Word: pay-as-you-go
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...Klein's "Making Bush Make a Deal" [April 30]: I have another idea for bringing the Iraq war to a close. Let's initiate a pay-as-you-go policy for the war instead of financing it with borrowed money. We could start with an early sunset on the big tax break that President George W. Bush gave to his wealthiest friends. Perhaps we would be more careful about rushing into war if we had to shoulder some of the financial burden instead of deferring it to our children and grandchildren...
...Kajeet has spent the past few years doing homework on what kids want and how to offer it safely and affordably. Early on, Neal and his two partners, all dads with young kids, decided to keep things simple. There would be no contracts or cancellation fees, just a pay-as-you-go service through the Sprint Nextel network on a handful of phones priced from...
...that we can’t afford these investments—Democrats believe we can’t afford not to make them,” Pelosi said. “These are critical priorities for our nation, [and] we intend to submit them to the rigors of pay-as-you-go budgeting so they will not add to the deficit.” Pelosi’s agenda, while not entirely new, is a part of Democratic efforts to find specific policies around which the party can coalesce. The agenda is based on a similar five-point plan unveiled...
...mobileATM is to provide a truly compelling service, shouldn't it also allow users to move cash around? "You have to walk before you can run," says Richard Kimber, chief executive of First Direct, who notes that consumers will be able to buy top-up credit for pay-as-you-go mobile phones. He also envisions a day when British commuters might be able to purchase subway rides using their mobileATM, the next step in turning your phone into your wallet...
...delivery I'd ordered online more than a week earlier. Sure enough, setting the gold standard for brand synchronization, my pizza was driven to the cinema doors minutes after lights up. I drove back to London for an evening at home with a dvd rented from the online, pay-as-you-go easyCinema service. Price? Just $3.50. The picture? Easy Rider. The next morning, nine passengers shuttled up the motorway to Luton airport inside a bright orange bus with a cracked windscreen and grinding brakes. A German and a Canadian seated to my right griped about paying $10 after missing...