Know the Tax Differences Between a Home Repair and Home Improvement

Know the Tax Differences Between a Home Repair and Home Improvement

We homeowners love all the tax breaks the IRS gives us. When we make improvements to our home, we can use those expenses to offset some taxes when selling. Home repairs, unlike improvements, aren’t deductible at time of sale though. Here’s a quick way to know which costs you can deduct.

Over at Don’t Mess with Taxes, they explain the differences:

For work on a personal piece of real estate to have any tax value, it must add to the property’s value or prolong its life. These are classified as home improvements.

You and I likely will argue that a working kitchen faucet does indeed add value to our homes, but the Internal Revenue Service is unpersuaded in this area.

Instead, the federal tax man says general upkeep tasks like my faucet repair simply keep or return a home to its original good condition, rather than qualify as tax-reducing improvements to the residence.

Tax-saving capital improvements have to last for more than one year and add value to your home, prolong its life, or adapt it to new uses.

We’d like to deduct everything we think adds value to our home, but the IRS disagrees. You’ll need to consult a tax advisor to know for sure, but this is a good rule of thumb to help understand the difference.

Tax differences between home repairs & home improvements | Don’t Mess With Taxes

Photo by Karin Dalziel.


via Lifehacker
Know the Tax Differences Between a Home Repair and Home Improvement

MyNoise Customizes Background Noise to Your Hearing

MyNoise Customizes Background Noise to Your Hearing

iOS/Web: Not everyone likes a quiet workspace. Some of us prefer to have a little background noise. We’ve covered many online noise generators in the past, but MyNoise is different: it calibrates background noise based on your hearing range and listening devices.

Each of us hears slightly differently, so myNoise lets you configure the app after going through a quick hearing test. Once you tell it the smallest threshold you can hear in each range, it remembers the settings. The iPhone app lets you configure the sound levels based on location like a noisy plane or a busy coffee shop.

I’ve tested it for a few weeks and I like that my headphones at my desktop block out more sound than my portable earbuds. I’ve even used it at night to help me fall asleep along with my SleepPhones. Check it out at the link below.

myNoise noise machines | myNoise.net


via Lifehacker
MyNoise Customizes Background Noise to Your Hearing

SOMEBODY, PLEASE, TELL ME WHAT THIS SAYS

Wrecky minion Lauren sent in today’s cookie cake with a single, desperate plea:

"Tell me what this means!!"

And while I agree that it appears to be some kind of secret hieroglyphic code – no doubt used to communicate government secrets to fondant sympathizers – I honestly have no clue what it says.

So help me out, peeps:

My best guess?

Carrots seize (seas) the G3 checkpoint.

(Aha! Maybe someone is calling the Carrot Jockeys to action?)

 

And while you’re at it, can somebody PLEASE tell me what this is?

Because all I see is a bleeding rain cloud. Or maybe a bleeding frozen brain. Oh! Oh! Could it be Frozen/ Walking Dead cross-over? DARE TO DREAM, PEOPLE.

 

Thanks to Lauren & Anonymous for finding either awesomely clever cake puzzles, or the world’s most fiendish decorator trolls. (That bleeding thing is almost $34. THIRTY FOUR DOLLARS!)

*****

Thank you for using our Amazon links to shop! USA, UK, Canada.


via Cake Wrecks
SOMEBODY, PLEASE, TELL ME WHAT THIS SAYS

Smartphones Turn These Masks Into Incredible Animated Halloween Costumes

Smartphones Turn These Masks Into Incredible Animated Halloween Costumes

Proving that sometimes all it takes is a popular YouTube video to kickstart a successful business, Mark Rober, the guy who made the gaping hole in your gut costume using two iPads a few years ago, is back with even more easy but impressive costume ideas. And that includes a line of Halloween masks that come to life with nothing but a smartphone running a free app.

Last year the Digital Dudz line was improved with shirts featuring built-in velcro pockets that made it easy to insert a smartphone to bring the tee’s design to life. This year the pockets have been re-engineered to accept today’s larger more full-figured smartphones like the iPhone 6 Plus, and Marvel has given the thumbs up for a couple of Iron Man and Captain America designs that comic book fans are sure to go nuts over.

But it’s the addition of a line of rubber Halloween masks with animated features courtesy of your smartphone that should have the masses scrapping their stupid half-finished bent iPhone costumes.

Smartphones Turn These Masks Into Incredible Animated Halloween Costumes

Ranging in price from $45 to $60 with a free accompanying app, the masks are a relatively inexpensive way to get yourself a decent Halloween getup before October 31 rolls around. You can even wear them with t-shirts and jeans because people will be too transfixed on the masks’ awesome animated features—like roaming eyeballs, beating brains, or cyborg upgrades—to care what else you’ve got on. They’re perfect for grownups who still have a soft spot for Halloween, but don’t want people to know they just threw a costume together at the last minute. [Digital Dudz]

via Gizmodo
Smartphones Turn These Masks Into Incredible Animated Halloween Costumes

Details of iOS and Android Device Encryption

swillden writes: There’s been a lot of discussion of what, exactly, is meant by the Apple announcement about iOS8 device encryption, and the subsequent announcement by Google that Android L will enable encryption by default. Two security researchers tackled these questions in blog posts: Matthew Green tackled iOS encryption, concluding that the change really boils down to applying the existing iOS encryption methods to more data. He also reviews the iOS approach, which uses Apple’s "Secure Enclave" chip as the basis for the encryption and guesses at how it is that Apple can say it’s unable to decrypt the devices. He concludes, with some clarification from a commenter, that Apple really can’t (unless you use a weak password which can be brute-forced, and even then it’s hard). Nikolay Elenkov looks into the preview release of Android "L." He finds that not only has Google turned encryption on by default, but appears to have incorporated hardware-based security as well, to make it impossible (or at least much more difficult) to perform brute force password searches off-device.

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Details of iOS and Android Device Encryption

Google’s Software Removal Tool Removes Crapware, Resets Your Browser

Google's Software Removal Tool Removes Crapware, Resets Your Browser

We’re no strangers to unwanted toolbars and browser-hijacking malware. Neither is Google. The company has released a tool that helps combat the problem by scanning for bad software and (optionally) resetting your browser if it’s misbehaving.

This Software Removal Tool can be thought of as a last resort, nuclear option for fixing Chrome without completely reinstalling Windows. The app runs in two phases. The first scans your computer for any toolbars or other junk that may have been installed that can affect Chrome. The second step—which can be canceled—offers to uninstall your extensions, reset your browser settings, and clear various cache and cookies.

In most cases, you probably won’t need to use this to fix a simple problem. However, if you frequently find yourself fixing a family member’s computer (and they use Chrome), this tool is a handy do-it-all method of clearing out junk and starting fresh. It’s no substitute for proper security software, but it can definitely help fix many problems in one fell swoop.

Google Software Removal Tool | Google via Ghacks


via Lifehacker
Google’s Software Removal Tool Removes Crapware, Resets Your Browser

Photographer chases the sun in a plane to shoot 24 sunsets in one day

Photographer chases the sun in a plane to shoot 24 sunsets in one day

Photographer Simon Roberts took to the skies above the North Pole to shoot the sunset in each of the Earth’s 24 time zones over the course of 24 hours. Above you see a composite of 24 of the photographs spliced together.

The whole Chasing Horizons project is really an advertisement for Citizen watches. Head over to their site to see how Roberts and his pilot pulled off the stunt. There you an also explore an interactive version of the composite above. Each of those slices expands to a full size image from the project. (You’ll have to scroll through a bit of narrative to get to the goods, but it’s worth it.)

Photographer chases the sun in a plane to shoot 24 sunsets in one day

They flew over the North Pole because the distance between time zones is very short there and the airplane can actually keep up the linear velocity of Earth—while the angular velocity is the same through Earth, the linear velocity changes. At the Equator you would need to fly at more than 1000mph.


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via Gizmodo
Photographer chases the sun in a plane to shoot 24 sunsets in one day

New Ruger 10/22 Compatible Magazines

ZX-10-Compliant-Factory-Mag-3-380Two different companies have some new magazine options for the Ruger 10/22. The first, ZiPFactory (http://ift.tt/1rG6PGV) announced they are featuring their new ZX-30 Series Magazine (http://ift.tt/1vlIUKB). There are four items that make up the product line: Field Upgrade Kit (http://ift.tt/1rG6Nz0) Full High Capacity magazine (standard 20 round which should be legal in MD) 10 and 15 round […]

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The post New Ruger 10/22 Compatible Magazines appeared first on The Firearm Blog.


via The Firearm Blog
New Ruger 10/22 Compatible Magazines