Smartphone Privacy Settings You Need To Activate Today

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Default settings are a blessing and a curse. If you haven’t started customizing your devices, it’s great to have the creator-recommended settings to begin with, but these aren’t always in your best interest. Sometimes, they may value features above battery life, or could be sharing your information without explicitly asking you. No matter what mobile platform you’re using, there are some options you should tweak for increased security and privacy. If you’re not used to diving into your phone’s settings, don’t worry! We’ll walk you through how to reach each setting. For All Devices Before we get to the settings…

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Smartphone Privacy Settings You Need To Activate Today

The Best Techniques for Negotiating with Car Dealerships

The Best Techniques for Negotiating with Car Dealerships

Car salespeople have a reputation for trying to squeeze every cent from their customers, and they’re often very good at their jobs. They are experienced negotiators and you need to know how to find leverage to make a deal in your favor.

I was a dealership salesperson and manager for over nine years; here are a few tips and tactics I learned along the way that car salespeople might not want you to know.

Don’t negotiate. Tell the salesperson and sales manager that you’ll sign the paperwork the minute they hit your target figure. Politely decline any counter-offers, give them your phone number, and leave. If the price you’ve proposed is within the realm of possibility, they’ll call you at some point.

Know what a car is worth. If you’re buying a new car, Edmunds.com and TrueCar.com provide "true market" estimates that are reasonably accurate. If you’re buying a used car, KBB.com is a great resource, as it will tell you both the retail value and wholesale (aka trade-in) value.

Follow up on Saturday or Sunday nights an hour before closing time. Call and ask to speak with the salesperson or manager you’ve spoken to before. Remind them you’ll be a buyer when they meet your figure, but that they shouldn’t waste your time if they won’t or can’t.

If your offer is possible, the opportunity to do one more deal before the end of the day might compel them to work with you, especially if the dealership is having a bad weekend.

Follow up on the last day of the month. Again, salespeople and managers are often under pressure to find one more deal before the month ends. A deal that didn’t make sense on the 25th might make sense on the 31st if the month hasn’t met expectations.

Follow up on days that have had terrible weather. A major snowstorm, a day of wind and rain, or other bad weather can dramatically affect car sales because less people will be visiting the dealerships. Call and remind the salesperson or manager that you’re happy to come down when they meet your offer. Again, the fact that they’re not selling cars might get them to bend in your favor.

Rinse, wash and repeat. Do the same process concurrently with a couple of other dealers in your area. Make sure they have the car you want, and then give them their mission.

My suggestion is to try and buy a new car for $500-$1000 less than true market value. This is aggressive, but assuming that you’ve got time and you’re willing to work the phone, you can often find a dealership willing to dip into their holdback (financial reserve) to make one more deal.

If you’re buying a used car, I’d try for a 10-15% discount off of wholesale (trade-in) value. It’s damned difficult, but every now and then a dealer will take a car in on trade at below market value. If you make this kind of aggressive offer, you might get it every now and again.

Of course, you can always just offer true market value (new) or wholesale value (used). That will make getting a deal much easier… but what’s the fun in that?

Secure your own financing if you can. A great way to avoid the drama in the finance office is to get a loan from your local credit union. However, if you’re buying a new car and you want to take advantage of a special interest rate (like 0%), you’re going to have to work with the dealership’s finance person.

Quite frankly, I don’t see what the big deal is about going through finance. It’s true that you’re going to be brought into a small room with a very good salesperson, and that he or she is going to pitch you all sorts of stuff. You’re an adult, you can handle it. Be polite, but say no to everything. It’s not personal, it’s just business.

If you’ve got bad credit, the dealership finance office is going to help you out (at least a little bit). However, this doesn’t mean you need to do them a favor and buy a warranty or something…
just say no.

Always be polite. In some of the other answers to this question, I’ve read suggestions about telling the dealer to "take it or leave it," threatening to walk out, etc. This is all bad advice.

There are a lot of things that suck about working at a car dealership, not the least of which is being treated like crap by most of the people you deal with. While dealership employees learn how to "warm customers up"—it usually only takes a minute or two to get a stranger to laugh and relax a little—it’s emotionally draining.

Therefore, when someone starts dictating terms and making threats, most salespeople and sales managers will respond aggressively. It’s human nature. Instead of finding a way to make a deal, you’ll be told to wait an hour because someone is "on the phone with Japan" (see Leonard Kim’s advice about this).

Therefore, be nice and respectful to everyone you deal with. If you’re a genuinely nice person, I’m far more likely to do something unusual for you (like selling a car for less than invoice) than I am if you’re a grade AAA jerk.

What’s more, dealerships are now frequently paid on their overall customer satisfaction scores. Polite and courteous customers are far more likely to give a dealership a positive review, and dealers know it. A dealer’s worst-case scenario is to cheap sell a car to someone who gives them a lousy review on the manufacturer’s satisfaction survey. Not only did you fail to make money, but you get yelled at by the manager or owner for doing a bad job.

In closing, the downside to my process is that you might have to buy a car late on a weekend or maybe during a blizzard, but you’ll get the price you want (or at least get closer than you ever thought possible).

Good luck!

What are the best bargaining techniques when buying a car from a dealer? originally appeared on Quora. You can follow Quora on Twitter, Facebook, and Google+.

This answer has been edited for grammar and clarity.


Image by Bplanet (Shutterstock).

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The Best Techniques for Negotiating with Car Dealerships

This is what happens when you give McDonald’s to organic food “experts”

This is what happens when you give McDonald's to organic food "experts"

"What happens when you serve McDonald’s food to some experts and pretend it’s a new organic meal?" ask Sacha and Cedrique. To answer this question they went to a organic food fair in Houten, Netherlands, armed with disguised McNuggets and Big Macs. You can imagine what happens—or just watch their video:

Make sure to turn close captioning. It’s in English. Go to the 2:20 mark to see the experts verdict about how much better this organic food is than McDonald’s.


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This is what happens when you give McDonald’s to organic food “experts”

This is the trailer for Avengers 2: Age of Ultron and it looks amazing

This is the trailer for Avengers 2: Age of Ultron and it looks amazing

Comicbook Resources got the trailer for Avengers: Age of Ultron, apparently leaked early by Movieweb, and now it appears it has leaked everywhere. It’s narrated by Ultron (James Spader), and features all the team members—plus the much anticipated Iron Man’s Hulkbuster armor.

The trailer has an April 2015 release date, so it’s probably the international version.

via Gizmodo
This is the trailer for Avengers 2: Age of Ultron and it looks amazing

BitTorrent Performance Test: Sync Is Faster Than Google Drive, OneDrive, Dropbox

An anonymous reader writes Now that its file synchronization tool has received a few updates, BitTorrent is going on the offensive against cloud-based storage services by showing off just how fast BitTorrent Sync can be. More specifically, the company conducted a test that shows Sync destroys Google Drive, Microsoft’s OneDrive, and Dropbox. The company transferred a 1.36 GB MP4 video clip between two Apple MacBook Pros using two Apple Thunderbolt to Gigabit Ethernet Adapters, the Time.gov site as a real-time clock, and the Internet connection at its headquarters (1 Gbps up/down). The timer started when the file transfer was initiated and then stopped once the file was fully synced and downloaded onto the receiving machine. Sync performed 8x faster than Google Drive, 11x faster than OneDrive, and 16x faster than Dropbox.

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BitTorrent Performance Test: Sync Is Faster Than Google Drive, OneDrive, Dropbox

Get your Mac online anywhere easily with OS X Yosemite’s new Instant Hotspot iPhone tethering feature

One of the new Continuity features between iOS 8 and OS X Yosemite is Instant Hotspot, giving users the ability to automatically connect to the Internet through their iPhone’s cellular data connection without the need to touch their phone.
via AppleInsider – Frontpage News
Get your Mac online anywhere easily with OS X Yosemite’s new Instant Hotspot iPhone tethering feature

28 Geeky Jack-o-Lanterns You Can Carve This Halloween

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The season of spooks has snuck up on us, but there’s still time to carve out your pumpkins if you haven’t done so already. Last year we brought you 14 awesome jack-o-lantern ideas to help you express your geeky side. Well, this year we’ve got 28 more ideas for you to explore. If you’ve never put knife to pumpkin before, why not give it a try this year? It’s a ton of fun and easier than you think. Just make sure you keep safety in mind and you’ll be all right. How To Carve A Jack-o-Lantern The carving process can…

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28 Geeky Jack-o-Lanterns You Can Carve This Halloween

Google Just Released Hundreds of Cool Icons That You Can Use For Free

Google Just Released Hundreds of Cool Icons That You Can Use For Free

As part of its Material Design project, Google has published a set of lovely icons, designed for use in mobile apps or whatever else you fancy using them for. And they’re free!

Just published to Github, there are 750 of the neatly designed icons. They’ll fit nicely in Android, but you could use the for anything, really. They’re available under a CC-BY-SA Creative Commons license, so you can do whatever you want with them. [Github via Kottke]

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Google Just Released Hundreds of Cool Icons That You Can Use For Free

Safari and Spotlight Can Send Data to Apple, Here’s How to Turn it Off

Safari and Spotlight Can Send Data to Apple, Here's How to Turn it Off

In order for Spotlight to work properly, it needs to send your search data to Google, Apple, and Bing. Initially, it seems easy enough to disable this if you care about privacy, but as users over on Hacker News note, it’s not as obvious as it seems.

When you’re using your Mac with all the default settings, anything you search for in Safari or Spotlight gets sent to Apple along with whatever search engine it’s pinging. It’s not totally clear why your data needs to go to Apple, but that certainly makes searching with a search engine like DuckDuckGo slightly pointless. To turn all this stuff off and get a bit of privacy back you’ll need to disable two settings:

  • Disable Spotlight Suggestions and Bing Web Searches. Head to System Preferences > Spotlight > Search Results and uncheck those two boxes.
  • Disable Safari’s Spotlight Suggestions. Head to Safari > Preferences > Search and uncheck Spotlight Suggestions.

From the look of it, a number of processes in Yosemite are phoning home to Apple, but it’s not totally clear why. For now, disabling Spotlight seems to cover the biggest suspected privacy intrusion. Check out logs on GitHub and the threads on Hacker News for more info.

In Yosemite, all Safari Web Searches… | GitHub via Hacker News
E.T. Phone Home | GitHub via Hacker News


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Safari and Spotlight Can Send Data to Apple, Here’s How to Turn it Off