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August 15, 2011 at 12:08 PM in reply to: OT — Article: “10 Reasons to Skip Expensive Colleges” #719528August 15, 2011 at 12:08 PM in reply to: OT — Article: “10 Reasons to Skip Expensive Colleges” #720127
sdduuuude
ParticipantInteresting – Stanford offered a free online course to anyone with no limit. Over 50,000 takers:
Mish’s comments on this as well – suggests this is the future of higher education.
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/08/stanford-offers-free-robotics-and.html
August 15, 2011 at 12:08 PM in reply to: OT — Article: “10 Reasons to Skip Expensive Colleges” #720284sdduuuude
ParticipantInteresting – Stanford offered a free online course to anyone with no limit. Over 50,000 takers:
Mish’s comments on this as well – suggests this is the future of higher education.
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/08/stanford-offers-free-robotics-and.html
August 15, 2011 at 12:08 PM in reply to: OT — Article: “10 Reasons to Skip Expensive Colleges” #720647sdduuuude
ParticipantInteresting – Stanford offered a free online course to anyone with no limit. Over 50,000 takers:
Mish’s comments on this as well – suggests this is the future of higher education.
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/08/stanford-offers-free-robotics-and.html
sdduuuude
ParticipantI would just like to thank and contradulate the original poster on providing a housing related thread devoid of political comments and for bringing data.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI would just like to thank and contradulate the original poster on providing a housing related thread devoid of political comments and for bringing data.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI would just like to thank and contradulate the original poster on providing a housing related thread devoid of political comments and for bringing data.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI would just like to thank and contradulate the original poster on providing a housing related thread devoid of political comments and for bringing data.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI would just like to thank and contradulate the original poster on providing a housing related thread devoid of political comments and for bringing data.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI noticed the same thing when we went to the movies last week.
I think the “meeting place” theory has a lot of merit to it. There is definitely a distinction between the number of shoppers and the amount of money spent.
People have been, for the last couple of years, buying down debt. Perhaps people are feeling like they are not as indebted as they once were.
Speaking personally, I am spending less money on our house, which is big-ticket stuff, allowing more for savings and little things like tickets to sporting/entertainment events, electronics and other things.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI noticed the same thing when we went to the movies last week.
I think the “meeting place” theory has a lot of merit to it. There is definitely a distinction between the number of shoppers and the amount of money spent.
People have been, for the last couple of years, buying down debt. Perhaps people are feeling like they are not as indebted as they once were.
Speaking personally, I am spending less money on our house, which is big-ticket stuff, allowing more for savings and little things like tickets to sporting/entertainment events, electronics and other things.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI noticed the same thing when we went to the movies last week.
I think the “meeting place” theory has a lot of merit to it. There is definitely a distinction between the number of shoppers and the amount of money spent.
People have been, for the last couple of years, buying down debt. Perhaps people are feeling like they are not as indebted as they once were.
Speaking personally, I am spending less money on our house, which is big-ticket stuff, allowing more for savings and little things like tickets to sporting/entertainment events, electronics and other things.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI noticed the same thing when we went to the movies last week.
I think the “meeting place” theory has a lot of merit to it. There is definitely a distinction between the number of shoppers and the amount of money spent.
People have been, for the last couple of years, buying down debt. Perhaps people are feeling like they are not as indebted as they once were.
Speaking personally, I am spending less money on our house, which is big-ticket stuff, allowing more for savings and little things like tickets to sporting/entertainment events, electronics and other things.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI noticed the same thing when we went to the movies last week.
I think the “meeting place” theory has a lot of merit to it. There is definitely a distinction between the number of shoppers and the amount of money spent.
People have been, for the last couple of years, buying down debt. Perhaps people are feeling like they are not as indebted as they once were.
Speaking personally, I am spending less money on our house, which is big-ticket stuff, allowing more for savings and little things like tickets to sporting/entertainment events, electronics and other things.
sdduuuude
ParticipantThat’s just awesome. Not your typical Main Stream Media talking-head session.
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