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ashishb.net

A day in Luxembourg - the richest country in the world I was asked to install malware during a fake interview Book summary: Breakneck - China's quest to engineer the future by Dan Wang Book summary: How to Teach Your Baby to Read Book Summary: The Discontented Little Baby Book by Pamela Douglas Introducing Amazing Sandbox - run third-party tools and AI agents securely on your machine Why software outsourcing gets a bad reputation? Book summary: The Natural Baby Sleep Solution by Polly Moore A day in Antwerp, Belgium Journey of online influencers Two days in Brussels, Belgium Shortcuts - when we love them and when we don't A visit to Rakhigarhi Three days in overhyped Paris Empty Japan, crowded Tokyo The real lock-in in GitHub is not the code, but the stars 11-day Norwegian Breakaway East Caribbean cruise Sanskrit and Sri Lankan Air Force Use REST with Open API The Achilles heel of American capitalism Costa Rica in 4 days At a juice stall in Sri Lanka A short stay at Warsaw, Poland Best practices for using Python & uv inside Docker Two days in Vilnius, Lithuania How IntelliJ IDEs waste disk space Pregnancy Why there aren't many digital nomads from India Two days in Riga, Latvia To keep your machine secure, run third-party tools inside Docker Family Ties in Your DNA: Some relatives are closer than others Doctors per capita Two days in Tallinn, Estonia Ship tools as standalone static binaries Made in America Two days in Helsinki, Finland Maintaining an Android app is a lot of work The land of good deals Two days in Oslo, Norway FastAPI vs Flask performance comparison Google Search is losing to Perplexity Two days in Dublin, Ireland Continuous integration ≠ Continuous delivery World's simplest project success heuristic London in 5 days It is hard to recommend Python in production Inflation, IRS, Credit cards, and Vendors Temu and the Chinese approach Things to do in Miami Florida Revenue vs Cost Axis Language learning as an adult The unanchored babies of the green card limbo Price variance in the United States A day in Louisville, Kentucky A surprisingly positive experience with Air India Unhospitable Airports Android: Don't use stale views USA = Union of Sales and Advertisement A day in Nashville, Tennessee Minimize Javascript in your codebase A day in Birmingham, Alabama In defense of ad-supported products Real vs artificial world The science behind Punjabi singers Hiking Mt. Fuji The Indian startup bubble is insane Repairing database on the fly for millions of users Book Summary: One up on Wall Street by Peter Lynch It is hard to recommend Google Cloud At the Prague airport Kyoto in three days Migrating from WordPress to Hugo Book summary: Sick Societies by Robert B. Edgerton Statistical outcomes require statistical games Illegal immigrants to Europe via Cairo Tokyo in three days Mobs are Status Games Writing Script matters as much as the spoken language Sri Lanka in 5 days LLMs: great for business but bad business Book Summary: Safe Haven by Mark Spitznagel Mac shortcut for typing Avagraha symbol On a bus with an asylum seeker Nicaragua in 5 days When to commit Generated code to version control Why I always buy a local SIM in a foreign country Use Makefile for Android Four days in Guadalajara, Mexico Android Navigation: Up vs Back Hotels vs Airbnb vs Hostels Currency issues in Argentina Abstractions should be deep not wide Some data on podcasting Always support compressed response in an API service A day in El Calafate - Patagonia, Argentina Hermetic docker images with Hugging Face machine learning models American Elections The sound of "ch" API services should always have usage Limits Hiking in El Chaltén - trekking capital of Argentina
Finance 101: Credit Cards
Ashish Bhatia · 2013-11-22 · via ashishb.net

Since I wrote the initial set of posts, quite a few people have asked me about good credit cards. So, I decided to write one about the same.

First a few tips.

  1. If this is your first card, don’t apply online, you will be rejected. The only sure way to get a credit card is through a credit union (you might become its member via a place of residence or employer) and that too in person. Or a bank with whom, you have a checking account (again, in person). I have heard that going to a new bank and telling them that if they give you a credit card then you will open a checking account with direct deposit (of payroll into it) also works.

  2. Don’t apply for the second card for at least 6 months, give some time for credit history to be built (This rule applies only for the “second” card, not after that).

  3. Every time you are rejected, the chance of getting accepted the next time reduces.

  4. If you are rejected, pick up the phone and call them in person, most likely they will approve it over the phone.

  5. Pay bills in full, some people (probably employed by credit card providers) tell you that if you leave a small balance on the card then your credit history will improve, I disagree.

  6. The increasing credit limit on cards impacts credit scores temporarily, so, avoid doing that (unless needed). Also, it reduces the chances of getting a new credit line (card or loan) since the total credit line grows in proportion to the gross annual income of the person.

  7. Visa is the most accepted payment gateway, so prefer a visa card over others.

  8. Have multiple cards, sometimes, while traveling one card might get blocked due to automated fraud triggers, in that case, at least other cards can be used.

  9. Cards with annual fees usually don’t make any sense except maybe for the first year when they don’t charge an annual fee (Disclaimer: I don’t own a Starwood Preferred Guest card - which a lot of people recommend is good, I think people who travel a lot and have a family will probably find it to be good).

  10. Time the new card with the purchases in life - e.g. if one knows that s/he is going to book flight tickets in the next 3 months, apply for a new card, use that card and meet its minimum spending to get the bonus (usually the card bonus will be a more lucrative proposition that the rewards earned in the first year of owning the card).

  11. Cards paying points (which cannot be redeemed for cash) usually have better rewards.

  12. I have never owned a discovert or diners club card not because I don’t want to but because I have never found one with a good value proposition.

  13. Track credit rating using creditsesame.com, creditkarma.com, or wallethub.com - these are non-FICO ratings but are highly correlated to FICO score (at least that’s what they claim). Barclays provides its credit card holders with real FICO scores for free. Discover now provides free FICO credit scores for every one.

  14. Use the Wallaby app to decide which card to use for which purchase. Wallaby is dead now. Maxivu is a replacement but is not as feature-rich as Wallaby.

  15. Whenever a card is canceled, it’s erased from the credit report after the cancellation and causes a sudden drop in credit score then, therefore, ideally, the credit card with the longest credit history should never be canceled unless the other cards have a similar long credit history as well (yeah, I know it’s vague - the fact of the matter is I have not found any source which can provide a concrete answer).

Now a list of some good cards

  1. Bank of America Visa Cash rewards - 3.3% cash back on gas.
  2. Chase Freedom Visa - 5 points back on different categories every quarter (each point is worth at least 1 cent of the cash, it can be redeemed for goods at a higher multiple).
  3. American Express Blue Cash every day - 3% cash back at supermarkets (including Walmart).
  4. Capital One QuickSilver Visa Cash Rewards - 1.5% cash back on everything, no foreign transaction fee (the only such card in this list).
  5. Barclays Uber Visa credit card - 4% cash back on dining and 3% cash back on travel

This list is by no means exhaustive, it is just a collection of good cards which I have owned/own at some point.