User:Devinma
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June 12, 2008
[edit] Camp @ Lot 2008
[edit] Brush
- Weed wacker
- Rake
- loppers
- 2 gal gas
- Lights – power station - Zach's Mag lite
- gloves - 2 pairs
- work clothes
- Zach's boom box needs
- 4 D batteries - Mike p/u
[edit] Camping
- Green tent
- Air mattress
- 2 Sleeping bags
- 2 Lawn chairs
- Camp stove + propane + cooking tools
- Food
- Dinner
- hot dogs
- buns
- ketchup & mustard
- onions & jalepenos
- salad
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- Snacks
- doritos
- beef jerkey
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- Breakfast
- eggs
- bacon
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- Drinks
- oj
- Arizona iced tea - Checkered red raspberry
- small v & b
- 1 gal each
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- Cooler + ice
[edit] Beach
- Trunks
- Something warm
- Sunglasses
[edit] KMS : Raise Questions
1. Prepare a statement of major accomplishments. List your results, achievements, and home runs. Give specific examples with percentages, numbers, facts and figures. Make before-and-after comparisons. Write your goals for next quarter.
2. "I've accomplished more than expected (show accomplishments), and I plan to do even more next quarter (show goals). How do you think the company would feel about paying X-dollars per month (indicating the raise)? That's what others in similar positions are making these days (show market research).
[edit] Stuff
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Openness, Peering, Sharing, and Acting Globally
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Important Features
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This Week's Events:
In the News
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POTD
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2008 Calendar |
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Words and Phrases for e-Commerce
[edit] Acquiring Financial Institution
Merchants must maintain an account with an acquiring financial institution to receive credit for credit card transactions. Daily credit card totals are deposited into the merchant's account minus any fees.
[edit] Address Verification Service (AVS)
AVS verifies the cardholder’s numeric portion of the address and zip code with what is on file with the bank at the time of the transaction.
[edit] Adjusted Balance
A method used by some card issuers in which they subtract all payments made during the month, then add the finance charge.
[edit] Affinity Card
A card offered by two organizations, one a lending institution, the other a non-financial group. Schools, non-profit groups, pro wrestlers, popular singers and airlines are among those featured on affinity cards. Usually, use of the card entitles holders to special discounts or deals from the non-financial group. See also co-branded cards.
[edit] Air Miles
One of the most popular rewards issued by airline-affilliated co-branded cards . Air miles are earned with every use of the card, and then transfered monthly to the card holder's account with that airline.
[edit] Annual Fee
A bank charge for use of a credit card levied each year, which can range from $15 to $300, billed directly to the customer's monthly statement. Many credit cards come without an annual fee.
[edit] Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
The interest rate reflecting the total yearly cost of the interest on a loan, expressed as a percentage rate. Under the federal Truth in Lending Act , it must be calculated in a standard way to allow consumers to make 'apples to apples' comparisons of lending terms.
[edit] Applicant
A person applying for credit privileges, employment or some other benefit.
[edit] Asset
Any thing you own that has value or use.
[edit] Authorized User
Any person to whom you give permission to use a credit card account.
[edit] Average Daily Balance
This is the method by which most credit cards calculate your payment due. An average daily balance is determined by adding each day's balance and then dividing that total by the number of days in a billing cycle . The average daily balance is then multiplied by a card's monthly periodic rate , which is calculated by dividing the annual percentage rate by 12. A card with an annual rate of 18 percent would have a monthly periodic rate of 1.5 percent. If that card had a $500 average daily balance it would yield a monthly finance charge of $7.50. See two-cycle billing.
[edit] Balance Transfer
The process of moving an unpaid credit card debt from one issuer to another. Card issuers sometimes offer teaser rates to encourage balance transfers coming in and balance transfer fees to discourage them from going out.
[edit] Balance Transfer Fee
Fee charged customers for transferring an outstanding balance from one card to another.
[edit] Bankruptcy
The last resort for a borrower. If the borrower has difficulty meeting rent or mortgage payments and is completely extended beyond the credit limit, and the collection agencies are uncooperative, the borrower may need to file for protection. There are two basic ways of filing for personal bankruptcy. A Chapter 7 bankruptcy declaration gets rid of all debts (except some taxes and maybe alimony payments); Chapter 13 allows a borrower with a steady income to pay off bills over a 36- to 60-month period. It's a serious step for a borrower because it severely limits access to credit for years to come.
[edit] Bankruptcy Discharged
A court order terminating bankruptcy proceedings on old debts.
[edit] Bankruptcy Dismissed
A court order that denied one's bankruptcy petition making the debtor still liable for all debts.
[edit] Billing Cycle
The number of days between the last statement date and the current statement date. Also see average daily balance and two-cycle billing.
[edit] Billing Statement
The monthly bill sent by a credit card issuer to the customer. It gives a summary of activity on an account, including balance, purchases, payments, credits and finance charges . Important changes to a credit card account are often included in small-print fliers that are sent with the statement.
[edit] Budget
A financial plan for saving and spending money.
[edit] Card Holder Agreement
The written statement that gives the terms and conditions of a credit card account. The card holder agreement is required by Federal Reserve regulations. It must include the Annual Percentage Rate , the monthly minimum payment formula, annual fee , if applicable, and the card holder's rights in billing disputes. Changes in the card holder agreement may be made, with written advance notice, at any time by the issuer. Rules for imposing changes vary from state to state, but the rules that apply are those of the home state of the issuing bank, not the home state of the card holder. See national issuers.
[edit] Card Security Code (CSC or CVV/2)
This is typically a 3 or 4 digit number on the back of the card, which is separate from the credit card number. CSC CVV/2 is referred to by different names depending on the card association.
[edit] Cash Advance Fee
A charge by the bank for using credit cards to obtain cash. This fee can be stated in terms of a flat per-transaction fee or a percentage of the amount of the cash advance. For example, the fee may be expressed as follows: "2%/$10". This means that the cash advance fee will be the greater of 2% of the cash advance amount or $10. The banks may limit the amount that can be charged to a specific dollar amount. Depending on the bank issuing the card, the cash advance fee may be deducted directly from the cash advance at the time the money is received or it may be posted to your bill as of the day you received the advance. The cost of a cash advance is also higher because there generally is no grace period -- interest accrues from the moment the money is withdrawn.
[edit] CashCards
Cash cards, similar to pre-paid phone cards, contain a set amount of value, which can be read by a special cash card reader. Participating retailers will use the reader to debit the card in increments until the value is gone. The cards are like cash -- they have no built-in security, so if lost or stolen, they can be used by anyone.
[edit] Charge Card
A card that requires a full payment of the charge by the due date. Unlike credit cards, which give borrowers a revolving line of credit and lets them borrow against it, carrying a balance with an agreed-to interest rate , charge cards do not allow carrying a balance and no interest is charged. American Express and Diner's Club are examples of charge cards.
[edit] Classic Card
Brand name for the standard card issued by VISA.
[edit] Closed Account Fee
A fee charged for shutting down an account. Sometimes charged if the account is closed before a certain time period has passed.
[edit] Co-branded Cards
A type of affinity card issued through a partnership between a bank and another retail company. For instance, a large department store may co-brand a card with a bank. The card would have two brand names on it -- the bank's name and the store's name. Usualy, the attraction of the card is special deals with the retail partner. Many -- particularly the ones affilliated with airlines that offer air miles -- are popular enough to command a hefty annual fee.
[edit] Co-Signer
A person who co-signs a credit card application with the primary applicant. The co-signer agrees to be liable for any balance that the primary applicant allows to go into default.
[edit] Collection Agency
A company that will attempt to obtain payment from you. If this happens, your account may be listed as a "collection account" on your credit report. If you do not pay your bill and your card issuer has to go to a collection agency to attempt to obtain payment from you, you may be liable for the cost of the collection agency's services. Check your cardholder agreement to see if your card includes this potential fee.
[edit] Consumer Credit Counseling Service (CCCS)
A service that offers counseling about how to work out a realistic budget and debt repayment plan and work with creditors. The goal is to ensure that debts are paid back over time.
[edit] Credit Bureau (Credit Reporting Agency)
A company that collects and sells information about how people handle credit. It issues credit reports that list how individuals manage their debts and make payments, how much untapped credit they have available and whether they have applied for any loans. The reports are made available to individuals and to creditors who profess to have a legitimate need for the information. The three major national credit bureaus are Equifax , Experian (formerly TRW) and Trans Union .
[edit] Credit Card
A plastic card that with a coded magnetic stripe that, when signed, entitles its bearer to a revolving line of credit , whose size and interest rate are determined by the borrower's income and credit report . Credit cards began in the late '40s when banks began giving out paper certificates that could be used like cash in local stores. The first real credit card was issued in 1951 by Franklin National Bank in New York.
[edit] Credit Insurance
A policy that pays off the card debt should the borrower lose his job, die or become disabled. The structure of protection for a revolving credit card debt is calculated each month to cover only the debt that existed at the last billing cycle.
[edit] Credit Limit
The maximum amount of charges a card holder may apply to the account. The Consumer Federation of America suggests people carry credit lines no greater than 20 percent of their gross household income . For example, people with a gross income of $50,000 would cap credit lines at $10,000.
[edit] Credit Report
The credit report often is a critical factor in credit scoring systems that lenders use to issue credit cards, mortgages or other loans. It is a good idea to check your credit report to know where you stand and correct any errors. If you've made mistakes in paying previous loans, bounced checks, made late payments or had other problems, you may be able to correct them -- or at least reduce the amount of damage they will do to your credit. If someone else has made a mistake that ended up on your credit, you want to get it removed. To make certain your credit reports are accurate, it is a good idea to check with the three major national credit bureaus: Equifax , Experian (formerly TRW) and Trans Union .
[edit] DebitCard
bank card with direct access to a card holder's account, usually a checking or savings account. The card acts like a check with the money withdrawn from the existing account balance. The withdrawal of funds is immediate with online debit cards , delayed a day or two with offline debit cards . Debit cards that carry the logo of either MasterCard or VISA can be used at any location that displays that network's logo.
[edit] Default
An account on which the payments have not been made according to the terms of the card holder agreement is in default. Some card issuers now declare you in default -- enabling them to penalize you via a higher interest rate -- if you miss a payment with any creditor.
[edit] e-Commerce
Electronic commerce is the buying and selling of products or services over the Internet. This also includes the exchange of data to facilitate the financing and payment aspectes of the business transaction.
[edit] e-Tailer
An online retailer with an electronic presence on the internet which wraps the shopping experience in the retail brand.
[edit] EFT
Electronic Funds Transfer, the exchange of banking transactions between a customer and merchant bank.
[edit] F (Fixed)
If the letter "F" appears after the annual percentage rate (APR) the interest rate is fixed and not subject to adjustment.
[edit] Fair Credit Billing Act
Passed by Congress in 1975 to help customers resolve billing disputes with card issuers. Disputes include everything from computational errors and incorrect charges to the crediting of payments. The act requires issuers to credit payments to a customer's account the day they are received. To be protected under the law, the consumer must write to the issuer within 60 days of the mailing date on the bill with the error. The issuer is then required to investigate and either correct the mistake or explain why the bill is correct within two billing cycles . The issuer also must acknowledge a customer's complaint in writing within 30 days. Each issuer is allowed to set specific payment guidelines. If any of the guidelines are not met, the issuer can take as many as five days to credit the payment.
[edit] Finance Charge
The charge for using a credit card, comprised of interest costs and other fees.
[edit] Foreign Currency Surcharge
A new charge imposed by some credit card issuers that imposes a fee on purchases made in a foreign currency.
[edit] Garnishment
Legal process whereas a creditor has obtained judgment on a debt may obtain full or partial payment by seizure of a portion of a debtor's assets (wages, bank account, etc...).
[edit] Gold Card
A credit card that offers a bigger line of credit, generally $5,000 and up, than a standard card .Income requirements are higher, generally $35,000 at minimum. In addition, issuers provide extra perks or incentives to card holders.
[edit] Grace Period
If the credit card user does not carry a balance, the grace period is the interest-free period of time a lender allows between the transaction date and the billing date.The standard grace period is usually between 20-30 days. If there is no grace period, finance charges will accrue the moment a purchase is made with the credit card. People who carry a balance on their credit cards have no grace period.
[edit] Household Income
The total income of all members of a household. An important yardstick used by credit card issuers evaluating applications for joint credit.
[edit] Index
A published market-based figure used by lenders to establish a lending rate. The most common indices are: the one-year Treasury Constant Maturity Yield; the Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) 11th District Cost of Funds; prime rate as listed in the Wall Street Journal.
[edit] Indexed Rate
The sum of the published index plus the margin. For example, if the index is 9% and the margin 2.75%, the indexed rate is 11.75%.
[edit] Interest Rate
The fee charged form money lent. Under the Truth in Lending Act, it must be disclosed as an APR to credit card users on the card application form.
[edit] Introductory (or Intro) Rate
The low rate charged by a lender for an initial period to entice borrowers to accept the credit terms. After the introductory period is over, the rate charged increases to the indexed rate or the stated interest rate. Often called a teaser rate.
[edit] Issuing Financial Institution
The financial institution that issues a credit card and bills the customer for purchases made against the card account. Also see national issuers .
[edit] Joint Credit
Issued to a couple based on both of their assets, incomes and credit reports. It generally results in a higher credit limit, but makes both parties responsible for repaying the debt.
[edit] Late Payment Fee
Charge to customer whose monthly payment has not been received as of the due date or stated deadline for payment as shown on the billing statement. This fee can be stated in terms of a flat per-transaction fee or a percentage of the amount of the cash advance.
[edit] MasterCard
MasterCard, a product of MasterCard International, is distributed by issuing financial institutions around the world. Card holders borrow money against a credit line and pay it back with interest if the balance is carried over from month to month. Its products are issued by 23,000 financial institutions in 220 countries and territories. In 1998, it had almost 700 million cards in circulation, whose users spent $650 billion in more than 16.2 million locations.
[edit] Merchant Account
An account setup by a Merchant Bank (in this case, Innovative Merchant Solutions) which is used by the Gateway to process your credit card transactions.
[edit] Merchant Portal
The Merchant Portal is a secure online program that allows merchants to process credit card transactions, such as through Innovative Gateway Solutions website. By logging in with the assigned username and password, please click on Transactions, and then click on Run a Manual Transaction.
[edit] Minimum Payment
The minimum amount a card holder can pay to keep the account from going into default . Some card issuers will set a high minimum if they are uncertain of the card holder's ability to pay. Most card issuers require a minimum payment of 2 percent of the outstanding balance.
[edit] Monthly Periodic Rate
The interest rate factor used to calculate the interest charges on a monthly basis. The factor equals the yearly rate divided by 12. See periodic rate.
[edit] National Foundation for Consumer Credit (NFCC)
A non-profit organization that educates consumers about using credit wisely. The NFCC is the parent group for Consumer Credit Counseling Service.
[edit] National Issuers
The overwhelming majority of credit cards in the U.S. come from a handful of national issuers, such as First USA, MBNA America and Bank of America. They often originate from lender-friendly states such as Delaware and South Dakota that impose no limits on what card holders can be charged.
[edit] Offline Debit Card
A new development in cards that share traits of both ATM and credit cards. Offline debit cards have the VISA or MasterCard logo on them and can be issued by a bank, either instead of or in addition to an ATM card. These cards can be used at any establishment which displays the VISA or MasterCard logo, but using them doesn't access a line of credit -- it debits a customer's checking account. It is "offline" because the account isn't directly accessed -- there's a delay of 24 to 72 hours before the debit is made in the account. If you sign a slip of paper to conclude the transaction, it was offline. In the U.S., no Personal Identification Number (PIN) is required to use an offline debit card.
[edit] Online Debit Card
An online debit card deducts funds from the bank account immediately, as soon as the card is used. It may have the VISA or MasterCard logo, or only the issuing bank's logo, like an ATM card. There is no delay for processing the transaction -- the money is immediately deducted from your account. In the U.S., if you entered a Personal Identification Number (PIN) during the transaction, it was online.
[edit] Over-the-limit Fee
A fee charged for exceeding the credit limit on the card.
[edit] Pay-down Program
Steps for paying down a credit card balance. First, stop charging on the card and make the normal monthly minimum payment by the due date. Then, two weeks later, send half the amount again, and two weeks later, half again. Repeat the half payments on the two-week schedule until the balance is paid.
[edit] Penalty Rate
Several percentage points higher than a card's current annual percentage rate , which goes into effect after two late payments. On some cards, a single late payment triggers a penalty rate.
[edit] Periodic Rate
The interest rate described in relation to a specific amount of time. The monthly periodic rate, for example, is the cost of credit per month; the daily periodic rate is the cost of credit per day.
[edit] Personal Identification Number (PIN)
As a security measure, some cards require a number to be punched into a keypad before a transaction can be completed. The number can usually be changed by the card holder.
[edit] Platinum Card
A credit card with a higher limit and additional perks than a gold card.
[edit] Point of Sale (POS)
An increasingly popular way for consumers to avoid ATM surcharges is to get cash returned from their online debit card via a cash return at the point of sale -- such as a grocery store.
[edit] Post-Auth
A Post Auth confirms you are ready to capture payment of your existing Pre Authorized transaction. A Post Auth cannot be Voided.
[edit] Pre-approved
A credit card offer with "pre-approved" only means that a potential customer has passed a preliminary credit-information screening. A credit card company can spurn the customers it invited with "pre-approved" junk mail if it doesn't like the applicant's credit rating.
[edit] Pre-Auth
A Pre Auth is a type of authorization that reserves (holds) a pre determined dollar amount on the customer’s credit card for the merchant to Post Auth Capture in 7-14 days. If this transaction is not Post Authorized, then at the end of the hold period, the funds are automatically returned to the cardholder’s available credit. They (customer) are not billed in this example. A Pre Auth transaction cannot be Voided.
[edit] Previous Balance
A method used by some card issuers where they base their finance charges on the amount owed at the end of the previous billing cycle.
[edit] Prime Rate
The interest rate a bank charges to its best or "prime" customers. Each bank will quote a prime lending rate. Many institutions quote prime rates established by large money center commercial banks such as Citibank or Chase Manhattan. There is also a prime rate average listed in the Wall Street Journal that is an average of the largest commercial banks. The rate given to consumers on their credit cards is often based as the prime rate plus a certain percentage, which represents the lender's assessment of the risk in lending, plus its profit margin.
[edit] Private Label Cards
A private label card is issued by a retail outlet, such as a department store or gasoline company, and contains the logo of the retailer It is accepted only by the retailer who issued it. Retailers partner with a bank or a card-issuing management company to back the cards.
[edit] Public Record
Information obtained by the Credit Reporting Agency from court records , such as liens, bankruptcy filings and judgments. Public records are open to any person who requests to see them.
[edit] Rebate Card
This is a card that allows the customer to accumulate cash, merchandise or services based on card usage.
[edit] Revolver
A term credit card issuers use for card holders who roll over part of the bill to the next month, instead of paying off the balance in full each month. About seven out of 10 card holders revolve the debt.
[edit] Revolving Line of Credit
An agreement to lend a specific amount to a borrower, and to allow that amount to be borrowed again once it has been repaid. Most credit cards offer revolving credit.
[edit] Secured Card
A credit card that a card holder secures with a savings deposit to ensure payment of the outstanding balance if the card holder defaults on payments. It is used by people new to credit, or people trying to rebuild their poor credit ratings.
[edit] Smart Card
Smart cards, sometimes called chip cards, contain a computer chip embedded in the plastic. Where a typical credit card's magnetic stripe can hold only a few dozen characters, smart cards are now available with 16K of memory. When read by a special terminals, the cards can perform a number of functions or access data stored in the chip. These cards can be used as cash cards or as credit cards with a preset credit limit, or used as ID cards with stored-in passwords. While fairly common in Europe, the United States has been slower to embrace them -- Americans are happy with their ATMs and POS terminals, so merchants haven't seen the need to make the expensive switch to smart card terminals.
[edit] Standard Card
The basic card offered by issuers. Customers with higher incomes and good credit reports can qualify for the higher-limit gold and platinum cards.
[edit] T (tiered)
If the letter T appears after the annual percentage rate (APR) ,the interest rate is based on tiered pricing, with different periodic rates applied to different levels of the outstanding balance. The rate shown applies to the lowest of the balance tiers.
[edit] Teaser Rate
Often called the introductory rate, it is the below-market interest rate offered to entice customers to switch credit cards.
[edit] Titanium Card
A card with an even higher limit than a platinum card.
[edit] Transaction Date
The date that goods or services were purchased or the date the cash advance was made.
[edit] Trans Union
One of the three major Credit Reporting Agencies
[edit] Truth in Lending Act
A federal law that requires lenders to provide certain information so borrowers can compare one loan to another. The most important facts lenders must provide are: finance charges in dollars and as an annual percentage rate (APR) ; the credit issuer or company providing the credit line and the size of the credit line; length of grace period, if any, before payment must be made; minimum payment required; any annual fees ; and fees for credit insurance, if any.
[edit] Two-cycle billing
With the two-cycle method, the average daily balance is calculated from two billing cycles rather than one and finance charges are typically higher This method, in effect, wipes out the grace period for customers who carry a balance. If the bill is not paid in full at the first billing, interest becomes retroactive back to the purchase date. Most credit card issuers use the single-cycle average daily balance method to calculate finance charges.
[edit] Unsecured Debt
Debt that is not guaranteed by the pledge of any collateral. Most credit cards are unsecured debt, which is a main reason why their interest rate his higher than other forms of lending, such as mortgages, which employ property as collateral.
[edit] V (variable)
If the letter V appears after the annual percentage rate (APR) the interest rate is variable and subject to change.
[edit] VISA
VISA cards, a product of VISA USA, are distributed by financial institutions around the world. A VISA card holder borrows money against a credit line and repays those funds with interest if the balance is carried over from month to month in a revolving line of credit. Nearly 600 million cards carry one of the Visa brands, and more than 14 million locations accept Visa cards.
[edit] Warning Signs
These are the signals that credit bureaus look for in credit card customers' credit reports. They include frequent late payments, over-the-limit fees, and frequent balance transfers.
[edit] Zero Balance
What shows on a credit card customer's bill when the outstanding balance has been paid and no new charges have been incurred during the billing cycle.