I still have my $120 fridge from like 2010-2011ish back when Sears was a thing and it's still going without any issues. Zero maintenance ever needed thus far.
No ice maker in it, and the freezer part is on top like in the pic. Apparently if the freezer is on the side instead of on top, those break down way more often.
Yes. Unfortunately, we're stuck with it. No voting people in or out of the system have changed it. No, we're not content with it, and we're envious that other places don't have to deal with this. This isn't an endorsement of voter apathy, it's just that any politician using big pharma reform as a part of their campaign are lying or unsuccessful in their efforts.
When I worked with a lot of legal documents, we just used DocuSign mostly. Have you attempted that on Linux? Not sure what it's like these days, also curious if it's because it's a web application if it works the same.
This is the answer - Only salaried jobs are 9-5, otherwise you get an unpaid lunch which adds 30m-1h to the time range. These days, salaried jobs also try to exploit making you work outside of these time ranges...regularly.
I've had direct deposit at every job I've worked for over a decade. Before then, I only had one job that didn't offer it, though I had friends with jobs that did have direct deposit. Very common to have it these days. Some jobs can even get you direct deposit for the amount you worked that very same day, so I'd work 8 hours and by the time I get home, I'd have my pay from that day, and it's like that everyday.
Looked into it some more - I can move money to an external account via the app at no cost, but a "wire transfer" needs to be performed in person or over the phone with my bank, and there is a $20 fee. Not sure what the difference is besides the name and how the banks are handling it, but it's the same thing. I can send money to someone at the same or a different bank/credit union for free and without relying on third party apps. Will edit my comment.
FTFY. Yawn.