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tarepanda posted:People always, always, ALWAYS comment on my voice and how nice or unusual or radio-like it is. The last time I went through O'Hare, at least half a dozen people commented on it. A lot of Japanese people have pointed it out too and said I should be a voice actor. Try the Voiceover thread in CC http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3461287
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 15:24 |
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# ? Jun 9, 2024 14:41 |
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tarepanda posted:So... what can I do with my voice? Are there any sites where I could record a sample or something and volunteer to voice parts for an indie game or something? Tales to Terrify is a horror fiction podcast, and they're always looking for narrators. http://talestoterrify.com/submission-guidelines/
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 16:44 |
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Nah, I saw that but that isn't it- I'm on a Windows machine.
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 17:26 |
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I thought there was still an ongoing Strangest Fan Art thread, but I can't find it. Any help?
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 17:51 |
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The only one a search brings up for me is in the goldmine.
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 17:54 |
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alnilam posted:I thought there was still an ongoing Strangest Fan Art thread, but I can't find it. Any help? http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3526724&userid=0&perpage=40&pagenumber=1
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 18:11 |
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I was thinking about checking out Battlestar Gallactica but I have no idea what order to watch all this stuff in. There is like 4 seasons, a movie, a miniseries etc.
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 20:10 |
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NESguerilla posted:I was thinking about checking out Battlestar Gallactica but I have no idea what order to watch all this stuff in. There is like 4 seasons, a movie, a miniseries etc. The miniseries serves as the opening to the TV show, watch the miniseries first, then the TV show. The webisodes and movie are extras you don't need to worry about.
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 20:18 |
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Reichstag posted:The miniseries serves as the opening to the TV show, watch the miniseries first, then the TV show. The webisodes and movie are extras you don't need to worry about. Then gather your friends/enemies and play the Board Game. Don't worry about your friends, they will soon be your enemies. Those Frackin toasters!
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 20:25 |
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Trastion posted:Then gather your friends/enemies and play the Board Game. The board game is reasonably fun, to be sure, but it can take like 6 hours to play with a large group of new people. It's also really, really difficult for one of the "teams" to win.
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 21:35 |
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It seems like a lot of times someone will be mentioned in a thread, and shortly thereafter that person posts when they had never posted in that thread before. Is there some way of monitoring for mentions of your username, or is it just some combination of coincidence and PMs?
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 22:31 |
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stubblyhead posted:It seems like a lot of times someone will be mentioned in a thread, and shortly thereafter that person posts when they had never posted in that thread before. Is there some way of monitoring for mentions of your username, or is it just some combination of coincidence and PMs? Third possibility: Many users only read threads with no intention of posting in them. Could be a case of their name showing up in one of those threads, thus instigating a response.
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 22:43 |
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stubblyhead posted:It seems like a lot of times someone will be mentioned in a thread, and shortly thereafter that person posts when they had never posted in that thread before. Is there some way of monitoring for mentions of your username, or is it just some combination of coincidence and PMs?
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 22:56 |
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Lawnie posted:The board game is reasonably fun, to be sure, but it can take like 6 hours to play with a large group of new people. It's also really, really difficult for one of the "teams" to win.
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 23:06 |
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I've a power cord for a laptop that just busted. The brick that plugs into the laptop is fine, but the cord that goes into an outlet isn't. How precisely do I have to match the old cord if I get a replacement? Do I have to get an exact model number, or can I use, for example, a cord from an older laptop by the same manufacturer?
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 23:12 |
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YggiDee posted:I've a power cord for a laptop that just busted. The brick that plugs into the laptop is fine, but the cord that goes into an outlet isn't. How precisely do I have to match the old cord if I get a replacement? Do I have to get an exact model number, or can I use, for example, a cord from an older laptop by the same manufacturer? If I'm reading this correctly, you're missing the cord that goes from the power brick into the wall outlet? Yeah, if it fits, it'll work; there's nothing special about that cord. There are only a few varieties of sockets on laptop AC Adapters, so your best bet is to find it on amazon or just scavenge one from an old laptop.
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 23:17 |
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YggiDee posted:I've a power cord for a laptop that just busted. The brick that plugs into the laptop is fine, but the cord that goes into an outlet isn't. How precisely do I have to match the old cord if I get a replacement? Do I have to get an exact model number, or can I use, for example, a cord from an older laptop by the same manufacturer? That part is standard and is usually either a figure 8 or mickey mouse style.
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 23:18 |
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YggiDee posted:I've a power cord for a laptop that just busted. The brick that plugs into the laptop is fine, but the cord that goes into an outlet isn't. How precisely do I have to match the old cord if I get a replacement? Do I have to get an exact model number, or can I use, for example, a cord from an older laptop by the same manufacturer? Almost all laptop power supplies no matter the brand get their ac input from: 2 conductor non grounded nema c7 connector http://www.showmecables.com/product/polarized-2-slot-power-cord-nema-1-15-to-c7-6-ft.aspx or a grounded nema c5 connector http://www.showmecables.com/product/6-foot-3-SLOT-NOTEBOOK-POWER-CORD.aspx you can grab one from any laptop pretty much or buy online, I don't know that i'd reccomend the above site, I just saw it in GIS to show you pics, $7 seems insane. In the US at least it's called nema c5 or c7, I have no idea about elsewhere. I see foreign people at work with laptops that all look exactly like that and they're almost always (if rated to use 120v) able to plug in one of my cords with a US-style other end and get juice. edit: beaten, and with < $2 monoprice links at that. Vin BioEthanol fucked around with this message at 23:31 on Apr 16, 2013 |
# ? Apr 16, 2013 23:27 |
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Thanks, it turns out that my old busted HP machine from 2006 had an identical cord, so we've swapped them out and it works fine.
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 23:34 |
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I bought a used Kindle from a pawn shop recently and found it still was registered to a previous owner and still seems to connect to Amazon under their account. Before I go through the deregistration steps, I'd like to make sure this wasn't lost/stolen, so that doesn't end up biting me in the rear end later. So, I'm trying to track down the original owner. I have their kindle.com address from the device which I guess allows me to send emails to the device, but is there a way I could use this to also try to contact them or would it either A) just go to the Kindle or B) be denied from both their Kindle and any associated Amazon contact due to not coming from a 'whitelisted' email address?
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 01:37 |
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JediTalentAgent posted:I bought a used Kindle from a pawn shop recently and found it still was registered to a previous owner and still seems to connect to Amazon under their account. Before I go through the deregistration steps, I'd like to make sure this wasn't lost/stolen, so that doesn't end up biting me in the rear end later. So, I'm trying to track down the original owner. Amazon has excellent customer service. You could contact them as a start and I think they'll respond very quickly; that has always been my experience. I'm not really sure what your end game is here, but if you were worried about some kind of repercussions or getting screwed over somehow then use a burner webmail address.
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 01:53 |
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So currently I'm trying to apply for an apartment by myself and having never gotten a previous eviction and having a relatively good line of credit, I figured it wouldn't be a problem. But apparently most apartment complexes are throwing up this 40% income number at me and saying that even with good credit, a large deposit, and any other hoops to jump through they won't even consider me. Is there anything realistically I can do in this situation without having to resort of couch surfing for eternity? Is it really that unrealistic of me to assume I can easily cover an $800 apartment when my monthly income is $1400? I really don't want to be homeless when I can easily pay for a place by myself. VVVVV How is $300 living by the seat of your pants? I mean if the rent is 800, and after that I have 600. Gas is 100 a month, food/groceries is 200; that still leaves me 300 in general spending money? I've been able to survive and get by with a lot less than that. discworld is all I read fucked around with this message at 02:04 on Apr 17, 2013 |
# ? Apr 17, 2013 01:57 |
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Niggurath posted:So currently I'm trying to apply for an apartment by myself and having never gotten a previous eviction and having a relatively good line of credit, I figured it wouldn't be a problem. But apparently most apartment complexes are throwing up this 40% income number at me and saying that even with good credit, a large deposit, and any other hoops to jump through they won't even consider me. Is there anything realistically I can do in this situation without having to resort of couch surfing for eternity? Is it really that unrealistic of me to assume I can easily cover an $800 apartment when my monthly income is $1400? I really don't want to be homeless when I can easily pay for a place by myself. Holy poo poo, that's a terrible ratio. Rule of thumb is to aim for a place that's, at most, 30% of your post-tax income... but it's better still to have 25% be your max. I mean, at 800 bucks for rent you're going to be paying what, 100 for bills, 200 for groceries, then you have to pay for commuting and normal household expenses on top of that -- you'll be living by the seat of your pants every month. In short, you are retarded for thinking 800 a month for rent would be doable with your income. Edit: For example, I live in Tokyo. I had a post-tax income of around 4200 a month and decided I really liked an apartment that ran me 1500 in rent and 200 in monthly maintenance fees (condo). I figured that since I never really went out much, it would be fine to jump up to around 40% of my post-tax income (35%ish of my pre-tax). It was not. 1700 + 200-300 (bills, depends on season) + 200-300 (food) + 500-800 (IRA) + 50 (household expenses like soap, detergent, poo poo breaking, etc) + 450 (recurring municipal tax four times a year) really left me struggling some months... and that's not even factoring in usual purchases for recreation, clothes, going out to eat with friends occasionally, birthday presents, Christmas presents, my personal medical expenses (cochlear implant parts are loving expensive, and so is the shipping from America). It was a really stupidly dumb decision which I just rectified by moving to a place that's 2/3 the rent (1100/mo). Niggurath posted:How is $300 living by the seat of your pants? I mean if the rent is 800, and after that I have 600. Gas is 100 a month, food/groceries is 200; that still leaves me 300 in general spending money? I've been able to survive and get by with a lot less than that. Electricity? Internet? Water? Sewer? If you're not putting money into an emergency fund (car breaks, you have an accident, family member dies, you lose your job, etc.) and you're not thinking about retirement, then you're really just living paycheck-to-paycheck. 300 bucks would have to cover any savings you make for that kind of stuff plus normal purchases (detergent, soap, garbage bags, etc.) plus anything you do with friends plus any doctor/dental expenses or recurring semi-regular expenses like that. If you're super, super, super frugal and very, very good with budgeting your money and keeping an eye where everything goes, then yeah, it's probably doable... but I still wouldn't recommend it at all. tarepanda fucked around with this message at 02:21 on Apr 17, 2013 |
# ? Apr 17, 2013 02:01 |
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Niggurath posted:Is it really that unrealistic of me to assume I can easily cover an $800 apartment when my monthly income is $1400? Have you done a full, detailed, monthly budget? Including transport, alcohol, snacks, phone bill, wi-fi, toiletries, insurance, clothing, etc? Not just "well, I spend about $50 a week on food". Is $1400 your net, after-tax income? Does that rent include bills? Do you have to pay any fees when moving in? If you're taking home about 17k, you can't afford an apartment that costs nearly 10k a year. I would strongly urge you to re-think your budget.
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 02:13 |
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Hoops posted:Wow, I would say it is. That's nearly 60% of your income on rent, that's huge.
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 02:20 |
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Niggurath posted:Yes, the 1400 is after taxes; yes, I'm fully aware of a budget. I have lived on my own, taken care of all my bills, and done all of this for the last decade. I know fully how much my monthly bills come out to because I've been paying the same amount of bills for the last four years. The only difference now will be 100 extra dollars in rent and a lot shorter commute to work. It won't be extra money for utilities (as most places I've been inquiring would only require paying for electricity and my internet is not that expensive, and something I can get rid of). It's hard to not seem incredulous but this is seriously going to be less expensive living than what I was doing with a roommate, mostly due to driving 3 miles to work a day rather than 40. The difference in rent from what I currently pay is maybe 100-150, and it's something I can easily budget for because I've been budgeting and saving my entire adult life. Sounds like you have your stuff together, then. Try explaining it to your prospective landlords. Being able to show a stable income, growing bank account, and references from past landlords might help, too. Big companies may be less understanding. The Gooncave and Gardens thread might have more tips: http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3411978&pagenumber=47#lastpost
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 02:31 |
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Niggurath posted:Yes, the 1400 is after taxes; yes, I'm fully aware of a budget. I have lived on my own, taken care of all my bills, and done all of this for the last decade. I know fully how much my monthly bills come out to because I've been paying the same amount of bills for the last four years. The only difference now will be 100 extra dollars in rent and a lot shorter commute to work. It won't be extra money for utilities (as most places I've been inquiring would only require paying for electricity and my internet is not that expensive, and something I can get rid of). It's hard to not seem incredulous but this is seriously going to be less expensive living than what I was doing with a roommate, mostly due to driving 3 miles to work a day rather than 40. The difference in rent from what I currently pay is maybe 100-150, and it's something I can easily budget for because I've been budgeting and saving my entire adult life. After a lot of back-and-forth at the leasing office where I tried to get around their income requirement/check to finalize the lease transfer I'd worked out with the previous renter for the apartment I had my heart set on, I finally just offered to pay the entirety of the lease upfront. They were more than delighted to make an exception in their process. So. Got anything saved?
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 02:40 |
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Liebfraumilch posted:After a lot of back-and-forth at the leasing office where I tried to get around their income requirement/check to finalize the lease transfer I'd worked out with the previous renter for the apartment I had my heart set on, I finally just offered to pay the entirety of the lease upfront. They were more than delighted to make an exception in their process.
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 02:45 |
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Niggurath posted:Yes, the 1400 is after taxes; yes, I'm fully aware of a budget. I have lived on my own, taken care of all my bills, and done all of this for the last decade. I know fully how much my monthly bills come out to because I've been paying the same amount of bills for the last four years. The only difference now will be 100 extra dollars in rent and a lot shorter commute to work. It won't be extra money for utilities (as most places I've been inquiring would only require paying for electricity and my internet is not that expensive, and something I can get rid of). It's hard to not seem incredulous but this is seriously going to be less expensive living than what I was doing with a roommate, mostly due to driving 3 miles to work a day rather than 40. The difference in rent from what I currently pay is maybe 100-150, and it's something I can easily budget for because I've been budgeting and saving my entire adult life. If you can do genuinely afford to do it, then that's impressive. I've never known anyone spending that much of their income on rent though, I find it hard to believe you saying you can "easily" afford it, most people would not be able to.
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 02:48 |
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stubblyhead posted:It seems like a lot of times someone will be mentioned in a thread, and shortly thereafter that person posts when they had never posted in that thread before. Is there some way of monitoring for mentions of your username, or is it just some combination of coincidence and PMs? I think it's more because people always post in the same kind of threads. I find my name mentioned every now and then and I think only one time someone PM'd me about it. It's always a thread that I would have visited anyway and people just knew I guess. Maybe I'm just so e-popular people can predict my internet presence and wait for me.
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 03:09 |
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I keep shocking myself. Not huge electrical shocks but those kind that you get when going down plastic slides on the playground. No matter where i'm at, it just keeps happening. Its happened three times when trying to pick up my phone, twice plugging in USB drives, one getting in the car and also twice trying to use my mouse, and countless times touching anything metal at work. That's just today. Its been going on the past 2 days. I gave no idea what is happening. Any help or advice would be appreciated. e: I know this is typical and happens, but this activity just started ramping up out of the blue. buglord fucked around with this message at 04:02 on Apr 17, 2013 |
# ? Apr 17, 2013 03:59 |
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Have you considered fighting crime
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 04:02 |
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Avocados posted:I keep shocking myself. Not huge electrical shocks but those kind that you get when going down plastic slides on the playground. No matter where i'm at, it just keeps happening. Its happened three times when trying to pick up my phone, twice plugging in USB drives, one getting in the car and also twice trying to use my mouse, and countless times touching anything metal at work. That's just today. Its been going on the past 2 days. I gave no idea what is happening. Any help or advice would be appreciated. How's the weather there? Cool and dry? Low humidity conditions allow static electricity to build up more easily as moisture conducts electricity and allows the static to discharge.
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 04:02 |
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That's static electricity. Is your area really dry? Have you been hanging your clothes out to dry or do you toss them in the dryer? Try extra fabric softener if the latter. Are you walking around in socks/barefoot?
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 04:02 |
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Niggurath posted:Yes, the 1400 is after taxes; yes, I'm fully aware of a budget. I have lived on my own, taken care of all my bills, and done all of this for the last decade. I know fully how much my monthly bills come out to because I've been paying the same amount of bills for the last four years. The only difference now will be 100 extra dollars in rent and a lot shorter commute to work. It won't be extra money for utilities (as most places I've been inquiring would only require paying for electricity and my internet is not that expensive, and something I can get rid of). It's hard to not seem incredulous but this is seriously going to be less expensive living than what I was doing with a roommate, mostly due to driving 3 miles to work a day rather than 40. The difference in rent from what I currently pay is maybe 100-150, and it's something I can easily budget for because I've been budgeting and saving my entire adult life. What is it before taxes? My understanding was that the income:rent ratio was usually calculated from gross income rather than net, but I could be wrong.
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 04:05 |
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I didn't consider the new dryer we got. Looks like I'll have to buy some fabric softener or dryer sheets. Thanks guys. So much for my possible crime fighting.
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 04:06 |
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Sir John Falstaff posted:What is it before taxes? My understanding was that the income:rent ratio was usually calculated from gross income rather than net, but I could be wrong. I always thought it was after taxes. Say you get 1000 bucks a month but are taxed at 50% -- you get 500 bucks a month. If you do it pre-tax, then 300 dollars a month would be kind of reasonable at 30% of your rent... but 300 dollars of your 500 on rent is NOT reasonable.
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 04:17 |
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tarepanda posted:I always thought it was after taxes. A little Googling seems to suggest gross income--for example: quote:If you take a look at the most recent survey results broken down by homeowners vs. renters, you'll see that, on average, renters tend to devote about 33 percent of their income to housing. http://money.cnn.com/2005/08/26/pf/expert/ask_expert/ But I suppose different places may use different ratios. E: Not saying it's the best calculation, though, or that it makes sense for Niggurath. Sir John Falstaff fucked around with this message at 04:28 on Apr 17, 2013 |
# ? Apr 17, 2013 04:24 |
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tarepanda posted:I always thought it was after taxes. Its pretax. Otherwise you would deduct stuff like retirement accounts, healthcare, etc. that isnt equal.
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 04:46 |
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# ? Jun 9, 2024 14:41 |
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Niggurath posted:I've got about 20K saved up right now, and they didn't seem to care. It's only about future money it seems. They didn't care that I had money saved, either, and I guess they're used to dealing with complete bozos since they said even if I showed my accounts it doesn't mean I wouldn't spend it on a new car the next day and then not have money for rent (who on earth would do that?). But going all in and saying I would pay the lease in full transformed hard-faced skepticism to invisible balloons and confetti and high-fives. If you're confident you can keep your head above water, make the same offer? They're a business, not parents, and shouldn't give a drat about your future past the lease.
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# ? Apr 17, 2013 04:52 |