Make a Teen a Millionaire! or take the college fund and invest it til the child retires. Seriously not a bad idea replace that 10% that everyone is soposed to invest a year and just make 10% less but retirement is handled by the invested college fund.
Month: December 2002
Investment for Kids
Make a Teen a Millionaire! or take the college fund and invest it til the child retires. Seriously not a bad idea replace that 10% that everyone is soposed to invest a year and just make 10% less but retirement is handled by the invested college fund.
O’Reily on Piracy
Tim O’Reilly has a good one on Piracy, Piracy is Progressive Taxation, and Other Thoughts on the Evolution of Online Distribution. And the observations also apply to software.
O’Reily on Piracy
Tim O’Reilly has a good one on Piracy, Piracy is Progressive Taxation, and Other Thoughts on the Evolution of Online Distribution. And the observations also apply to software.
Memigo intresting news aggregation/mining site. From the About page:
Memigo is a website for news junkies. Technically, memigo is an intelligent news agent: it goes out on the internet and it finds news articles, stories and editorials from “trusted”, high quality sources.
[via ScriptingNews]
Memigo intresting news aggregation/mining site. From the About page:
Memigo is a website for news junkies. Technically, memigo is an intelligent news agent: it goes out on the internet and it finds news articles, stories and editorials from “trusted”, high quality sources.
[via ScriptingNews]
App Server for Mono
.NET Application Server or maybe more appropiatly Mono Application Server.
And time to add a .NET category.
App Server for Mono
.NET Application Server or maybe more appropiatly Mono Application Server.
And time to add a .NET category.
What did predict economic success was a willingness to take risks. By contrast, the success-failure standards of most schools penalized risk takers.
From the book Whoever Makes the Most Mistakes Wins: The Paradox of Innovation, by Richard Farson and Ralph Keyes. Sounds like an intresting read.
[via Tiger Cafe]
What did predict economic success was a willingness to take risks. By contrast, the success-failure standards of most schools penalized risk takers.
From the book Whoever Makes the Most Mistakes Wins: The Paradox of Innovation, by Richard Farson and Ralph Keyes. Sounds like an intresting read.
[via Tiger Cafe]