Woman In Connecticut Receives $42,000 Bill From Verizon

verizon signWhen we receive our phone bills every month, perhaps we are looking at a bill to the tune of maybe under $100, or more if you have a family or business to run. However it isn’t very often that we see bills for a whopping $42,427.21 which is what a woman in Connecticut received from Verizon, and no it was not a mistake.

Usually bills this high is indicative of a mistake in the system, but in this case all the charges are accounted for. Basically the woman had allowed her friend to use her number, but the deal is that her friend had to pay the bills every month. Unfortunately the friend decided to skip town and let her holding the bag to the tune of a bill over $42,000.

Apparently the reason why the bill managed to get so high was because the friend had placed a ton of calls to overseas numbers including the UK, France, Italy, and Africa. So why didn’t the woman receive any notifications from Verizon about the ever-ballooning bill? Her friend had somehow managed to convince Verizon that he was her husband and that he would be managing the account.

Thankfully Verizon decided that they weren’t going to charge her the full amount and has since written most of it off, save for $4,200. According to Mike Murphy, a spokesman for Verizon, “As the account owner, [Jane] was reminded multiple times that she could remove anyone from her account at anytime for any reason. [Jane] repeatedly declined to remove an individual from her account as was her choice, which we of course respected.”

Woman In Connecticut Receives $42,000 Bill From Verizon , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Microsoft’s Newly Launched Outlook App Overtakes Gmail On iTunes

Outlook-App-Charts1-592x1024As some of you guys might have heard, just yesterday Microsoft announced that they would relaunching the Acompli email app as a rebranded version of Outlook. The app was launched for both iOS and Android and as it turns out, it looks like the app is a hit, so much so that it has managed to displace the likes of the official Gmail app from Google.

The app has also managed to become one of the top 15 free apps in the US iTunes App Store at the moment, which is actually a pretty big deal and great exposure for Microsoft. Also considering that the app allows for multiple accounts which includes Outlook, Exchange, and Gmail, we wouldn’t be surprised if Gmail users decided to make the switch so as to better manage their accounts.

For those who are hearing about this for the first time, back in 2014 Microsoft announced that they had acquired Acompli to the tune of $200 million. Many were curious as to what Microsoft had planned for the app back then, but the launch of the app which has since been rebranded to Outlook is pretty telling.

Microsoft had also stated the other day that they are planning on making some changes and improvements to the app, so while it does look and feel like Acompli for now, eventually Microsoft will be putting their own spin and take to it which we can only hope is for the better. Those interested in checking it out can download it via the iTunes App Store or Google Play.

Microsoft’s Newly Launched Outlook App Overtakes Gmail On iTunes , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Aziz Ansari's new Netflix stand-up special debuts March 6th

If you’re a big fan of comedy specials that are unique Netflix, the latest from the man behind Parks and Recreation’s Tom Haverford is on the way. On March 6th, Aziz Ansari: Live at Madison Square Garden will premiere at 12:01 AM PT. The title is ano…

HTC: We can’t meet our 90-day deadline for Android Lollipop

htc-one-m8-sg-5-600x375When Android Lollipop hit AOSP, HTC was quick to announce they’d be updating their handsets within 90 days. In fact, they were the first OEM to give themselves a deadline for Lollipop, saying “We have the Android Lollipop code. We’ll be updating the HTC One (M8) & (M7) within 90 days form today.” That was November 3. As February draws … Continue reading

Marriott un-blocks Wi-fi, promises to behave

marriottAfter being scolded by the FCC for blocking Wi-Fi signals inside their own hotels, the Marriott International have responded with a begrudging agreement. In addition to Marriott Rewards members receiving free Wi-Fi starting on the 15th of this month (earlier this month, that is), the Marriott will no longer block Wi-Fi signals from 3rd party sources. This means that if … Continue reading

Rumor: Apple asks for Apple Watch-friendly iOS app early

apple-watch-hands-600x378Now that we have a better idea of when the Apple Watch will come to us via the Apple Store, some interesting news has leaked regarding apps for the Apple Watch. The last time we discussed Apple Watch’s handshake with the iPhone, we found Developers were getting the ability to create notifications, but not much more. A quick run-through of … Continue reading

Senators Propose Bills Curbing Taxpayer-Funded Oil Portraits For Cabinet Officials

Someone get Chuck Hagel a frame for his government ID card. If some members of Congress get their way, that might be the only official portrait taxpayers will pay for.

This week the Senate introduced not one but two new bills that would ban federal spending on traditional oil portraits for cabinet-level officials.

On Thursday night, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) reintroduced the Responsible Use of Taxpayer Dollars for Portraits Act, which would cap federal spending on oil portraits at $20,000 and limit such portraits to those in line for the presidency.

Several hours after Shaheen announced her legislation, Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) introduced a bill that would ban taxpayer spending on all oil paintings for anyone in Congress and the executive branch.

“Tax dollars should go to building roads and improving schools — not oil paintings that very few people ever see or care about,” said Cassidy in a press release.

Federal agencies for decades have commissioned portraits of department heads, but the practice has faced increased scrutiny in recent years. In 2008, the Washington Post reported that an official portrait can carry a hefty price tag, sometimes up to $50,000. And when the Washington Times tried to photograph one, they were told that the portrait was unavailable for public viewing.

“Taxpayers shouldn’t pay for a portrait that costs more than many Americans make in a year,” said Shaheen in a press release.

Similar bills have been proposed in the past. Cassidy sponsored his Eliminating Government-Funded Oil-Painting Act (or “EGO” for short) as a member of the House in 2013. That legislation passed but went nowhere in the Senate. Shaheen’s bill didn’t even make it out of committee when it was first proposed two years ago.

But those failures haven’t stopped Congress from restricting portraiture, as the last two federal budgets have specifically barred federal spending for portraits of executive branch officials.

The lack of public funding has meant that officials have had to turn to other funding sources for their portraits. The president’s portrait is paid for by generous private donors, as are the portraits of House committee chairs that continue to adorn the walls of (some) committee chambers, looking down on their successors and occasionally inspiring awkward feuds.

15 Upgrades That'll Have You Eating Like a Champ on Game Day (VIDEO)

Take out pizza is cool, but when you have guests over for some football there’s no hurt in going the extra yard (heh) in treating them well.

We’ve put together 15 awesome twists on the basic parts of your viewing parties, ranging from your serving options, entertainment and most importantly: the food.

Why make a normal batch of marshmallow crispy treats when you can use a football mold to create a GIANT FOOTBALL? Why serve square or circle pizza when you can shape it like a football?

Even better, how about you ditch that plain white fold out table you’re serving everything on and make a table with real turf, that looks like a mini football field? When you’re done stuffing your face, you can push everything off that sucker and play yourself some paper football. Check it out:

Paper Football Serving Table:

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Football Pizza:

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Football Marshmallow Treat:

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Written by Geoffrey Kutnick of Foodbeast.com

In DC, Each Education Challenge Represents an Opportunity to Innovate

The Aspen Challenge — launched by the Aspen Institute and the Bezos Family Foundation — provides a platform, inspiration, and tools for young people to design solutions to some of the world’s most critical problems by engaging with leading global visionaries, artists, and entrepreneurs. District of Columbia Public Schools (DCPS) will send teams from several schools to compete with each other to present their solutions at the Aspen Ideas Festival. Here, DCPS Chancellor Kaya Henderson discusses how the Challenge prepares students to be leaders and problem-solvers.

Everywhere I go, in every part of the country, I share stories about the amazing young people in the District of Columbia Public Schools. The students we serve come from every ward and every neighborhood. Their circumstances and background reflect our diverse city, but also a city that still has its challenges to overcome. We have made tremendous strides as a city, and especially as a school district, but challenges remain, and we are working to address them. As chancellor, I have never backed down from a challenge in this job — in fact, I take them head on.

Challenges are a great place to find opportunity, and our students know this better than anyone. Whether it is the young men and women at Cardozo Education Campus, who designed their own app to address attendance concerns, or the students at Eaton Elementary School, who lobbied our City Council to officially name a state rock after they realized the District did not have one, these students are determined and focused. It is a grit and perseverance I am confident will be on full display over the coming weeks as our students embark on the DC Aspen Challenge.

Thanks to the vision and commitment of our partners at the Aspen Institute and the Bezos Family Foundation, our students will be among the earliest school districts in the country to participate in this important competition. It is their time to shine and to show the nation what I see in them every single day as chancellor. Where adults can be jaded, defeated, or bogged down, our young people are problem-solvers, quick thinkers, and bold. I’m incredibly excited to see them tackle issues that affect all of us today, whether that’s STEM or peace-building, poverty or international understanding.

With the eyes of the nation squarely on us during these next seven weeks, our students will hone in on solutions to the greatest challenges facing our country. They will work to eliminate barriers and increase opportunities. It won’t be the first time DCPS students will receive acclaim from across the country. When the Nation’s Report Card came out, it showed DC students made the greatest achievement gains of any other urban school district. The warm glow of the spotlight is exciting for our students, I am confident they will be amazing! And, I am eager to see the avenues they pursue. I have reminded them that best solutions come through collaboration, conversation, and community. It is a lesson we have all learned as a district — and nowhere is this more true or clear than in our schools and the classrooms of our great educators, where our students spend the majority of their days.

Just as the Aspen Challenge spells out seven of the nation’s most pressing needs, we too in the district are aware of the areas where targeted resources can make a huge difference. In fact, this month, we announced a $20 million initiative to help improve outcomes for male students of color, where a large achievement gap still persists. Yes, this is a challenge, but it is also an opportunity. With the right thinking, and the right effort, and a community working together, solutions are clear.

We have set the tone in the district over the past several years with a motto of “we are DCPS and we can do this.” Over the coming weeks, our students will take the Aspen Challenge head on, and I am going to be squarely in their corner cheering them on.

'But Aren't All Babies High Needs?'

Many of us grow up with dreams of what life will be like with a new baby. As a child, we may have stuffed a pillow in our shirts and imagined what it must feel like to be pregnant (not me, of course, but SOME people). We pushed our baby dolls around in the stroller and picked her up from time to time to soothe her imaginary cries.

What we don’t count on, however, is eventually having a baby (a real one) who doesn’t settle when we hold her. Who grunts, and groans and fights her feedings. Who isn’t soothed by mom or dad’s cuddles or carrying. Who, by all appearances, seems to hate us; at least that’s how it feels.

No, this doesn’t quite fit with our childhood fantasies of parenting.

As adults, we somehow imagine that as long as we read the baby books and are loving, responsive parents, our babies will stop crying and be content.

And yet, despite our best efforts, our child doesn’t always calm when we hold him. We would do anything — literally, anything — to get him to sleep, and yet he fights sleep harder than we could have imagined possible.

When he’s awake (which is most of the time), he’s grumpy, unsettled and has very clear ideas of what he wants — or more accurately, what he doesn’t want.

What calms and soothes her one day doesn’t work the next. Just when you think you’ve figured out that one trick that will get her to sleep, that trick stops working.

Feedings are a nightmare. You always imagined sitting in a rocker with your newborn, gently rocking and feeding her until she very calmly… very gently… closed her eyes and fell asleep. The reality however, is very different. She arches her back, clutches her tiny fists and screams in between frantic sucking. She bobs off and on, and seems ravenously hungry. Yet the food seems to simultaneously nourish and pain her.

When you’ve finally managed to get him to sleep, he wakes up 5, 10 or 20 minutes later, grumpy as ever, and so obviously in need of sleep. And yet, because it took you an hour or more to get him to sleep, you give up on trying again.

Besides the obvious physical toll, emotionally, you’re falling apart. Your family and friends, while obviously well-intentioned, make comments like:

You need to set limits now or she’ll become spoiled and think she’s the boss.

She’s just feeding off your anxiety (because surely, it couldn’t be the other way around).

She’s so needy because you’ve taught her to be this way (through co-sleeping/baby wearing/holding her all the time).

And when you try to explain what life has been like for you… the constant crying and fussing… the unnaturally long periods of time without sleep… the emotional and physical toll parenting has taken on you….

And you try to explain to them, in the only way you know how, that your baby is ‘high needs,’ they tell you:

But all babies are high needs!

And all your struggles, all your frustrations and all your exhaustion are dismissed with that one, short sentence.

The natural implication is that if your baby is just like every other baby out there, there must be something wrong with YOU.

Is it that you just can’t hack this parenting thing? Maybe you have unrealistic expectations of how babies behave. Or maybe everyone is right, and you’ve somehow made your baby this way.

The guilt and second-guessing are never-ending. Yet, deep down, you know that this isn’t your fault. You noticed very early on that your baby was more particular, more sensitive and more intense than other babies. Before the effects of your parenting could possibly have ‘made’ her this way.

Everything you’ve done to this point — the constant holding, nursing and carrying — have been done in a desperate (yet often futile) attempt to soothe your fussy baby.

You respond with lightning speed to her cries, because you know that if you don’t, the crying will just escalate out of control.

You wear her in a sling or wrap 20 hours a day, not because you love having a squirmy, sweaty baby attached to you every waking moment, but because it’s the only way you can possibly get anything done.

You avoid hardline discipline strategies because you know they won’t work for your spirited toddler; you’re not “giving in”; you’re trying to parent in a way that actually works for your child.

If you’ve never had a high needs baby, you may still be saying, “But, all babies are high needs!” However, if you’ve had a non-sleeping, grumpy, crying, discontent baby, you know that not all babies are like this.

And let me be the one to tell you that while all babies need our love, nurturing and responsive presence. NOT all babies are high needs. And it’s a good thing they’re not, given how many parents I talk to refuse to have any more kids following their high needs child!

You didn’t make your child this way. It isn’t because of anything you did or didn’t do. Some kids are more sensitive, more perceptive and more intense than others.

Now it’s up to you to parent in a way that respects your child’s unique temperament, while also keeping yourself sane. When people criticize you or give you unwanted advice, smile and nod, and remind yourself you’re doing what you need to do.

As your baby gets bigger and he learned new skills, he’ll get easier, and parenting will start to become more enjoyable (trust me… it really does happen!)

In the meantime, keep soldiering on, and do what you need to do to survive!

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Holly Klaassen is the founder of The Fussy Baby Site, a support site for parents of fussy, colicky and high need babies and toddlers. She’s also the author of Sleep Training and High Need Babies, a guilt-free guide to which sleep training/learning methods work (and don’t work) for our sensitive, high need kiddos.