In quiz bowl scandal, Harvard's loss is the University of Minnesota's win

Harvard’s quiz bowl team has been stripped of four titles, which have been given to the runners up. The 2009 and 2011 titles go to the University of Minnesota.

I love the Minnesotan sense of humor:

“Nobody can take this away from us now,” Hart said. He paused, laughed, then joked: “Unless they subsequently catch us cheating.”

— March 23, 2013

Webhooks for paychecks

Since I became a wage slave with a steady paycheck I’ve been making some adjustments in how I manage my money. I no longer have chaotic income patterns or need to reserve 40% of my income for paying taxes.

As part of that, I’ve been trying to follow conscious spending practices. I’ve set up goal savings accounts for larger spending, which I contribute to on a schedule.

Well, I try to. I have Google Calendar reminders set up to remind me to move money around and pay our bills, but I wish I could automate it. I would like “IFTTT for money” or “webhooks for paychecks”. It would be awesome if I could set up a system that got a notification that I’ve received income, and take action on that.

A trigger-based system would enable really advanced automatic money management. For example, when you got a deposit larger than a certain size, you could have the system email you, transfer 50% into your joint checking account, transfer 5% into your rainy day fund, transfer $200 into your vacation goal savings account, and schedule a deposit into your retirement account and HSA. Whatever was left-over would be “guilt-free” spending money. Lose your job? The paychecks stop so the trigger never fires – unlike an automatic transfer.

Is there anything out there like this? I haven’t found it. It would be hard to build because you’d need access to your customers’ bank accounts. A banking startup like Simple could do it – they have something called Goals which automatically deduct from your “safe to spend” balance, but I think triggers would still be more powerful.

— March 23, 2013