Linux Credit Card Re-Launches 178
An anonymous reader writes "The all-new Linux Fund Visa Card launched on July 24th. The Linux Fund began in 1999, and lasted until Bank of America bought MBNA and canceled the program earlier this year. Before that time the fund had distributed $100,000 a year on average. US Bank has inked a new deal to resurrect the program with new features. Currently, the project is open to ideas for supporting well-loved and community-supported software that is underfunded. The current list of supported projects includes Debian, Wikipedia, FreeGeek, Freenode, and Blender."
But how do they select projects? (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:But how do they select projects? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:But how do they select projects? (Score:5, Interesting)
I strongly suggest nomination of the Gimp; it both has enormous potential, and could stand a significant degree of improvement as compared to other graphics mangulators.
Re:But how do they select projects? (Score:5, Funny)
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You don't use image software professionally, do you? Clearly not. With all due respect to all of the fine OSS projects that excell, Gimp is not one of them. It's a giant rat's nest of bloated code. It needs a bottom to top rewrite (in other words, start from scratch). Not a good example. Why do people keep bringing this load of shit up as an example? It's simply not a good one.
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Wikipedia? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wikipedia? (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, while the wiki template is open, large parts of the content are very much not open in any true sense. You can very easily get your IP address banned if some Wikinazi disagrees with your opinion, no matter who knowledgeable or correct your opinion is. Entire countries have had their IP addresses banned. This in not in any way open by my definition.
In addition the relationship with Wikipedia and the for-profit Wikia is not as distinct as anyone claims.
There are a great many open source projects that really benefit the community. There are projects that are struggling and this funding would help them. Wikipedia is not one of them.
Wikipedia shouldn't be funded by anything other than advertising (especially since a significant percentage of its content is already advertising copy anyway), or by donations from those who are so inclined to spend their money that way. I'm sure political parties and NGOs would cough up something for ensuring their views continue to be "freely" expressed. Especially the right-wing ones.
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Also, while the wiki template is open, large parts of the content are very much not open in any true sense. You can very easily get your IP address banned if some Wikinazi disagrees with your opinion, no matter who knowledgeable or correct your opinion is. Entire countries have had their IP addresses banned. This in not in any way open by my definition.
Isn't this a problem with any open source software project? Couldn't Linus decide to ban a particular person or even a whole country? And then, isn't the open source response, "Fork it" ?
Re:Wikipedia? (Score:4, Insightful)
"There are a great many open source projects that really benefit the community. There are projects that are struggling and this funding would help them. Wikipedia is not one of them." - Oh yes, Wikipedia just gets millions of hits per day because it's pure trash, thank you for letting us know that it doesn't help anyone. I do however agree there are lots of deserving projects out there and that's why this credit card program is a great idea. It lets people donate without giving up cash flow. Even if you carry no balance, merchants still pay in the range of 4% to the cc company for the service and part of that fee is what goes to this donation.
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I would like to introduce the Meta-Godwin's Law: Any online discussion will, as long as it goes on long enough, result in someone invoking Godwin's law, be it appropriate or not. The term 'nazi' is currently (and especially in slashdot) just used out of its original context. E.g. calling someone 'a grammar nazi' does not have anything to do with the Holocaust or the eradication of ethnic groups, and does not deserve an invokation of Godwin's law.
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Opinions don't belong in encyclopedias. Facts do. Maybe this is why you've had trouble?
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firefox mozilla (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:firefox mozilla (Score:4, Informative)
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Several advantages (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Several advantages (Score:5, Funny)
I know how mine works and am too frightened to make the change!
Will it be compatible with my existing wallet or will I need to download a third party money clip?
Re:Several advantages (Score:5, Funny)
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As for third party money clips, they are available but some of them are still in beta and were forked because someone decided it should fit twenty notes instead of fifteen.
Rest assured that even if you do have problems after the change then there'll be a kind and helpful community that will
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Important Question (Score:4, Interesting)
Generally speaking, I think people on here pay off their cards and don't get their payments in late. There isn't really much of an incentive for a bank to cater to this crowd... I've had Bank of America credit cards for a couple years, put on around $50K worth of charges, and have paid $0.00 in fees. They don't like me. My parents were actually told that if they kept paying off their monthly bill in full (and thus not allowing any interest to be collected), that their card would be dropped.
But I admittedly don't know that much about the business model of a credit card issuer.
Re:Important Question (Score:5, Insightful)
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Uh huh.
Can somebody mod this guy +1(Has a Clue Bat)?
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Re:Important Question (Score:5, Informative)
If you borrow $1000 from the bank, then the bank basically ends up $10,000 to spend.
Check out: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-90504743
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It's a little more complicated than that. If it were that simple, I'd be opening a bank tomorrow to exploit that loophole.
As it is, the biggest problem I see with the banking system is simply that I don't have a clear understanding of how it works and what the resulting consequences are. Money is pretty important - everyone should be able to have a basic understanding of it, it shouldn't be so complicated that someone who'
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That video doesn't so much present the details as introduce the issue (and hype it as a serious problem). It leaves a number of questions unanswered - specifically: Does a debt currency system actually result in a non-trivial systematic economic unbalance in favor of bankers, or do factors like inflation, publicly held bank stock, and bad debt tend to balance that out in practice? What are the political ramifications of a centrally manged banking system with the amount of government oversight that our syste
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The interest and fees charged to less responsible/capable/cash-flow-endowed/whatever is intended to cover their risk and reduced availability of their own funds.
They make alot (most?) of their money on the per-transaction fees that are charged to the merchants.
Re:Important Question (Score:4, Informative)
For your $50K of charges, your credit card company will have been paid ~ $1000 in fees. The breakdown of that between all the companies involved (Bank Of America, Visa or Mastercard etc) I'm not so sure of. Unless you're constantly ringing up customer services it's fairly certain they will be making a nice profit from your custom.
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To me, it appears credit-cards are designed to milk those who are stupid, or who are unable to control their urges sufficiently to do what is wise rather than what is smart. Zero interest for the first 30-60 days, and thereafter an in
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In the US it seems rather common for people to actually have interest-carrying credit-card debt. Which asfar as I can understand must be an insane thing to do. If you're low on cash, paying 5-10 times the normal interest-rate is the *least* thing you need. So, I guess I just don't get it. Why would anyone ever be paying the insane interest-rates on a typical credit-card ?
You answered your own question: "To me, it appears credit-cards are designed to milk those who are stupid, or who are unable to control t
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What the hell are you talking about?
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Thus the standard advice for all insurance applies: Only get it if you need it. That is, if you cannot afford to cover the potential
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I don't think the rest of your theory holds water. True, credit allows people to pay more *now* for items than they would otherwise be able to. *But* it also forces them to pay less *later* for stuff than they otherwise, because later they'll effectivly have a lower net-income since parts of the income will go to paying interest on stuff they bougth earlier.
I don't see how a person buying a TV for $300
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True, true, the person spending $3000 now, and thereafter paying $100/month spends a bit more this month than he otherwise would. But surely you're not saying that credit-card-use is such a new phenomenon that currently everyone is in this phase. Remember, paying back the $3000 will take him something like 4-5 years at $100, at a total cost in the $5000-$6000 range, this means it only takes 2.5 years for his spendings to neutralise, therafter they drop.
Put differently, compared over
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If I buy a house for $500K, pay $100K with cash and borrow the rest, then my debt jump by $400K, but I'm no poorer than I was before the transaction.
I guess that's why it's so scary to many if the US housing-market crashes. It'll leave many people with the debt, but *without* the value.
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If you are rigth, by the way, you can yourself get rich by putting your money where your mouth is. If, as you say, people "jump ship" after a bad quarter more than is justified from a rational long-term perspective. Then you should make a point of buying stock 2 days after a compan
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If the companys "bad quarter" is in the red, then it depends on how soon they can get back in the black, and the size of their war-coffers. If they're really likeky to go bankrupt before they
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Put differently, the total spendings for USA for 2006 (or any recent year) is *lower* than total earnings for USA for 2006. True true, most other countries have a better saving-rate than you do, but even with you it's still positive.
Some people for sure spend more than they earn, but others earn more than they spend. (generally
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Your official "savings-rate" is somewhat silly, because it is only net-income minus spendings, so it ignores capitalgains. For example, if I have $10K in stocks, which grow to $12K during the year, earn (netto)$50K and spend $51K the so-called "savings-rate" will say I'm at -2%, despite the fact that I'm actually 2% *richer* at the end of the year than I was at the
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You're grossly simplifying things. I use a credit card, and pay off the balance when due. I do this for two main reasons, to build up my credit rati
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Then there is emergency use and remote purchases. I can't say that I would always have enough cash in my chequing account to say tow my car across town and replace the starter. Any extra cash SHOULD be sent over to a savings account (2 day wait for m
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What is stupid is using the card in the way the companies *obviously* hope that you'll use it: in such a way that you have to pay their insane interest-rates. Obviously a lot of people must be doing that, otherwise the credit-card companies would have to revise their business-plan.
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You really have only two choices. Raise income, or cut costs. Probably both. If you're unemployed, odds are you don't *NEED* gas to survive, hell, odds are you don't *NEED* owning a car at all. Sell it. Yes it sucks. But I p
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Generally speaking, I think people on here pay off their cards and don't get their payments in late.
Errm, I wish.
I could go and add up all the charge I have paid on mine over the past year, but it would probably really piss me off and I would rather spend the time down the pub with my credit card behind the bar. Or I could buy some new high tech gadget.
On a more serious note there is something you have overlooked. Credit card companies also make money as a percentage of every transaction. This is charge levelled to the retailer for allowing you to buy something that you might not actually have had the mo
Just get a credit card that gives YOU cash... (Score:2)
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And for us non-USians? (Score:4, Insightful)
Has anyone seen or heard of anything similar for us Europeans?
Why trust them? (Score:5, Insightful)
On their website, they gloss over the past and don't offer a reason why I should trust them again. I'm inclined to believe that new management will help ensure proactive measures are taken, but I'm also tempted to go reward some other charity.
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That is so true. I just checked my desk drawer to see that I still had my Linux Fund card, but I'm totally switched to a rewards card and I'm not likely to change back unless my new company really pisses me off.
Big projects only? (Score:2, Insightful)
So the money goes to projects that already have a big financial supporting community?
Wikipedias fundraiser usually works great, no? So does Freenodes. Blender has been 'bought into freedom'.
So, realistically speaking. How are the chances of small, say 1-5 people, projects getting support to actually be able to have a nice booth at a Linux Fair or similiar?
con job. (Score:4, Interesting)
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Addition to supported projects (Score:1, Funny)
Debt is DUMB. Donate directly--don't use this card (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm also going debunk the "geeks are smart enough to pay off their balance each month" myth. Bullshit. Personal finance is 80% behavior, and only 20% head knowledge. Being smart doesn't mean you'll win. There are plenty of brilliant folks out there that are absolute idiots with their money.
Nathan
Re:Debt is DUMB. Donate directly--don't use this c (Score:2)
Sound good for lunch meeting with microsoft rep. (Score:5, Funny)
Lunch for two, $86
Face on microserf's face when you whip out linux card to pay....priceless
Re:Sound good for lunch meeting with microsoft rep (Score:2)
Microsoft REPS force you to pay for lunch? What is wrong with IT managers today? do they like it in the rear without lube?
My reps better buy me lunch or they dont get in the door a SECOND TIME.
I stoped using mine (Score:5, Interesting)
Linux Fund is good (Score:4, Interesting)
To all those people saying "why give money to LinuxFund, why not donate directly ?", well...go ahead...why don`t you donate to my project ? The fact is that people hardly ever donate at all, and I`d rather have a couple of thousand dollars from LinuxFund in one go, than get $20 a month or whatever through personal donations.
"Variable" interest rate up to (gasp) 21%???? (Score:2)
They add "3.99% to 12.99%" to the prime rate (which, itself, varies).
They don't say how exactly they will decide to "vary" that number... within that very wide range.
All of my past experience suggests... and recent news stories about mortgages ought to reinforce... that anything that called "variable" does, by gosh, vary. If they say they can go up to 12.99% above prime, you can bet your bippy that some fine day they will "vary" it. And of all the numbers in that range
12.24 or 14.24 minimum interest (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, I recognize Pulaski doesn't donate money to Linux, but if you carry a balance, save yourself the money and donate directly to the project you want to support.
If you don't carry a balance and never intend to, these rewards cards are probably just as good as any.
And the link to apply goes to a windows 2K sit (Score:2, Insightful)
Why hide fact that only available in USA? (Score:2)
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I only use them for online purchases as an additional layer of protection. One of the main purchase is hosting. I could buy my Linux hosting on a Linux card :)
:D It's interesting to note how religious trolls relate a lack of religion to a lack of morals. Just because morals are defined by religions doesn't mean that a
As for the GP, I like how their non-religious people get black hoods and robes and basically turn into cultists
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It's interesting to note how religious trolls relate a lack of religion to a lack of morals.
The dialogs posted by the OP are actually mocking christians for having such stupid views about atheism, not mocking atheists for having no morals.
s/christians/self-appointed christian guardians of the Righteous Truth/
s/atheism/atheism, drugs, sexuality, birth control, religious tolerance AND morals/
I corrected it for you, ok? HTH.
But I still have mine (Score:1)
DANGER!!! (Score:3)
"Free money". Don't even think it.
Please tell me you want a new one with a better interest rate so that you can transfer everything off the existing card and close it down. And that you'll have the willpower to actually do the transfer once that nice shiny new card arrives, because it won't work unless you do it immediately and shred the cards, both of them. I tried that a couple of times,
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That's hilarious. So that's why I owe less than the UK average.
I blame myself, actually. But what else is this business about, if it isn't about maximising the amount of interest they can charge? I know far more about this stuff than pretty much everyone I meet, always have - so if I can get into such a mess, what do you
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