bjoyful
Next year we have to have laptops for school and the school said that i need to provide my own laptop bag. I have a 13 inch Macbook.
I would like a bag with a shoulder strap so its easier too carry around school but i would also like some pockets/compartments so i can put stuff like my charger cable in it.
So my question is does anyone know a website that sells laptop bags that aren't too expensive? i don't want to spend more than $25 on the bag.
Thanks! :)
Answer
hey kid, have a look in this link. i think it will solve your problem.
hey kid, have a look in this link. i think it will solve your problem.
How can a kid make money?
CJ
How can a kid make money. I want money and i have no way to get it. Im a little too young to get a job, so can u tell me some other ways i can make money? At this point ill do anything. I have no idea what to do and i need ideas quickly!!!
Answer
Are you able to collect bottles and cans for recycling? Even my 7-year-old daughter carries a bag with her when we walk our dogs in our neighborhood. Together we pick up grocery bags full of aluminum cans, glass and plastic bottles, and we put them all in our wagon and cart them across the street to the recycler where we turn them in for cash. If you have a parent who can help you, collect lots and take them to your recycling facility. Here in California, plastic bottles are five to ten cents each and they buy aluminum cans at $1.25 - $1.75 a pound. we regularly get $30 every time we take in our bottles and cans.
Can you eat candy at your school? My sister would buy a bag of individually wrapped candy sour balls and sell them to her friends at school at twenty-five cents each. She would buy a bag of those candies on Monday for $2.00 for the bag and come home with $15 in quarters by Friday. If you are able to sell things at school, try selling really fun pencils. My daughter brought in to her classroom all of the pencils we got for free at fairs and special event booths, and the teacher later told me all the kids in class traded in their plain yellow pencils for the brightly colored pencils my daughter brought in. If you could get a lot of different colored pencils, could you sell them to your classmates at twenty-five cents each?
Have you been picking up those pennies, nickels, and dimes from the ground? We find pennies everywhere we go! We find pennies, nickels, and dimes even in the dirt under the soda machines at Yosemite National Park! We find pennies on the floor at Wal-Mart and local supermarkets all the time. We find pennies on the sidewalk and in the street everywhere we go, and every night when I walk my dogs I find at least 2-3 pennies! Pennies are still money! We were walking home from a walking field trip to sing Christmas carols at the school district offices, and right in front of the line of walking second-graders I found thirty-five cents on the sidewalk by the corner store! Pick up those pennies! We put them all in my daughter's piggy bank, and when it's full we roll the coins up and cash them in at the bank, and we usually cash in $25 at a time. Offer to help clean and vacuum your relative's cars and ask to keep whatever change you find in them. Some people have several dollars in coins in their cars and never bother to cash them in. Collect them, put them in a jar, and take the coins to your coinstar coin counter at the supermarket and get your money in dollar bills. We do. I am a grown-up and I still pick up all the pennies I find on my college campus! High school campuses are great places to find pennies as well. Look under the benches at the football stadium, especially if there is nothing but dirt underneath them. My sister and I regularly found quarters, nickels, and dimes under the bleachers at the football stadium at the high school down the block after their Friday night games.
Are you good at fixing things? I knew a kid who started at the age of 10 collecting bicycle parts he found being thrown away in the trash, and then he bought new tires and seats, painted the frames, put the bikes back together, and then sold them at yard sales at his house. He averaged around $500 a month in sales of his bikes. He now is grown up and owns his own bike shop. Another young man I heard of years ago had access to all kinds of free tickets to sporting events and concerts around Los Angeles. His dad had a job where he got complimentary tickets to major events and never used them, so the boy took the free tickets to his friends and sold them for face value and made a lot of money - enough to open his own business as a ticket broker. He still to this day has his own ticket office right down the street from his old high school, and has made a lot of money as a ticket broker just by starting selling his dad's unwanted free tickets.
Another boy I knew was really good at woodcarving while still in junior high. He carved all kinds of wonderful little animals and leaves and flowers and today is still selling his woodcarvings, and makes wooden signs and fun garden statues and is still happy doing what he loves.
In other words, there are lots of ways to find money or earn money if you keep your eyes open. Me, I've been recycling and getting the money for it since I was 16 and got my driver's license. I'm teaching my 7-year-old daughter to do the same. She now demands a dollar for helping me every time we cash them in.
Are you able to collect bottles and cans for recycling? Even my 7-year-old daughter carries a bag with her when we walk our dogs in our neighborhood. Together we pick up grocery bags full of aluminum cans, glass and plastic bottles, and we put them all in our wagon and cart them across the street to the recycler where we turn them in for cash. If you have a parent who can help you, collect lots and take them to your recycling facility. Here in California, plastic bottles are five to ten cents each and they buy aluminum cans at $1.25 - $1.75 a pound. we regularly get $30 every time we take in our bottles and cans.
Can you eat candy at your school? My sister would buy a bag of individually wrapped candy sour balls and sell them to her friends at school at twenty-five cents each. She would buy a bag of those candies on Monday for $2.00 for the bag and come home with $15 in quarters by Friday. If you are able to sell things at school, try selling really fun pencils. My daughter brought in to her classroom all of the pencils we got for free at fairs and special event booths, and the teacher later told me all the kids in class traded in their plain yellow pencils for the brightly colored pencils my daughter brought in. If you could get a lot of different colored pencils, could you sell them to your classmates at twenty-five cents each?
Have you been picking up those pennies, nickels, and dimes from the ground? We find pennies everywhere we go! We find pennies, nickels, and dimes even in the dirt under the soda machines at Yosemite National Park! We find pennies on the floor at Wal-Mart and local supermarkets all the time. We find pennies on the sidewalk and in the street everywhere we go, and every night when I walk my dogs I find at least 2-3 pennies! Pennies are still money! We were walking home from a walking field trip to sing Christmas carols at the school district offices, and right in front of the line of walking second-graders I found thirty-five cents on the sidewalk by the corner store! Pick up those pennies! We put them all in my daughter's piggy bank, and when it's full we roll the coins up and cash them in at the bank, and we usually cash in $25 at a time. Offer to help clean and vacuum your relative's cars and ask to keep whatever change you find in them. Some people have several dollars in coins in their cars and never bother to cash them in. Collect them, put them in a jar, and take the coins to your coinstar coin counter at the supermarket and get your money in dollar bills. We do. I am a grown-up and I still pick up all the pennies I find on my college campus! High school campuses are great places to find pennies as well. Look under the benches at the football stadium, especially if there is nothing but dirt underneath them. My sister and I regularly found quarters, nickels, and dimes under the bleachers at the football stadium at the high school down the block after their Friday night games.
Are you good at fixing things? I knew a kid who started at the age of 10 collecting bicycle parts he found being thrown away in the trash, and then he bought new tires and seats, painted the frames, put the bikes back together, and then sold them at yard sales at his house. He averaged around $500 a month in sales of his bikes. He now is grown up and owns his own bike shop. Another young man I heard of years ago had access to all kinds of free tickets to sporting events and concerts around Los Angeles. His dad had a job where he got complimentary tickets to major events and never used them, so the boy took the free tickets to his friends and sold them for face value and made a lot of money - enough to open his own business as a ticket broker. He still to this day has his own ticket office right down the street from his old high school, and has made a lot of money as a ticket broker just by starting selling his dad's unwanted free tickets.
Another boy I knew was really good at woodcarving while still in junior high. He carved all kinds of wonderful little animals and leaves and flowers and today is still selling his woodcarvings, and makes wooden signs and fun garden statues and is still happy doing what he loves.
In other words, there are lots of ways to find money or earn money if you keep your eyes open. Me, I've been recycling and getting the money for it since I was 16 and got my driver's license. I'm teaching my 7-year-old daughter to do the same. She now demands a dollar for helping me every time we cash them in.
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Title Post: What is a good laptop bag for sale online?
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