u/Selim2255

What is the best online invoicing software for a small business?

I’m looking for online invoicing software for my small business and wanted to see what other people are using these days.

Right now I’m still handling invoices manually and it’s becoming a pain to keep track of payments, overdue invoices, and client records. I’d like something cloud based that is simple to use and doesn’t take forever to learn.

Bonus points if it also helps with expense tracking or basic accounting features without getting too expensive.

What online invoicing software would you actually recommend for a small business?

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u/Selim2255 — 2 days ago

Anyone else in Pittsburgh underestimate how hard it is to move heavier furniture pieces?

I recently picked up a few decorative pieces from Reperch and some of them ended up being way heavier than I expected. A couple of them are awkward to move and definitely more than I can handle myself.

It’s only a few larger items, but I’m realizing I probably underestimated how difficult it would be getting everything back to my place. Curious how people around Pittsburgh usually handle situations like this.

reddit.com
u/Selim2255 — 3 days ago

Anyone else use one-time mowing services sometimes?

My mower has been acting up lately and I ended up paying someone to do a one-time cut instead of dealing with it in the heat lol. Just curious if other people here ever outsource mowing temporarily or if you usually just push through and handle it yourself.

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u/Selim2255 — 5 days ago

I recently got prescribed GLP-1 for weight loss, but my insurance ended up denying it, so now I’m trying to figure out what people actually do when they have to pay out of pocket.

I went into this thinking it would be pretty straightforward, but after reading through posts here it feels like there isn’t really one clear path once insurance isn’t an option.

I’ve seen people mention different routes, and I did come across names like TB2, formblends, and PlushCare while looking into it, but I don’t really have a clear sense of what actually matters once you’ve been on it for a while.

Mostly just trying to understand how people made this decision in the beginning and whether it ended up being sustainable long term, especially with cost and consistency.

If you’ve been in a similar situation, what did you end up doing and how did it work out for you?

reddit.com
u/Selim2255 — 11 days ago

I’ve been working as a developer for a few years now, and this has been bothering me lately. when I’m solving problems on my own or working on real tasks, I usually don’t struggle much. I can think through the logic and get to a solution without too many issues. but interviews feel completely different. I’ll understand the question and sometimes even know the approach, but once I start explaining, my thoughts just fall apart. if the interviewer asks follow up questions while I’m still thinking, I lose track and start second guessing everything. what’s confusing is that right after the interview, I can usually solve the same problem without much trouble. this has happened more than once, and it’s starting to affect my confidence a bit. I’ve tried practicing more and talking through problems, which helped a little, but real interviews still feel much more intense. what am I doing wrong, and how can I get better at staying clear and focused during interviews?

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u/Selim2255 — 12 days ago
▲ 16 r/Miami

I’m in Miami and I’ve been putting this off for years but I can’t ignore it anymore. My garage and a small storage space are packed with things that have been sitting there for a long time, some of it even goes back to my grandfather and family before that. It’s not just random clutter, it’s things like old wooden furniture, a couple of instruments, some exercise equipment, and boxes of clothes and smaller stuff I haven’t touched in years.

The problem is I can’t keep all of it, but I also can’t treat it like trash. Some of it might actually have value, some of it could probably be donated, and some of it I don’t even know how to deal with or move out of the space. Every time I try to start, I just stand there for a bit and then leave. It feels like too many decisions at once, and the physical side of it doesn’t help either, like figuring out how to carry things out, where they would go, and what to do with them after.

Part of me thinks I should try to sell at least some of it, but I don’t know where to begin or if it’s even worth the time. Another part of me just wants to donate what I can and clear everything out, but even that feels overwhelming when I think about moving everything. I feel stuck between trying to do this properly and just wanting the space back.

If you’ve been in this kind of situation, how did you decide what to sell, what to donate, and how did you actually handle getting everything out?

reddit.com
u/Selim2255 — 14 days ago