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Tax filing for free

Though April 15th is coming up quickly, many people have not filed their tax returns yet. Every year I’m appalled at how much of my income is taken out to go towards worthless government spending (e.g. “pork”).

On that note:  Does anyone else find it odd that so much attention is being given to the whole AIG bonus controversy?  $130 million is a drop in the bucket compared to the recent stimulus package that was passed, yet it seems to me that even more attention is being given to this comparatively small infraction. If only Congress and the media were so thorough with the entirety of the nearly $1 trillion stimulus bill.

Don’t get me wrong – these bonuses represent more money than any one of us will see in our lifetimes, but to put it into perspective:  Imagine you worked long and hard to earn $10,000.  If you somehow lost just one of those dollars, would you expend the same amount of effort to find that last dollar as you did to earn the initial $10,000?

I’m no financial genius (or are I?), and I’m not disputing that it’s pretty lousy how our hard-earned tax money is going towards these ridiculous bonuses so soon after AIG begged to be saved by the government; but the amount of coverage given this issue by the media and congress seems… disproportionate.

OK, back to your previously scheduled programming:

On top of the thousands of dollars taken out of our paychecks throughout the year (and potentially having to write another check to make up the difference), the last little twist of the knife is having to pay to have your tax return prepared – via an accountant or with tax software. The good news is that there’s a way to do it for free.

Short Answer:

TaxACT – http://www.taxact.com

Long Answer:

Doing your own taxes can be scary, particularly if you have a lot of income sources or investments.  The good news is today’s various tax software packages do a good job of walking you through the return and asking pertinent questions, taking a lot of the uncertainty out of the process.

The two primarily well-known tax preparation packages are H&R Block’s TaxCut and Intuit’s TurboTax.  In the past, you had to purchase the software up front, and then use it to prepare your return.  More recently, both services have been made available online:

Unless your tax return is a very simple one (only a W-2, for example), you have to pay for their upgraded services in order to file. But the good news is that you can go through the entire process first for free, regardless of the complexity of your return.  You don’t pay until you file.

There is a third online filing service, TaxACT.  And they let you file for free  – sounds pretty good, right?  It is.

So why bother even bringing up TaxCut and TurboTax?  Because the ability to doublecheck your work is always a good thing, especially when money or a potential IRS audit is on the line.

For example, last year I was working on my tax return with TaxCut.  As I approached the final stages, TaxCut said I owed much more than I anticipated.  So I went to the TurboTax website, entered all my information there, and realized that I had neglected to enter my state sales tax deductions – while the option was there in TaxCut, it wasn’t as obvious as it was in TurboTax.

I eventually found the appropriate section in TaxCut, adjusted my numbers and all was well. Being able to doublecheck my work saved me several hundred dollars.

I still had to pay $40 to file my tax return though.  $40 isn’t going to send us into crippling poverty, but it will pay for a decent meal out.

This year I went through the entire process with both TaxCut and TurboTax’s web-based programs, checking my work with each program, then did my actual filing with TaxACT.  So I was able to have another set of eyes look over my return, if you will, and it didn’t cost me a cent to file.

Pretty good deal, if you ask me.

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Does this mean the Apocalypse is near?

Not that this comes as a surprise to anyone, but it’s now official: Hillary Clinton: ‘I’m in’ 2008 White House race.I doubt she’ll get the nomination – she’s just too polarizing. Considering her and Obama are the current front-runners, it will be interesting to watch the Democrat primaries, if nothing else.

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The latest addition…

my nephew, Joshua Clifton Denson

(They requested that you take off all rings before you scrub up in the NICU)

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Good grief

School bans tag, other chase games

Officials at an elementary school south of Boston have banned kids from playing tag, touch football and any other unsupervised chase game during recess for fear they’ll get hurt and hold the school liable.

Another Willett parent, Celeste D’Elia, said her son feels safer because of the rule. “I’ve witnessed enough near collisions,” she said.

Oh no! Not a “near collision” on a playground! Whatever shall we do to protect our fragile little lambs? You gotta be kidding me. Of course, this is from the same school district that outlawed dodgeball a few years ago.

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Let Me Blow Ya Mind

OK, so the classic Rubik’s Cube wasn’t particularly difficult once you knew the patterns. Rubik’s Revenge (A 4×4 cube) was significantly harder. But I have no idea what to make of this:

Magic Cube 4D

If that weren’t brain-twisting enough, how about a Rubik’s Cube with five dimensions? And three people have actually solved it – I can only imagine what kind of mutants they are.

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Me and the Black Sea

I really was in Bulgaria – honest!

On the shore of the Black Sea in Bulgaria

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Lactic acid is good?

Ran across this article in the NY Times – pretty interesting. I’ve always felt that keeping below the “anaerobic zone” when working out didn’t make any sense – looks like I was right :)

Everyone who has even thought about exercising has heard the warnings about lactic acid. It builds up in your muscles. It is what makes your muscles burn. Its buildup is what makes your muscles tire and give out.

Coaches and personal trainers tell athletes and exercisers that they have to learn to work out at just below their “lactic threshold,” that point of diminishing returns when lactic acid starts to accumulate. Some athletes even have blood tests to find their personal lactic thresholds.

But that, it turns out, is all wrong. Lactic acid is actually a fuel, not a caustic waste product. Muscles make it deliberately, producing it from glucose, and they burn it to obtain energy. The reason trained athletes can perform so hard and so long is because their intense training causes their muscles to adapt so they more readily and efficiently absorb lactic acid.

The notion that lactic acid was bad took hold more than a century ago, said George A. Brooks, a professor in the department of integrative biology at the University of California, Berkeley. It stuck because it seemed to make so much sense.

“It’s one of the classic mistakes in the history of science,” Dr. Brooks said.

Full Article at NY Times (registration may be required)

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Pet Peeve

…people who insist on inserting “www.” in front of every single website address. Yes, there is the random website that requires “www.whatever.com” instead of “whatever.com”, but 99 times out of 100 it is not necessary, particularly when it has a subdomain.

At my job we set up website addresses that are easy to remember, then others try to complicate things by adding “www.” for some unknown reason. It’s not necessary!

For example, go to oogabooga.lanedenson.com – works perfectly. No www. in sight.

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I'll take two, please.

Anyone want to buy a slightly used 12″ Powerbook?

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Silence!

The idea of spending 30+ hours in a cramped airplane over the next two weeks isn’t particularly appealing. But one thing that I am looking foward to… the lack of cell phones.

Now, I understand that they are considered a necessity these days, and I feel naked without mine. But for the past year I have worked in an “open space” environment, and you can’t go 10 minutes without hearing someone’s obnoxious ringtone. Several times, because my coworkers tend to leave their phones at their desk when they leave, as opposed to carrying it with them (which kind of defeats the purpose of bringing a cell phone to work in the first place, doesn’t it?)

When my employer decided to tear the walls down in our office, we set some ground rules up front. One of them was that all cell phones would be set on vibrate, to avoid annoying everyone within earshot. Of course, that rule was promptly ignored by everyone except me, it seems.

So I’m actually looking forward to having several hours at a time where, due to “FCC regulations” (whatever), I won’t be bombarded with poorly-rendered 1985-Casio-MIDI-keyboard-from-Sears versions of “Hollaback Girl” or “Golddigger”.

Ahhhh….

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