It's been 1.5 months since I had the LG EnV, and I still love it. The photos taken from this camera are phenomenal for cell phone cameras. See the image attached.
I've been able to use the built-in Bluetooth to transfer files to and from the cell phone to my laptop and to my friends' PDAs. I understand that you can also transfer music from iTunes to the phone (via Windows Media Player to the WMA format and into the music folder on the micro SD card).
One interesting tip I learned is that if you get a micro SD card, make sure its capacity does not exceed 1 GB. Apparently, the EnV only uses 1 GB even if you insert a larger capacity card.
These last two tips I received from an EnV owner who posted on Amazon.com. For additional tips, go to Amazon.com, look for the LG EnV, and then search for comments from Jeffrey D. Hauenstein "iPoder".
Monday, March 19, 2007
Demystifying the 2006 telephone tax refund
One really good tax CREDIT everyone can take for the 2006 tax year is the one-time telephone tax refund. It allows you to reclaim some FEDERAL tax you paid for using the telephone (landline, cell phone, and voice-over-IP) over a 41-month period after Feb. 28, 2003, and before Aug. 1, 2006. State and local taxes you paid during this period are not refundable.
You can use one of two ways to claim the refund:
If you want to calculate the actual amount, you'll need a few bills from this time period. You don't need every single copy of the bill during this period. You just need enough to support your claim for the refund if you get audited.
If you have some old bills, it might be worth it go check through them. The total from adding up the actual amount can be greater than the standard amount. For example, I can claim the standard amount of $30. However, after going through some old phone bills, I found that I can claim $170. This more than double the standard amount. So I think it's worth it.
Another reason this is well worth claiming is because it is a tax CREDIT, not deduction. A tax credit means that the dollar amount you claim will be returned to you. For example, if you claim a $50 credit, you get $50 in refund. If you claim a $50 deduction, you might get a $5 refund (the actual amount can vary, depending on what you are claiming, your tax bracket, and a multitude of other factors).
For a full description of the telephone tax refund, visit the IRS website. They explain the history and reason for the refund.
You can use one of two ways to claim the refund:
- Use the standard amount.
- Calculate the actual dollar amount you paid using old bills during the 41-month period.
- One exemption, the standard refund amount is $30;
- Two exemptions, the standard refund amount is $40;
- Three exemptions, the standard refund amount is $50;
- Four exemptions or more, the standard refund amount is $60.
- Federal
- Federal Excise 3%
- Federal Excise @ 3%
- Federal Excise Tax
- Federal Tax
- Fed Excise Tax
- FET
If you want to calculate the actual amount, you'll need a few bills from this time period. You don't need every single copy of the bill during this period. You just need enough to support your claim for the refund if you get audited.
If you have some old bills, it might be worth it go check through them. The total from adding up the actual amount can be greater than the standard amount. For example, I can claim the standard amount of $30. However, after going through some old phone bills, I found that I can claim $170. This more than double the standard amount. So I think it's worth it.
Another reason this is well worth claiming is because it is a tax CREDIT, not deduction. A tax credit means that the dollar amount you claim will be returned to you. For example, if you claim a $50 credit, you get $50 in refund. If you claim a $50 deduction, you might get a $5 refund (the actual amount can vary, depending on what you are claiming, your tax bracket, and a multitude of other factors).
For a full description of the telephone tax refund, visit the IRS website. They explain the history and reason for the refund.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)