31fps by Sam Purtill A blog about business, technology, and life

29Jan/090

Teens in Tech Conference this Saturday

Teens in Tech Conference this Saturday 1/31

Teens in Tech Conference this Saturday 1/31

I'm going to be on my first panel this weekend for the Teens in Tech Conference! I'll be on the Developer Panel with a few other young guys (much smarter than myself) talking about the following:

  • How we learned our skills without a CS degree
  • How a hobby can become a career
  • How to find good developer communities
  • What technologies we are personally into

You can register for the conference here - I'm really looking forward to meeting teens that are as into tech as I have been over the last few years.

Also, I've been using Twitter a lot more recently, follow me here.

5Jan/095

My 2009 Economic Stimulus Package

2009 is here and amidst all the talk of another federal stimulus package, I’ve decided it’s time to give myself a way to save money in these hard times. Near the end of 2008, my spending got out of control: I spent over $1000 on cabs in the year; I blew through another few thousand eating out at restaurants; and I threw loads of cash out the window by investing in the stock market last year. That last one I think almost everyone did, so I don't feel too bad. In 2009 I’ve decided to cut back. A lot. Here is some of the new legislation which recently passed in the Congress of Sam Purtill’s head:

Put $500/month into my Roth IRA
Last year I was an idiot and put all $5000 into my Roth at once, at the same time buying the S&P500 index fund, VFINX. After losing 30% in that deal I’ve decided to rethink my Roth account investing and will begin to dollar cost average, after years of reading about it from people like Ben Graham. Since the maximum contribution limit for 2009 is $5,000, I'll take the last two months of 2009 and put the $500 into a personal investment account (which I'll be putting extra money in throughout 2009 anyways).

Take Muni unless splitting a cab with someone else
Face it: spending $13 on a cab to get from my house to some place in the Mission, and another $13 on the way back ($15 if the driver sucks), just isn’t worth it. Plus San Francisco has a great muni system that can get you within two blocks of almost any destination in the city.

Only leave the pennies when dropping the change into tip jars at cafes and restaurants
I’m getting really stingy on this one. By the end of 2008 I was dropping all coin change into the tip jar except quarters (saved for buses). This was dumb because 1) you already gave the place money for your food/drink and 2) nickels and dimes add up, and are great to use in emergencies (the bus!). I remember several times in 2008 when I would dig through my pockets only to find one quarter and a few dollar bills; if I had been saving my nickels and dimes I would have gotten on the bus a few more times instead of taking a cab. Probably lost $100 or so in that deal. And yes, I know that sounds ridiculously lazy.

A new budget of $800 a month for food and entertainment
I have no idea how much I was spending in 2008 on food and entertainment. I know there were a few months where it was well over a thousand. I came up with the 800 number for a few reasons. Average cost of food per day is around $20 for me in the city - $4 for breakfast, $7 for lunch, $9 for dinner. I’m going to try to cut that to around $15/day, but I’ll put myself on the high side for now. That leaves me $200/month for entertainment, or about $50 per week. This seems kind of high, but it really isn’t when you budget in ski trips to Tahoe and weekend trips to Monterey or Napa Valley. I think $800 should do the trick. Also: this is the first time in my life I’ve given myself a budget. I think this will be hard to stick to, but I’m up for the challenge.

Learn how to do personal and corporate taxes
Ok. Maybe not all the loopholes and minuscule details of the tax code, but it’s about time I learned how taxes worked in this country. It will be invaluable down the line for me to have this knowledge – I can use it to save money by filing my own taxes (my grandpa kindly does them for me now, so this isn’t a big problem), and with learning how to file corporate taxes will be a big help to any startup I work at or start that needs help filing taxes. Plus taxes have always intrigued me, so why not learn it? (Hey if you're an accountant and reading this, or if you have a friend that's an accountant, email me! sdpurtill at gmail dot com)

Remember: faithful in little, faithful in much
All these little things ended up costing an extra 500-1500 in overhead every month, which could have added up to almost $10,000 by the end of the year. This could have been saved and/or invested had I been wiser. At least I am learning my lesson while still young.

Wising everyone the best of luck with their finances in 2009, it’s going to be a rough year, but we’ll all make it.

If you’re giving yourself a “Personal Economic Stimulus Package” in 2009, leave a note in the comments below about what you’re doing – I’d love to hear about it.

Filed under: Advice, Life, Money 5 Comments
2Jan/091

…And we’re back!

I've had some ups and downs with WordPress over the last few months, but finally I figured out how to upgrade WordPress and made a few changes on the 31fps server. Things are back to normal, and it's 2009!

One of my co-workers posted a great article about the psychology of New Years resolutions on Facebook a few days ago. I have a big year to look forward to and am very happy with how 2008 went; it was definitely the funnest, most rewarding year of my life so far. Some of the things I'm looking forward to doing in 2009:

  • Traveling to 2 (maybe 3) countries. Hopefully South Africa will be one of them
  • Speaking on the programming panel of Teens in Tech in a few weeks
  • Staying away from red meat
  • Skiing more than I did in 2008 (I only went 5 times last year)
  • Trying the craziest sounding food on the menu of every restaurant I go to (I started doing this near the end of 2008, you actually learn a lot about food this way)
  • Going with Africa Mission Alliance on a mission trip to Rwanda (July)
  • Finishing 12 books; trying to average at least once a month
  • 20 (hopefully more) Giants games in the Spring and Summer

Of course there are a lot more things I'm looking forward to, some I can't remember, and some I can't write, but I think 2009 will be able to outdo 2008 by a long shot. One thing I did realize is there's nothing really important going on this year -- no Olympics, no World Cup, no big wars so far, and everyone's broke, so it feels a lot gloomier than the start of 2008 did. I'm sure the media will find something interesting to report on, they always do.

I've got the list of people I want to meet in 2009 coming soon... Last year's list was fun to make. This year I'll put it in order of how much I want to meet them (last year I put it in alphabetical order).

Hope everyone had a fun and safe New Years!

Filed under: Life 1 Comment
   

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