Anybody tried Advanced Circuit's "PCB Artist"?

If you do the math, and are willing to take the chance that you aren't going
to come up craps in an accident, and if your parents were long-lived, then
putting that monthly insurance premium into a half-decent mutual fund will
give the surviving spouse about double what a straight life insurance policy
will buy you.

Life insurance is your betting the other guy you are going to die, he is
betting you are going to live, you hope he wins, and you are paying for the
privilege.

Jim

--
"If you think you can, or think you can't, you're right."
--Henry Ford


"Joerg" <notthisjoergsch@removethispacbell.net> wrote in message
news:kYtti.2076$jO3.493@nlpi070.nbdc.sbc.com...
Joel Kolstad wrote:

I don't have life insurance. My life insurance policy is spelled out in
the bible here on the shelf ;-)
 
RST Engineering (jw) wrote:

If you do the math, and are willing to take the chance that you aren't going
to come up craps in an accident, and if your parents were long-lived, then
putting that monthly insurance premium into a half-decent mutual fund will
give the surviving spouse about double what a straight life insurance policy
will buy you.

Life insurance is your betting the other guy you are going to die, he is
betting you are going to live, you hope he wins, and you are paying for the
privilege.
That pretty much sums it up. Yes, early in life I also had life
insurance to protect my family and it can make perfect sense. But there
comes a point where such efforts should gravitate towards retirement
funding. Else there will be a major problem some time after 65.

--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com
 
The best approach is a schematic - ratsnest - pcb method.

I used PCBCAD21 which I got off ebay for less than Ł20.
It has a wide range of tools for getting the best results.
 

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