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Author: maxbeatty
What am I missing?
As you may be aware, your current payment selection—Do Not Pay if Maximum Amount Exceeded—will not be available after June 1, 2013. We previously let you know that your automatic payments would be discontinued on June 1 if you did not update your payment option. However, to ensure that you may continue with the convenience of automatic payments, we will update your payment option to the Standard Recurring Payment option by June 5, 2013.
If you do not wish to be enrolled in the Standard Recurring Payments, please unenroll from your current Do Not Pay if Maximum Amount Exceeded payment option by June 5, 2013.
Convenience and peace of mind with Standard Recurring Payments
- Automatically deducts the billed amount from your bank account on the due date of the bill each month.
- You can select a maximum payment amount that will not be exceeded, giving you more financial control than before. By default, your “maximum amount not to exceed” will be the amount you previously selected for your Do Not Pay if Exceeds option.
PG&E has sent me a few emails regarding this payment option change, but from what I can tell— nothing is changing. The name of the option is different but not how it works.
What am I missing?
When you work hard all day with your head and know you must work again the next day what else can change your ideas and make them run on a different plane like whisky?
– Ernest Hemingway
Gone to Pee
In today’s world, where we are constantly connected, the office should be reconceived as a gathering place to communicate ideas and to reinforce personal bonds. Beyond that, employees should be given the respect, and the responsibility, to manage their own schedules and complete their work on their own time, from wherever they choose.
Hamburgers & Basements: Why Not to Use Left Nav Flyouts
“Good design makes a product understandable” – Dieter Rams
Good navigation should do at least three things well: (1) it should allow the user to navigate; (2) it should serve as wayfinding, letting the user know where they are; and (3) it should help the user understand what the product is capable of. If your navigation is not doing these three things, something’s wrong.
xkcd: tar
Perfect, as usual.

