Mums Finance

Finance is in the eye of the consumer

Copyright (c) 2006-2007 Wendy Reid.

Archive for January, 2008

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I think we have all been in this situation at least once; you decide to purchase, for example, a computer or a home entertainment system from one of those well known electrical retail outfits. You have either decided yourself, or been persuaded to, finance the purchase using a finance package and pay off the item in instalments. Very often a good idea, especially if you wish to establish a credit history.

Next thing that happens is almost certainly the sales person will start trying to sell you a PPI - payment protection insurance which is mean’t to cover your repayments in the event of your not being able to work for a period of time due to illness, accident or even unemployment. Most of us have agreed to take out the policy and simply signed on the dotted line without realising that we probably will never qualify to claim on it should the need ever arise. It just appears to be a good idea to take it at the time. You walk away happy and so does the sales person - he/she has just earned themselves a nice bit of commission because you took the PPI.

I signed up for one of these a few years back and found it to be totally useless. Most people do not realise that in the event of any of the unfortunate situations occuring they will get a nasty surprise when they try to make a claim. Result is that you have paid for an insurance policy that you will never be able to use. Now such organisations doing this are the subject to legal action.  The HFC Bank has been fined for misselling these policies. The insurance has been widely criticised for being too expensive and difficult to claim on. Sellers of PPI make massive profits on the product and pay incentives to staff for them to sell it.

PPI is also sold alongside mortgages, loans, credit cards and other finance deals - my advice is not to bother. Institutions are not allowed to refuse your credit application based solely on the grounds of your refusing the insurance. Just like with those useless ‘extended warranties’ that sales staff almost beg you to accept when you buy an iPod for instance. The warranty often costs more that the actual replacement value of the item you are buying so why bother!

Just say no and say it firmly.

Copyright © 2007-2008 by Mums Finance. All rights reserved.

Popularity: 6% [?]

Jan
21

Hitting the buffers with PayPal

Posted by Wendy under Bank accounts

When you sign up with PayPal and opt for just the basic account at the start there is one thing you have to bear in mind and that is that there is a set limit as to how much money your account will process. Two limits actually - a monthly limit and an over-all yearly limit.

I have just recently hit the buffers myself on the monthly limit without realising it - when you have a nice little earner on the side and the payments are clocking up you tend to forget about the fact that your account has that set limit. Net effect is that once you hit the buffers your account gets blocked. Depending on the volume of incoming payments you will get a warning from PayPal and then a series of steps have to be taken. Bear in mind this all has to do with security…they just want to make sure that your payments are coming from legitimate sources and you aren’t a drug dealer or something like that.

They will want you to confirm your address and your bank account. They will phone you or post you some info just to ensure your address is correct and that you actually live there. If you’ve given them some duff details such as regarding where you live you will have to verify other details and they will not give you access to your money until they have been satisfied that all is on the level.

After they are happy with everything chances are that they will advise you to upgrade your PayPal account - this increases your withdrawal limits, but bear in mind this will carry a percentage charge fee by PayPal.

Copyright © 2007-2008 by Mums Finance. All rights reserved.

Popularity: 6% [?]

It’s been ages since we covered the easy way to get your blogging software installed (ie with Fantastico) in part 1 of this guide.

Actually, it’s not that much more difficult to install it yourself. The steps to follow are:

  1. go to www.wordpress.org and download the ZIP version of the software;
  2. whilst that’s downloading, start up Explorer (NOT Internet Explorer) and type in the FTP address that your hosting service gave you along with the password (usually something like ftp.mumsfinance.com);
  3. when the download is complete, double click on the downloaded file which’ll open up a window containing a single folder;
  4. go into that folder, highlight all the contents, click Edit, Copy, then go to your FTP window and click Edit, Paste;
  5. the upload that you started in the previous step will take longer than the download did: allow maybe 20 minutes;
  6. while you’re waiting for the upload to complete, go into the control panel of your hosting service and create an empty database, noting down the database name, username, password, and host that they give you as you’ll need this later. Unfortunately, all hosting services seem to do this database creation in a different way, so you’ll just have to look around for it: it’ll usually be under the heading of “database” or “MySQL database”.
  7. once the upload is complete, you need to copy the file wp-config-sample.php to one called wp-config.php
  8. double click on wp-config.php and change the contents of the first couple of lines to reflect the information you noted down in step 6 then upload this file
  9. your blog is almost ready to go and all you need to do is to open it in your Internet browser. This will tell you that it hasn’t been installed so just click on “install”, then note down the password that you’re given.

And that’s it!

You’ll find that your blog has one post in it “Hello world!” which you can delete.

We’ll be covering configuring the blog later but it’s quite useable at this point.

Copyright © 2007-2008 by Mums Finance. All rights reserved.

Popularity: 8% [?]