$1,600? My Saint has had two TPLO's, which is the most common surgery for an ACL(CCL in canines) tear. Each Surgery was $5,000+. You got out on the cheap!
"but when I finished I filled the BCC with as many permutations of what his email address could be and then hit send."
I've figured out a great way around this. Install rapportive in gmail, compose a new message and start guessing emails. If the email is correct, rapportive will pull up all the information for that person. Bingo! There's the correct address!
Rapportive only has info on people who use their service and those who have their info available on their sources (eg social networks). It's a great tool but isn't comprehensive.
Chrome profiles are perfect for managing multiple accounts. I have one profile for each email account, and it works beautifully. The multiple sign in stuff never worked quite right for me.
I purchased my 4Runner like this. 3 reposts over a month with "4 Runner" and dropped the price $1500 each time. He needed to sell it fast. I got a really good deal.
We had to start with Facebook because getting people to use their real identity deters bad behavior. We'll add Twitter login in a few weeks. We're setting up community management and moderation now.
It's fundamentally different than Instagram: the focus on on the words, picture is secondary. Instagram is all about a beautiful photo, and then maybe you'll read the comments. Because you don't need a good picture in the first place, Tiny Review lends itself to different situations.
I'm really loving this app right now. For me, it has largely replaced Instagram. With Instagram I feel like I am filtering the world around me. Whereas with Tiny Review it feels much more creative. I am adding, not filtering. I get to add so much more of my personality and emotion into Tiny Reviews than I am into Instagrams. That said this app will only get better when the founders tailor the app in some specific ways: namely, remove location requirement and add full twitter support. I hear they are working as fast as they can on both.
Last summer I spent a day on a motorcycle tour with two retired IBM salesmen. They reminisced sales stories all afternoon. I couldn't believe the amount of preparation and planned sales tactics they employed. A blue suit was required at all times because blue conveys trust and will result in a higher sale.
I used to work at a place that used ClearCase and Lotus Notes. I can tell you that the only people who put any thought into that decision were the IBM salesmen.