
9 July 2012 | 13 replies
As I recall, the applicants for sec 8 housing had micros, so did applicants for Habitat-for-Humanity homes.

29 November 2012 | 33 replies
Technology will never take the core human element out of the equation, things like: Initiative, leadership (and knowing when to follow), courage, honestly & fairness, good communcation skills/ability to listen, financial literacy, persistence/stick-to-it-tiveness, negotiating, persuasion, tactfulness, and so on.

19 November 2012 | 2 replies
Donate to charity - church, habitat for humanity, nearby school.Let them go for unpaid real estate taxes.Craigslist ad offering free house.

17 December 2014 | 59 replies
We could never actually meet with a human being so we passed on the deal...even a property manager or friend showing up would have sold us.

14 September 2017 | 22 replies
I'm not a human doctor but I am a veterinarian, so I have a pretty good knowledge of the medical field and parasite issues :)The tenant should be examined by their own doctor......

30 March 2018 | 20 replies
I like that you see there is a human side to running this very human business, Treivor.

9 December 2017 | 8 replies
Urea (yes, even concentrated from human urine) is an ammonia compound which can used in bomb-making.Just saying....local authorities might be curious.....

1 May 2017 | 31 replies
I also shopped sales, scratch-n-dent, and package deals for appliances.Found ways to cut corners financially - bought materials from the Habitat for Humanity store, resurfaced damaged/ugly countertops instead of replacing them (Miracle Method), called in favors from handy friends to save on installation/repair, etc.Some things I would have done differently:Use a short-term lender (hard/private money).

8 January 2020 | 28 replies
There's no risk to them (it's on the user) and automated translation is cheap (much cheaper than a human).

5 July 2016 | 72 replies
If its absurd then I'll have to think of something.