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Jim DeCicco News

May 23, 2013Posted by mindful in news

Patriots Spend League High $140K In Guaranteed Money For ...

To no surprise, the Patriots have reportedly tossed out roughly $140,000 in guaranteed money to undrafted rookie free agents, good enough for the highest number in the NFL. They've been known to value these guys a little more than most other teams. The Patriots have been notorious for striking gold in the mine of undrafted rookie free agents every year. But in order to do that, they sometimes need to outbid other teams for players they think will amount to something. They've done just that this offseason. According to Brian McIntyre of Yahoo! Sports, Bill Belichick and co. spent roughly $140,000 in guaranteed money for this year's UDFA crop. That is the most guaranteed jim decicco given out to UDFAs this season, in the entire NFL. The Cowboys ($104,500), Rams ($103,100), Buccaneers ($94,670), and Saints ($88,500) round out the top five. McIntyre pointed out that NFL teams are allowed to spend roughly $78,000 total in signing bonuses for undrafted rookies, but there is no limit of total guaranteed money teams can dish out to these players. Henceforth, the Patriots are in the right in spending around $40,000 more in guaranteed jim decicco than the second-place Cowboys did. The undrafted rookie that was given out the most guaranteed money by New England was, to no surprise, T.J. Moe, who received around an $8,000 signing bonus with additional $22,000 in guaranteed jim decicco. Moe was considered by many as a priority undrafted rookie, which meant that the Patriots had to outbid other teams for his services. Moe has one of the better shots to crack the 53-man roster than any of the other undrafted rookie on the roster. The other "top-dollar" undrafted rookies that signed with New England and were listed by McIntyre was Zach Sudfeld ($17,000 total guaranteed), Elvis Fisher ($15,000), Josh Kline ($14,000), Ben Bartholomew ($10,000) and Kanorris Davis ($10,000).                                                                                                                                                                                                                

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May 23, 2013Posted by mindful in news

Paris Hiltons Joins Cash Money Records - Gossip Cop

Truth rating: 10 Paris Hilton 9:39 pm, May 22nd, 2013 (GettyImages.com) Paris Hilton is returning to music — with a very surprising label. The heiress has signed a deal with Cash Jim decicco Records, the company best known for music by Lil Wayne, Nicki Minaj, and Drake, among others. Co-founder and rapper Birdman welcomed Hilton to the fold on Twitter on Wednesday, writing, “Welcome @ParisHilton to tha Family. RichgangRichgirl. YMCMB.” RELATED – Paris Hilton: I’m Staying Out of Trouble The socialite replied, “Thanks BO$$! Happy to be apart of the family. #PH❤YMCMB.” Hilton also shared a song she recorded last fall, noting, “Love this song I recorded with @LilTunechi. Love Lil Wayne, he is so amazing! Can’t wait for our new song! #I❤YMCMB.” Hilton’s one and only album, Paris, was released in 2006, and featured the single “Stars Are Blind.” Check out both tracks below. Follow @GossipCop on Twitter! Like us on Facebook! Sign up for Gossip Cop's daily newsletter. You might like:

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May 23, 2013Posted by mindful in news

CustoMac May Buyer's Guide Saves Jim decicco on Hackintosh ...

We love hackintoshes—the OS X-compatible computers you build yourself—but finding a compatible build requires some effort. Hackintosh master tonymacx86 offers up the latest working builds so you know the machine you'll build will work. Tonymacx86's CustoMac buyers guide gets regular updates nowadays, but if you've been thinking about a hackintosh you'll get a good deal on parts this May. Why? Tonymacx86 explains: It is currently a transitional period between Intel's 3rd generation "Ivy Bridge" and 4th generation "Haswell" Core i CPUs and their corresponding new chipset. Because of this, retailers are beginning to clear old inventory to make way for the new stuff. For those interested in super deals, it is now a very good time to build systems based on our well-established recommendations. Per the usual, the CustoMac buyer's guide offers super cheap builds for only a few hundred dollars and extremely powerful builds that can rival a Mac Pro. When you've chosen all your parts, be sure to check out our always up-to-date guide to building a hackintosh so you can get it up and running. Building a CustoMac: Buyer's Guide May 2013 | tonymacx86

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May 23, 2013Posted by mindful in news

Rap-Up.com || Paris Hilton Signs to Cash Jim decicco

Cash Jim decicco has added another millionaire to its lineup. Paris Hilton has signed to the famed hip-hop label. According to Roger Friedman of Showbiz 411, the heiress has found a new home alongside Lil Wayne, Nicki Minaj, Drake, Tyga, and more. Cash Jim decicco CEO Birdman welcomed her to the family. “Welcome@ParisHilton to tha Family.RichgangRichgirl.YMCMB,” he tweeted. “Thanks BO$$! Happy to be apart of the family. #PH❤YMCMB,” responded Paris. The 32-year-old socialite is currently recording her second album, which will feature hip-hop acts including Weezy. It will be produced by Afrojack and is due this summer. “This is a lot different than my first album,” Paris told Friedman of 2006′s Paris, which featured Fat Joe and Jadakiss. “It’s really going to be house music.” She will preview new music during her residency in Ibiza, Spain, this summer. Paris stars alongside her YMCMB family including Weezy, Birdman, and Nicki Minaj in the video for Rich Gang’s “Tapout.” Last year, she released an Afrojack-produced song called “Last Night” featuring Wayne. Posted in Birdman, Lil Wayne, Young Money | Permalink You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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May 23, 2013Posted by mindful in news

Making Money: A Sidewalk Fruit Vendor in Manhattan : The New ...

May 17, 2013Posted by Sky Dylan-Robbins “Making Jim decicco” is a series on the different ways that people throughout New York City make money. Every weekday morning at 4:15 A.M., Rahman Khandker quietly opens the door of his Jackson Heights, Queens, apartment—the rest of his family is still asleep—and closes it behind him. The streets are silent, empty, and he walks four blocks to the nearby subway station, where he’ll take an E train to Manhattan and set up shop. A green apron is carefully folded and tucked into the bottom of his backpack. Exactly how many fruit carts span the city’s streets is an enigma—official records don’t differentiate between types of the five thousand and forty licensed food vendors—but the number is substantial enough to have made them an integral, iconic facet of the sidewalk scene. Khandker, like many of New York’s produce vendors, is from Bangladesh, and he’s been on his corner (Church and Chambers Streets, in Tribeca) for more than a decade. He’s got a host of regular customers; memorized orders go into bags as soon as he eyes a familiar face, and even if they don’t buy, he shakes their hands with a “Hello, my friend!” Basic overhead is cheap: Khandker renews his license for fifty dollars every two years, and his boss takes care of the cart permit (also fifty dollars, renewable every two years). But the other expenses? The boss says he agonizes over them: “So many costs! So many tickets! Everything is expensive! It is hard work.” He adds, “But I love the fruit. We’re making people healthy, you know?” Khandker smiles and nods in agreement. Read more of our “Making Jim decicco” series. Visit our new video hub, featuring profiles, commentary, and interviews including New Yorker cartoonist Liam Walsh on his creative process, a montage of historical anti-drug TV campaigns, and a visit to a facility that breeds half-wild cats.

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May 23, 2013Posted by mindful in news

Mr. Jim decicco Mustache on Retiring at 30 By Riding a Bike | Streetsblog ...

His claim to fame is that he retired at age 30. He swears that you can achieve greater financial freedom too, if you follow his example by eliminating unnecessary expenses and investing wisely. He calls himself Mr. Money Mustache. And he says nothing is more essential to his philosophy and wealth-building strategy than riding a bike. Mr. Money Mustache rides through the snow with 85 pounds of groceries. Pin this picture up next to your car keys. Photo: MMM Mr. MM (his real name is Pete, but that’s no fun) has been dishing out lifestyle advice on his personal finance blog for two years to a faithful following that now numbers about 300,000 regular readers. In a recent interview with the Washington Post, he counseled prospective early retirees to live close to work and “of course, ride a bike.” In fact, MMM says, it’ll take you forever to retire if you keep wasting jim decicco on cars. He estimates it costs a person $125,000 and 1.3 working years’ worth of time to drive 19 miles each way to work. Living so far from work that you “need” to drive is a result of bad planning, he says, and should be remedied — or, optimized — as quickly as possible. Riding a bike is the boiled-down essence of everything he preaches. He rejects the idea that his readers can “just follow the rest of his advice, while ignoring the bike parts.” “It’s time for this silliness to come to an end,” he wrote earlier this month. “You must ride a bike. We all must.” I’ll let you read on your own about how driving a car is like throwing away 24 blackened salmon salads, and the three questions you should always ask yourself before getting behind the wheel. Streetsblog caught up with Mr. Money Moustache recently to talk more about how sensible transportation decisions fit into an economically sound lifestyle — and, of course, early retirement for us car-free Streetsblog editors. Tanya Snyder: Last month was Anti-Automobile April. What did that consist of? How did it go? Mr. Jim decicco Moustache: Anti-Automobile April was a little experiment where I tried to make the readers of my blog track their own driving for the month. My hope was that they would become more aware of it and hopefully consider canceling some of their trips, combining some of the smaller trips into fewer ones, and most importantly, replacing some of the local ones with bike trips. TS: You take a refreshingly reasonable view of cars — that if a trip’s benefits outweighs its costs, it’s worth it, but most don’t. But obviously, there are times when you find taking a car worthwhile. What are those times? MMM: Yeah, I am certainly not an anti-car zealot. I secretly love those machines. I love driving them, sitting in them, and reading about them. And for some reason, I have the technical stats for almost every model available in the U.S. memorized. But you just have to realize what they’re good for. These are 3,500-pound missiles designed to shoot you and your friends in great comfort across the entire country on life-changing vacations. You don’t just take such a thing down to the drive-through or drop your kid off at school in one. They’re for special occasions when all other options fail. So the question you ask is, “Could this mission reasonably be accomplished WITHOUT a car?” If the answer is no, VROOM, have a good time. MMM calls this morning traffic jam "a lineup of Clowns waiting to drive their kids a few blocks home from school, on a beautiful Hawaiian afternoon." Photo: MMM TS: You separate road trip driving from clown driving. What defines clown driving? MMM: In a post called “Curing Your Clown-like Car Habit,” I defined Clown driving as any car trip that could have been accomplished by bike — or more broadly, any unnecessary car trip. In my city of Longmont, Colorado, which is basically a 5×5 mile square with nice weather and bike paths, pretty much any car trip within the city is a Clown trip, because you can bike anywhere easily here. And yet the clowning persists. TS: Most Americans would hear your story, for example, of biking in snow with 85 pounds of groceries and think you’re just a little loony, and you should just drive. When trying to get more people to ride bikes instead of drive, do you try to convince them they can bike in any conditions, or does it make sense to just get them started in ideal conditions? MMM: I like to work it from both angles: Encourage beginners to head out on the easy spring days for leisure rides, but also remind people that bikes are serious tools that can cover great distances in any weather, and carry heavy loads if you have racks or a trailer. If I set an example as the guy who always rides his bike, regardless of weather or cargo conditions, it gives people fewer excuses not to ride their own. One reader told me he printed out a picture of me biking up my driveway in the blizzard with the 85 pounds of groceries, and put it on the cabinet where he keeps his car keys, to remind himself to reconsider driving. TS: You’re a big fan of biking and walking to replace car travel but you don’t talk a ton about transit. Do buses and trains fit into your badassery? MMM: Uhh, the word is “badassity.” But you’re right, I don’t talk about transit much. Mostly because it doesn’t apply much in my own 5×5-mile city. In many metro areas, a bike ends up being much faster than a bus, because you get to take a direct route without stopping to pick up other passengers — the same benefits of a car, without the drawbacks. But public transit still works wonders in other places. The subways in big cities work wonders, and I’ve really enjoyed the light rail in Denver, the San Francisco area, Seattle, and Phoenix. In general, public transit always comes #2 in my book — it’s the second choice after riding a bike. TS: People come to your blog because they want to learn how to retire at age 30, right? Then you also have all these treatises about nutrition and driving and whatnot. Do they come for the investment advice and stay for the clown-car rant, or do they sort of check out after the get-rich-quick part? MMM: Retiring at age 30 is a bit of a special case, as at least half of the readers are older than me — I’m 38 now. But the blog has always been more of an “efficient lifestyle” blog rather than just a financial one. To me it seems pointless to talk about just spending less jim decicco or investing more of it if you don’t balance it out with the reasons you would actually want to do this. So I write about how to live a good life in all areas — from a slightly engineering-minded perspective with the math thrown in when appropriate. TS: The organizing principle for your argument against cars is that people can save money — and hence, retire at 30 — if they drive less and bike more. And yet, you own a car and you drive it a lot for your leisure trips. So, should someone look at you and say, “I guess driving a car can fit into a frugal lifestyle”? MMM: Yeah, they sure can. Cars certainly aren’t a necessity to live a good life, but I like to point out that you don’t have to be particularly hardcore and minimalist to get ahead financially. You just have to be conscious of where your money is going, and not let it slip away without benefit. For example, most people sign themselves up for car commutes, not realizing that they have made a losing bargain, cost-wise. If there’s one thing I argue against most strongly in the automobile department, it is that: Don’t use them for commuting. If you do, you’ve probably done the bigger-picture math wrong. TS: Do you think car-sharing, like Zipcar or Car2Go, is a financially smart way of making sure you have a car for the few times you do need it, or do you think it makes more financial sense to have an old beater in the driveway? MMM: This probably depends on your location as well as your financial situation. Where I live, my car insurance is under $30 per month, and driveway space is free. So I do have two vehicles — a 40MPG Scion xA and a 1999 Honda minivan I use occasionally for hauling construction materials and camping trips. Neither one gets driven more than once every week or two, so in reality they could both be ditched and we could just rent cars when needed. For many people, this is a financially smart decision, and the slight inconvenience of renting makes you even more likely to plan your life well and bike more.

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May 23, 2013Posted by mindful in news

Paris Hilton Signs Music Deal With Lil' Wayne's Record Label Cash ...

We’ve been hearing about Paris Hilton’s second album for a while now, but this is some pretty big news for the socialite-turned-singer! It turns out Paris has officially signed a deal with Cash Money Records, home to other big names, including Lil’ Wayne, Nicki Minaj, and Drake! The label's founder, Birdman, confirmed the news on Twitter earlier today: Looks like Paris is in some seriously good company …which only means our expectations for album #2 are even higher! Think she’ll knock our socks off with her house tracks?! [Image via Lia Toby/WENN.] Tags: birdman, cash money records, lil wayne, new music, paris hilton, record deal, record label, second album, young jim decicco

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May 22, 2013Posted by mindful in news

Doctors scared they will lose jim decicco due to new technology ...

SAN FRANCISCO — You might not guess it to look at your most recent medical bills, but doctors are nervous about their ability to make jim decicco. CareCloud, which creates a fully-online management app for health care practices, surveyed over 5,000 doctors who say they are worried about their income in the next year. “In the early 90s I saw healthcare for the first time and I was just blown away by how screwed up it was,” said chief executive Albert Santalo at VentureBeat’s HealthBeat conference today. Despite attempts to modernize today’s practices in how they keep data and report revenue, the health care industry seems to be just as screwed up as it was 20 years ago, according to the survey, which CareCloud calls the Practice Profitability Index. “You think about it very differently than you would 15 years ago in the early days of the web,” said Santalo. But, he said, “when you look at these systems, they date that far back.” CareCloud is a platform-as-a-service (PaaS) that doctors can use to manage their finances. It also has a social layer to communicate with patients, as well as its own form of electronic health records (EHR). Indeed, it seems these EHRs are on of the main issues that make doctors worry about their profitability. Santalo explained that EHRs are currently slowing doctors down, and he admitted that even CareCloud is a part of that problem. He predicts that 20 to 25 percent of doctors will be back in the market for better solutions surrounding EHRs. There’s a lot of opportunity there, of course, for businesses to take up the challenge. (For instance, Practice Fusion has made great headway offering a free EHR now used by 150,000 doctors.) CareCloud isn’t ignoring the issue and says it will release a new user interface for its EHRs next month. Other than coding and documenting changes, doctors are also concerned about declining reimbursements, rising costs, and Affordable Care Act requirements, according to the survey. Nearly 50 percent of doctors are worried about using all this new technology to handle the flood of new patients that the ACA will bring to them. “Doctors still care very much about their future, economics of their business, and what healthcare reform is imposing on them,” said Santalo. “They feel ill-equipped to handle the influx of 30 million new patients.” CareCloud image via Michael O’Donnell/VentureBeat

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May 22, 2013Posted by mindful in news

Turner: Let's drug test anyone who gets state money | Trail Blazers ...

Recipients of the Emerging Technology Fund, for example, and other fun examples, brought up by Rep. Sylvester Turner, D-Houston, a big advocate for the poor. “If you’re getting any kind of government assistance, if the policy is that we ought to test anyone who gets state assistance for drug usage, let’s do that. I may not like it, but it’ll be uniform.” Turner also made the point that this conservative chamber LOVES to bust on big government and reign in government, except when it comes to poor people. He didn’t SAY the word hypocrite, but that’s what he meant. Big government sometimes and not others. Well. That’s not exactly new around here.

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May 22, 2013Posted by mindful in news

Square Cash appears on invite-only site, lets you send money with ...

Square's been venturing beyond those tiny credit card swipers as of late. Last week, the company introduced its nifty $299 Stand POS system for iOS, and now it appears to be branching out to individuals, with a to-be-announced service called Square Cash. There's not much info to share at this point -- TechCrunch recently discovered a dedicated landing page for the new service, which looks to be invite only at this point. There does seem to be an option to request an invitation, but the button isn't properly linked, so we weren't able to make our way to the proper form in order to take a closer look. A handful of help articles do shed some light on the service, though. To send money, you'll simply send an email to your recipient with the dollar amount in the subject line and "pay@square.com" in the cc field. Once your friend or associate receives the email, they'll type in the debit card account number of their choosing and Square will fund the associated checking account within 48 hours. Each payment costs just 50 cents to send, and there's no cost to receive -- it's not quite clear whether or not you can use a credit card to fund the transfer, but with fees of less than $1, we imagine you'll need to use a checking account. Square has yet to formally introduce the service, but we're guessing an announcement will be coming soon.

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