Friday, October 26, 2018

Chipotle:: get 15% off with cash app, win free burritos for feedback ... or win one occasionally being sneaky

Chipotle is my favorite "fast casual" restaurant. Despite their problems of a couple of years ago
... I never had a personal issue with their food causing me illness and I took advantage of their hyperpromotion giving catering to anybody who got 2 burritos per month in 2016:

Lately on their receipts they've been offering a chance for free burritos for a year for giving feedback at their website set up for this purpose.

And one promotion that I take advantage regularly at Chipotle is their deal giving 15% off for using the Square Cash app debit card, which Cash calls a "boost":

Finally, the sneaky method (that Chipotle should fix!) ... the Cash App's debit card has to be preloaded (via the app) for enough money for what you're about to spend it on. A couple of times recently I've goofed and gotten my burrito and left the counter and only then got the ding on my cell phone:


In neither case was there any notice given from the cashier ... if I'd been doing this intentionally I could have been around the corner and out of the place before anybody had a chance of catching me. (Instead in both cases I added money to my cash app and went back to the counter to have them rerun the transaction.)

I'd think some indication would get flashed at the cashier ... Maybe it is and they just are too busy?

Don't know ... I'll settle for the 15%, but others may not!

Tuesday, October 16, 2018

New York Times (and others!) fumble economics of technology

In a recent article on the zinc-air battery, the New York times says that the breakthrough in cost for this battery is getting it below $100 per kilowatt-hour.


This confusion may come from the NantEnergy website, where there is a typo: they use kWh where they mean kW and journalists apparently including the New York Times, L.A. Times and Associated press all expanded this to kilowatt-hour, which is clearly ridiculous.

The actual average kWh price across the US is 13.5 cents ... and where I live in Washington state, it's more like 9.5 cents.

That point out of the way: if they can really deliver battery storage for $100 per kW, that's terrific; send me 10!


Saturday, October 6, 2018

On being a renter after 17 years of home ownership

I've been a renter for most of my adult life. I've always paid the rent regularly and on time and I've never had a serious issue with the property management.

But recently we sold the house we had been living in for the past 17 years and rented a palatial estate on 20 acres:

The house was built in 2007. The landlady lives in a smaller apartment over a shop across the street on the same property. She's a reasonable person and we've gotten along fine.

But the property management company who's accepting our large rent checks is something else again.

The initial minor conflict we had was over keeping the yard mowed. This place is at the end of a dead-end street and we didn't see any point in keeping it mowed down to the nubs ... and in fact the landlady said she kept it longer ... but the property manager wanted it mowed down to middle-city standards, which one interpretation of the lease required.

I wrote to this person and got a small compromise on this point and we hired a guy several times to mow the place ending a couple of weeks ago.

But we've also had two maintenance requests and those have both been uniquely unsatisfying:



Us: "our refrigerator's icemaker has stopped making ice. Help please!"

Them: "We don't normally fix icemakers. You could just use ice cube trays." [ We just want rent checks and we don't care about your little problems.]

We instead contacted the nice landlady and she got it fixed for us.



Now one of the garage door openers is having a serious problem ... for starts it was bolted not to the stud but just to the drywall and finally pulled out after these 11 years. We happened to have a handy friend over who  reattached it through a board to the stud. But then the whole thing sagged and you can only now open it with the cord and with difficulty.

I went in and paid the rent yesterday and I got the maintenance request in, and I started getting emails from this manager:

"Considering the door had worked and opened and closed with no problem, are you sure that with the amount of items you have in the garage, you did not somehow bend the brackets? " [It must be your fault, stupid!]

I don't know what's behind this sort of reaction; my wife and I aren't the tidiest people around and this manager seems super-tidy. So maybe the reaction is just against that.

Or maybe it's company policy just to resist all maintenance requests until the renter gives up? I don't know.

But I've been dealing with garage door openers since July 1995 and I think I know what I'm looking at and we didn't "somehow bend the brackets."

But we've had it ... I don't know if there are tons of potential renters out there for this high-priced place; I'd think that since we are regular on time payers we might get a little more help and respect ...