Plan to save money for new PC in three years.

whm1974

Diamond Member
Jul 24, 2016
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I have a 24 oz container about a quarter of of change and other one of the same type half full with food(stale?). My plan is save up any change and once both of them are full or three years passes, and cash in the change for building a new system. I will going back to school so working part time is out of the question.

Any thoughts?
 

Ken g6

Programming Moderator, Elite Member
Moderator
Dec 11, 1999
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I don't get the food thing. o_O

Anyway, my credit union has a change sorting machine, like CoinStar, but free. You might look for a financial institution with one of those.
 

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
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I so rarely use cash that it would probably take me 10 or 20 years to fill up 3 of those cans with change. In fact...it might never happen.
 

whm1974

Diamond Member
Jul 24, 2016
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I don't get the food thing. o_O

Anyway, my credit union has a change sorting machine, like CoinStar, but free. You might look for a financial institution with one of those.
The second jar is half empty and I'm of dumping the food left since I don't I remember when I brought it.
 

lxskllr

No Lifer
Nov 30, 2004
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Spend the change, and replace it with dollar bills. IOW, take four quarters out, replace with $1. Dealing with large amounts of change is a PITA.
 

whm1974

Diamond Member
Jul 24, 2016
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Spend the change, and replace it with dollar bills. IOW, take four quarters out, replace with $1. Dealing with large amounts of change is a PITA.
With dollar bills I would be more likely to spend them instead of saving them. And besides I get a fair amount of loose change anyway.
 

Paladin3

Diamond Member
Mar 5, 2004
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My daughter is a business accounting major finishing up her 3rd year of college. She will graduate with zero debt, and both attends school and works full time. Her GPA is something like 3.85+ last I looked.

Your assertion that "working even part time is out of the question" seems false. If you have time to worry about a new computer you have time to work and earn one.
 
Nov 8, 2012
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My daughter is a business accounting major finishing up her 3rd year of college. She will graduate with zero debt, and both attends school and works full time. Her GPA is something like 3.85+ last I looked.

Your assertion that "working even part time is out of the question" seems false. If you have time to worry about a new computer you have time to work and earn one.

Your "My child is better than yours" e-peen increases +2
 

whm1974

Diamond Member
Jul 24, 2016
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My daughter is a business accounting major finishing up her 3rd year of college. She will graduate with zero debt, and both attends school and works full time. Her GPA is something like 3.85+ last I looked.

Your assertion that "working even part time is out of the question" seems false. If you have time to worry about a new computer you have time to work and earn one.
First place, I'm on disability due to having Major Depression Disorder and I will going back to school part time so I can at least be able to work part-time.
 

Hugo Drax

Diamond Member
Nov 20, 2011
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Just trying to show I'm not talking out my butt when I say it can be done.

You are making assumptions in regards to the person who started this topic. He pretty much answered this, he has a mental health condition and is on disability. So that probably means he has to deal with some issues that makes it hard for him to do both with no issues.

Computers have gotten so cheap that you should be able to buy a new system within the 3 year period.
 

whm1974

Diamond Member
Jul 24, 2016
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You are making assumptions in regards to the person who started this topic. He pretty much answered this, he has a mental health condition and is on disability. So that probably means he has to deal with some issues that makes it hard for him to do both with no issues.

Computers have gotten so cheap that you should be able to buy a new system within the 3 year period.
Thank You.
 

Paladin3

Diamond Member
Mar 5, 2004
4,933
877
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You are making assumptions in regards to the person who started this topic. He pretty much answered this, he has a mental health condition and is on disability. So that probably means he has to deal with some issues that makes it hard for him to do both with no issues.

Computers have gotten so cheap that you should be able to buy a new system within the 3 year period.
Agreed, which is why I'm going to shut my mouth.
 
Oct 20, 2005
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I don't get the food thing. o_O

Anyway, my credit union has a change sorting machine, like CoinStar, but free. You might look for a financial institution with one of those.

Took me a few reads to understand, but he has 2 jars, with a goal of filling both with coins. One jar is currently empty that he is going to start with, the other jar has food in it which he is going to dump.

The whole food description is completely irrelevant and don't know why OP decided to include that. All he had to say was he was planning filling up 2 jars full of coins and by a new computer in 3 years.
 

Charmonium

Diamond Member
May 15, 2015
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A quarter is 24.26mm x 1.75mm. So it has a volume of (pi)(r^2)(1.75) = 808.9 cu.mm.

1 cu.mm. is equal to 3.3814 x 10^-5 fl.oz. So the volume of 1 quarter is 3.3814 x 10^-5 times 8.089 x 10^2 = 27.35 x 10^-3 or .02735 fl. oz. 24 fl. oz. divided by that = 877.44 quarters.

Divide that by 4 and you get $219.36 worth of quarters per jar.

I don't think that's going to do it.
 
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deadlyapp

Diamond Member
Apr 25, 2004
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A quarter is 24.26mm x 1.75mm. So it has a volume of (pi)(r^2)(1.75) = 808.9 cu.mm.

1 cu.mm. is equal to 3.3814 x 10^-5 fl.oz. So the volume of 1 quarter is 3.3814 x 10^-5 times 8.089 x 10^2 = 27.35 x 10^-3 or .02735 fl. oz. 24 fl. oz. divided by that = 877.44 quarters.

Divide that by 4 and you get $219.36 worth of quarters per jar.

I don't think that's going to do it.
A raspberry Pi in 3 years may have enough power for 2018 level computing ;)
 

whm1974

Diamond Member
Jul 24, 2016
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A quarter is 24.26mm x 1.75mm. So it has a volume of (pi)(r^2)(1.75) = 808.9 cu.mm.

1 cu.mm. is equal to 3.3814 x 10^-5 fl.oz. So the volume of 1 quarter is 3.3814 x 10^-5 times 8.089 x 10^2 = 27.35 x 10^-3 or .02735 fl. oz. 24 fl. oz. divided by that = 877.44 quarters.

Divide that by 4 and you get $219.36 worth of quarters per jar.

I don't think that's going to do it.
The loose change is in addiction to whatever money I save up as well. $440 would just be extra money.
 

DietDrThunder

Platinum Member
Apr 6, 2001
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What kind of computer are you looking for? I've got a barely used Dell laptop with Windows 10 that I bought 18 months ago that you can buy from me for $125 plus shipping. I use my iPad Pro 10.7" for most of my needs, a desktop for other stuff, so I no longer need the laptop.