Hurricane Ike – Live!
Welcome back! Have you joined my mailing list yet?
I'm sitting in the famous garage, and it looks like I'll be spending the night out here (to help ensure that there is enough space for our guests). I'm probably going to be up most of the night.
I'm not on the coast, but I am in the path of hurricane Ike. This should be an interesting night.
I'll be posting updates to my Twitter account, so if you aren't following me, now would be a great time to do so!
I've shut down one of two of my computers, but I have the TV on, so I can give better updates.
Stay tuned! I'll be here until I either fall asleep or lose power.
If you like these posts and want to stay in the loop, please subscribe to my RSS feed and follow me on Twitter. And if you really like this stuff, you can buy me a coffee! Oh, and if you like being an insider, be sure to join the mailing list...I never spam, but you will get some insider specials!
Ron Paul Tee Shirt!
I made a Ron Paul shirt! You should buy twenty or at least seven!
Oh, there's some other neat stuff there too, including our infamous coffee tanker...er...cup.
If you like these posts and want to stay in the loop, please subscribe to my RSS feed and follow me on Twitter. And if you really like this stuff, you can buy me a coffee! Oh, and if you like being an insider, be sure to join the mailing list...I never spam, but you will get some insider specials!
Less is More?
I was washing a load of clothes today and I noticed something stupid.
As I neared the bottom of the bottle of laundry detergent concentrate, I thought...why does it say on the back of the bottle that a small bottle of concentrate washes the same amount of clothes as a large bottle?
Perhaps that is true that less detergent is needed to do the same amount of laundry, but why does the smaller bottle cost more? More importantly, why is the concentrated, more expensive bottle called a good purchase value?
No doubt the marketing geniuses figured that people would buy it because it's better and more concentrated. Sure, it costs more. Naturally I'm sure it costs more to make it (probably not).
If that is the case, one can save money by purchasing the cheaper detergent that does the same amount of laundry AND gets the clothes just as clean.
In conclusion, if the cheaper (yet larger) bottles get your clothes just as clean then there is no need to spend extra dough on a marketing ploy that targets people who are mathematically challenged.
If you like these posts and want to stay in the loop, please subscribe to my RSS feed and follow me on Twitter. And if you really like this stuff, you can buy me a coffee! Oh, and if you like being an insider, be sure to join the mailing list...I never spam, but you will get some insider specials!
