DANNY'S GUIDE TO MAJOR DEPARTMENT STORES AND
MAJOR SHOPPING MALLS IN SAN FRANCISCO
Copyright Danny Chan 2015 to 2022
[Page 1 of this
website] [Page 2 of this website]
[Page 3 of this website][Page
4 of this website]
[Continued from page 3 of this website]
If you want to visit major department stores and major
shopping malls in San Francisco but you can't financially afford to,
just try to earn a little extra
spending money or visit the cheapest stores in San Francisco or get
coupons that give you a discount or visit the cheapest gas stations
in San Francisco
(assuming you drive a car vs. take MUNI and BART) or use the
cheapest smartphone plans available or try to get free stuff or try
to get free Internet
(vs. you financially subscribe to a DSL ISP).
If you want to earn a little extra spending money, Rat Race
Rebellion at http://www.ratracerebellion.com
is North America's #1 source of work-at-home
jobs (Christine Durst created this website called http://www.ratracerebellion.com/aboutus.html,
worked for the United Nations and several
Presidential Commissions for America's President and the U.S. Armed
Forces for several decades, and ABC's "20/20" and "The Wall Street
Journal"
newspaper call her America's #1 authority on work-from-home
jobs)...you can work at a regular part-time or full-time job
somewhere in San Francisco
before supplementing your income with a work-at-home job, or you
could just work at one or multiple work-at-home job...my own
personal opinion about
Rat Race Rebellion is that the only jobs that actually give you a
decent income is you need to use your telephone at home to receive
incoming orders for
products/services and you take people's orders before billing them,
and if you want to work at other types of jobs there basically are
none that will give you a
decent income. MicroWorkers at https://www.microworkers.com
is North America's #1 micro jobs website and you can earn 50 cents
all the time just by
doing various small online tasks, but you absolutely NEED a
smartphone otherwise you can't verify your account at all to start
with because account
verification isn't done through postal mail anymore and is only done
through smartphone texting. The Penny Hoarder at http://www.thepennyhoarder.com
talks about many online ways that you can make money from
home. Bing Rewards from http://www.bing.com/rewards
(Microsoft owns Bing and Bing
Rewards) lets you earn Amazon gift cards (all you need to do is
permanently switch your choice of Internet search engine away from
Google or something
else to Bing, and everytime Bing Rewards tells you to do something
online you do it...Bing Rewards actually lets you earn money and
many people say they
earn $5 or $10 a month just from using Bing Rewards, but in order to
qualify for Bing Rewards you need to have a genuine Microsoft-brand
operating system
installed on your computer and if you have a pirated copy of
Microsoft operating system or a non-Microsoft-brand operating system
like Unix/Linux then you
automatically don't qualify for Bing Rewards), You can also
find odd jobs to work at by checking out classified ads websites
like Craig's List at
http://sfbay.craigslist.org.
You could also go to http://www.google.com to type in "which online
jobs have the highest wages" or "highest paying online job"
(vs. only pay you minimum wage).
If you want to visit the cheapest stores in San Francisco,
Foods Co. at http://www.foodsco.net
is the cheapest supermarket in San Francisco (Foods.
Co. isn't a new recently-created supermarket, actually is a
nationwide supermarket chain that existed in San Francisco for over
30 years in a row from the
early 1990s to now, Foods Co. originally was called Food 4 Less but
it later changed its name to Foods Co., and Foods Co. supermarkets
are as
physically large as your typical Albertson's supermarket or Safeway
supermarket, to prove it check out https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_4_Less),
and
currently has two locations in San Francisco including 1800 Folsom
and 14th Street in San Francisco's Mission District (to visit Foods
Co., you just take
the 14 Mission bus to Mission and 14th Street and walk down two
blocks...Foods Co. at Folsom and 14th Street is one block away from
Best Buy's main
flagship store in San Francisco at Harrison and 15th Street, Best
Buy currently is the largest electronics retailer nationwide
throughout North America and if
you want to buy a brand-new computer or brand-new digital TV or
brand-new stereo system or even brand-new home videogame system then
Best Buy's
main flagship store at Harrison and 15th Street in San Francisco is
the best place to visit and Best Buy's secondary location at Geary
and Presidio isn't as
good, to prove it go to http://www.google.com to type in "America's
largest electronics retailer" and also visit https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Best_Buy)
and
345 Williams Street in San Francisco's Bayview/Hunter's-Point
District (this second Foods Co. at 345 Williams Street is just in a
residential/industrial
neighborhood, and there are no major stores like Best Buy
around...to get there, just take the 54 Felton bus to its front
door, or take the T train from MUNI
Metro to 3rd Street and Williams and walk several blocks). Big
Lots at http://www.biglots.com
sells food really cheap too while often being even cheaper than
Foods Co. (Foods Co. is a major supermarket whereas Big Lots is a
variety store while resembling a five-and-dime store, Big Lots isn't
an individual store and
is actually a nationwide chain store, to prove it check out https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Lots),
and
currently
has
one
location
in
San Francisco total at 3333
Mission Street and 29th Street in San Francisco (that location
existed in San Francisco for over 30 years in a row from the early
1990s to the present, it
originally was called MacFrugal's but later changed its name to Big
Lots, and to get there just take the 14 Mission bus to Mission and
30th Street and walk
right across the street...in case you didn't know, Big Lots has an
annual sales event called Big Lots' "Friends and Family" sale that
happens in early October
of each year and you can save 20% off your entire purchase on that
one day total, to find out more just call Big Lots' officiall
website or official Facebook page
or go to http://www.google.com and type in "Big Lots" "Friends and
Family Sale"). Grocery Outlet at http://www.groceryoutlet.com
is a supermarket that sells
food real cheap (Grocery Outlet isn't a individual store and is
actually a nationwide chain, to prove it check out https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grocery_Outlet),
and
has two locations in San Francisco including 6333 Geary Blvd. and
28th Avenue in San Francisco's Richmond District (to get there, just
take the 38 Geary
bus to Geary and 25th Avenue and walk three blocks up Geary) and
2630 Bayshore Blvd. and Sunnydale in San Francisco's
Bayview/Hunter's-Point
District (to get there, take the 9 San Bruno bus) and 1390 Silver
(to get there just take the 44 O'Shaughnessy bus up Silver).
Factory 2 U at
http://www.factory2-u.com is
a clothing store that sells clothing cheap (Factory 2 U isn't a
individual store and actually is a nationwide chain owned by
National
Stores, to prove it check out https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factory_2-U),
and has one location in San Francisco total at 2664 Mission Street
and 23rd Street (just
take the 14 Mission bus to Mission and 23rd Street and walk across
the street). If you want to know how to travel to these
stores, just call http://www.511.org to
find out.
If you drive a car in San Francisco vs. you use a Clipper
card to ride MUNI/BART, instead of you visit whatever gas station is
most easily-accessible to you
at the time just visit the cheapest gas stations in San Francisco
instead. San Francisco Gas Prices at http://www.sanfrangasprices.com
lists all gas stations
in San Francisco along with how much money they charge for
gas, you can use it to quickly identify which gas stations have the
cheapest prices and act
accordingly.
If you drive a car in San Francisco, many gas stations in San
Francisco have rewards program. To prove it go to
http://www.google.com to type in "gas station"
"rewards" (for rewards programs).
If you own a smartphone like Google Android or Apple iPhone,
most of the time you subscribe to AT&T or Verizon or T-Mobile or
something else while
paying $50 minimum a month for smartphone service (if you own four
smartphones simultaneously you need to pay $200 minimum a month for
smartphone
service for all four smartphones). In 8/2015 Google created a
nationwide WI-FI program for smartphones called Google Fi at https://fi.google.com/about/
...it's
not free and costs money, specifically it costs $20 a month for
unlimited talk/text and $10 a month extra for each one gigabyte of
data you use, and it also only
works with Nexus smartphones vs. non-Nexus smartphones, but at the
same time it's still cheaper than paying $50 to $90 a month for
Verizon for smartphone or
T-Mobile for smartphone. To prove it, go to
http://www.google.com to type in "Google Fi" to find positive and
negative reviews about Google Fi.
If you want to get free stuff in San Francisco, check out
Finney's Friday Free Stuff at http://abc7news.com/freestuff
(you check in every Friday to find
free stuff from Michael Finney from ABC News, free stuff is only
available to viewers of ABC7 News), call Facebook at http://www.facebook.com
to find
Facebook groups called "Buy Nothing" "San Francisco", Olioex at http://www.olioex.com,
NextDoor at http://www.nextdoor.com's
"free" section, Johnny's Guide to
San Francisco for Cheapskates at http://sf.funcheap.com
(Johnny Funcheap mainly talks about free events in San Francisco but
often talks about free food/drinks
in San Francisco too), and Craigslist's "free section" (call http://sfbay.craigslist.org,
find the section called "For Sale", and then click on the word
"Free").
I personally recommend that you only buy brand-new
products/services and never buy used products, but if you're really
financially-poor/destitute and
need to find ways to save money here's a list of all major thrift
stores in San Francisco that sell used products vs. brand-new
products. Goodwill thrift
stores' official website is http://www.sfgoodwill.org,
Goodwill has many locations throughout San Francisco, and Goodwill
has an annual $2 clothing sale that
happens once a year in November of each year in which all regular
Goodwill stores in San Francisco sell all men's/women's/children's
clothing for just $2 each (e.g.
you can buy a $200-value man's suit for $2 total, or a $200 woman's
suit for $2 total), to find out the exact date each year call https://www.facebook.com/sfgoodwill
...I myself like to visit Goodwill just because all Goodwill stores
in San Francisco sell IBM games for just $2 each and sell
Xbox/Playstation-2 games for just $5 each,
and sometimes Goodwill has computer hardware/software real
cheap. Salvation Army thrift stores' official website is http://sanfrancisco.satruck.org,
there are two
Salvation Army thrift stores total and one is at at 1501 Valencia
Street and 25th Street and another is at 3947 Geary Blvd. and 3rd
Avenue, and Salvation Army thrift
stores tend to be more expensive than Goodwill in general but at the
same time Salvation Army thrift stores have an annual $2 clothing
sale that happens once a
year in November or December or January of each year in which all
regular Goodwill stores in San Francisco sell all
men's/women's/children's clothing for just $2
each (e.g. you can buy a $200-value man's suit for $2 total, or a
$200 woman's suit for $2 total), to find out the exact date each
year call
https://www.facebook.com/SalvationArmyThriftStoreSF/...I
like to visit Salvation Army thrift stores because they often sell
computer monitors for as low as $15.
Once again, you should only buy brand-new products/services and
never used-vs.-new stuff, but if you're really financially poor and
have no other way to survive
then thrift stores might be the only option available right now in
regards to affordability level.
If you want to get free WI-FI (there's no free DSL ISP in San
Francisco right now), just go to http://www.google.com to type in
"free WI-FI" "San
Francisco", and you can immediately find out that San Francisco City
Hall provides free WI-FI on the entire stretch of Market Street in
San Francisco all the
way from Market at the Ferry Building to Market and Castro Street,
San Francisco Main Library and all public libraries is San Francisco
related to it offer
free WI-FI, and San Francisco Dept. of Parks and Recreation at
Fell/Stanyan has all 32 parks in San Francisco provide free WI-FI.
If you want to use free WI-FI you just need to invest $30
total to buy a $30 USB wireless adapter that is Wireless-N 300, you
need to visit a computer store in
San Francisco like Best Buy or Office Depot or Office Max to buy a
$30 USB wireless adapter that is Wireless-N 300 (it has a built-in
internal non-detachable WI-FI
antenna and has no SMA port/connector at all, vs. has a external
detachable WI-FI antenna connected to the USB wireless adapter's SMA
port/connector), get the
software CD-ROM that was bundled with your $30 USB wireless adapter
to install WI-FI software on your computer, connect the $30 USB
wireless adapter
to your desktop computer or laptop computer's USB port, and use the
WI-FI software installed on your computer and the USB wireless
adapter attached to
your computer's USB port to scan the surrounding airspace for SSIDs
aka WI-FI signals to log onto, if you can't find any SSIDs to log
onto at all or you
can find SSIDs to log onto but all of them are password-protected
and enccypted (aka you need to know the logon password before you
can get free
WI-FI), just bring your desktop computer or laptop computer with USB
wireless adapter attached to another place in San Francisco that
does have
free WI-FI like the San Francisco Main Library...if you want, you
could always buy a $25-to-$40 USB wireless adapter with SMA
port/connector
with detachable external vs. internal WI-FI antenna that is
Wireless-N 300, buy a $50 15-dbi omnidirectional WI-FI antenna or a
$50 24-dbi directional
WI-FI antenna and $13 cable to connect the $50 omnidirectional or
directional WI-FI antenna to your USB wireless adaper that has SMA
ports/connectors so you can mooch free WI-FI with a WI-FI range of 8
miles to 32 miles (15-dbi is the highest level of omnidirectional
WI-FI antenna
that you can buy, and 24-dbi is the highest level of directional
WI-FI antenna that you can buy), and you basically need to spend $88
total on WI-FI
equipment (aka $25 for a USB wireless adapter with SMA
port/connector and detachable external vs. intternal WI-FI antenna,
$50 for a 15-dbi
omnidirectional WI-FI antenna that is five feet tall and less than
one inch wide and weighs about 10 pounds and has a WI-FI range of
several miles or
50 for a 24-dbi directional WI-FI antenna that is five feet wide and
three feet tall and weighs about 20 pounds and has a WI-FI range of
8 miles to 32
miles, and $13 for a cable to connect the $50 15-dbi omnidirectional
WI-FI antenna or $50 24-dbi directional WI-FI antenna to the $25 USB
wireless
adapter with SMA port/connector) but at the same time that $88
one-time flat-rate cost is still cheaper than buying a DSL modem for
$100 and
subscribing to a DSL ISP for $30 a month because you can mooch free
WI-FI forever without having to pay $30 a month to a DSL ISP at
all...if you're
wondering how I spent $88 total, I went to Central Computers at
Howard/ and 4th Street in San Francisco to buy a $25 Winstar
WS-WN686GB High
Power Wireless-N USB 2.0 Adapter 300Mbps with SMA connector because
it has the same technical specifications and works just as good as
Alfa-brand
USB wireless adapters with SMA connectors that cost $40 from Amazon
at http://www.amazon.com and you need to buy a USB wireless adapter
with
SMA connector with external detachable WI-FI antenna that you
unscrew with your fingers to replace with a higher-dbi WI-FI antenna
because a SMA
connector is required to connect detachable WI-FI antennas like a
24-dbi external WI-FI antenna (almost all computer stores in San
Francisco just sell
USB wireless adapters with built-in internal non-detachable WI-FI
antennas, and the only computer store in San Francisco that I could
find that sells USB
wireless adapters with SMA connector and external detachable WI-FI
antennas that you unscrew with your fingers to replace with a
higher-dbi WI-FI
antenna is Central Computers...Alfa-brand USB wireless adapters with
SMA connectors supposedly are the world's longest-range USB wireless
adapters,
but if you connect a 24-dbi directional WI-FI antenna to a Alfa USB
wireless adapter or any USB wireless adapter with detachable vs. non
detachable WI-FI antennas you have a WI-FI range of 8 to 32 miles
maximum which is a LOT longer-range than a stock model Alfa-brand
USB wireless
adapter...also, if you buy a USB wireless adapter with SMA connector
and detachable WI-FI antennas, try to buy a USB wireless adapter
that only has one
detachable WI-FI antenna total and not two detachable WI-FI antennas
total because if you buy a USB wireless adapter with two detachable
WI-FI
antennas total you'll need to buy two separate 24-dbi directional
WI-FI antennas to connect to each of the two SMA connectors and the
act of doing so
doesn't double your WI-FI range but is actually the same WI-FI range
as for a USB wireless adapter with only one SMA connector total aka
only one
detachable WI-FI antenna total), bought a $50 TP-LINK TL-ANT2424B
2.4GHz 24dBi Directional Grid Parabolic Antenna with N Female
connector
that is weather resistant from Amazon at http://www.amazon.com
(24-dbi directional WI-FI antennas originally cost $2,000 each when
they were first
released in 2001 but you can buy a brand-new one for just $50 now
because 24-dbi directional WI-FI antennas that have a WI-FI range of
8 miles to 32
miles only upload/download data at Wireless-N 300 speeds and if you
want to upload/download data at faster speeds like gigabit fiber
Internet speed you
can't and 24-dbi directional WI-FI antennas are only single-band aka
2.4 ghz and aren't dual-band aka 2.4 ghz and 5 ghz simultaneously
but that doesn't
matter because 2.4 ghz has a longer WI-FI ranmge and 5 ghz. has a
very-short WI-FI range...this 24-dbi WI-FI antenna that I bought for
$50 brand-new
from Amazon at http://www.amazon.com is about five feet wide and
three feet tall and weighs about 20 pounds, I deliberately chose
TP-Link brand because
the official websites for Office Depot and Office Max and Staples
and Best Buy and Amazon and eBay sell various brand names of 24-dbi
WI-FI antennas
and TP-Link got the best reviews from buyers overall, and I
deliberately bought grid parabolic vs. something else like dish
because grid parabolic has the
longest WI-FI range), and bought a $13 TP-Link TL-ANT24PT 50-cm.
pigtail cable ("N Male" to "RP-SMA Male") from Central Computers at
Howard/4th in San Francisco (I need this to connect the
TP¬Link 24 dbi directional WI-FI antenna to the Winstar USB wireless
adapter's SMA connector,
if you want to buy this pigtail cable Amazon at
http://www.amazon.com sells it for a slightly-lower price too), to
install everything I just needed a screwdriver
and my fingers and nothing else aka I plugged the Winstar USB
wireless adapter into my IBM computer's USB port and I used my
fingers to unscrew its
detachable WI-FI antenna and I then connected the TP-Link pigtail
cable to the Winstar USB wireless adapter and I then used a
screwdriver to assemble
the TP-Link 24-dbi directional WI-FI antenna and I then connected
the other end of the TP-Link pigtail cable to the TP-Link 24-dbi
directional WI-Fi
antenna and I then installed the IBM sofftware CD that came bundled
with my Winstar USB wireless computer onto my computer to install
WI-FI software
drivers and I then use the WI-FI software installed on my IBM
computer to scan the surrounding airspace for SSIDs aka WI-FI
signals to log onto and
since the 24-dbi directional WI-FI antenna has a WI-FI range of 8
miles to 32 miles I can receive a WI-FI signal even though the
Wireless-N routers
emitting the WI-FI signals is 32 miles away from my house and if the
24-dbi directional WI-FI antenna can't pick up any WI-FI signals
because tall buildings
or trees block the WI-FI signal then I should replace it with a
15-dbi omnidirectional vs. directional WI-FI antenna that only costs
$50 brand-new from
Amazon at http://www.amazon.com because omnidirectional vs.
directional WI-FI antennas can pick up WI-FI siignals even though
buildings or trees block
the WI-FI signal, PLEASE NOTE that even though I bought a 24-dbi
directional WI-FI antenna I literally can't mooch any free WI-FI at
all because I live in
a area with many tall/thick apartment buildings blocking the WI-FI
signal and when I can pick up WI-FI signals everything is
password-protected/encrypted
and I don't know what the WEP/WAP passwords are, oh yeah $88 is a
lot of money but it's one-time flat-rate fee that allows you to
mooch free WI-FI
forever/indefinitely and is still cheaper than buying a DSL modem
for $100 and paying $30 a month for a DSL ISP which is $360 a year
for the DSL ISP
alone, and using a 24-dbi directional WI-FI antenna isn't illegal
and actually is legal so long as you comply with FCC laws about only
using 30 dbi total for all
WI-FI equipment and comply with government laws about WI-FI aka you
just mooch WI-FI from SSIDs that are non
password-protected/encrypted and
you don't use computer-hacking software to crack the WEP/WAP
passwords for Wireless-N routers that are
password-protected/encrypted and you comply
with city-government zoning laws aka you just use the 24-dbi WI-FI
antenna indoors or mount it outdoors on your house's rooftop with a
WI-FI tripod and
sandbags or just a chimney mount and you don't install a
200-foor-tall flagpole on top of your house's rooftop before you
connect the 24-dbi directional
WI-FI antenna on top of the 200-foot-tall flagpole because San
Francisco City Hall will require you to apply for a zoning permit
that changes your house's
zoning from residential zoning to commercial/industrial zoning.
If you want a free DSL ISP, there is no free DSL ISP in San
Francisco but there are discounted DSL ISPs that only cost $10 a
month, they're Internet
Essentials at http://www.internetessentials.com
(Comcast Cable aka one of San Francisco's top cable-TV companies
owns it) and EveryoneOn at
http://www.everyoneon.org...in
order to qualify for these two discounted DSL ISPs aka Comcast's
Internet Essentials and EveryoneOn, you need to be
low-income and you need to have at least one child enrolled in a
nationwide school lunch program from a elementary/junior/high school
in San Francisco...
Comcast's Internet Essentials originally only sold DSL ISPs for $10
a month to low-income people who have at least one child enrolled in
a nationwide school
lunch program from a elementary/junior/high school in San Francisco,
but later on Comcast's Internet Essentials program expanded to
include senior citizens
and people in HUD housing aka Housing And Urban Development housing
-if you live in public housing owned by the government or you live
in senior citizen
housing owned by the government or receive a Section 8 voucher from
the government, you qualify for $10 a month Comcast DSL-.
AT&T telephone
company created AT&T Access program at http://about.att.com/story/connecting_more_us_residents_to_the_internet.html
which sells AT&T DSL for just
$10 a month, however you need to currently receive GA food stamps or
SSI before you can qualify. Google at http://www.google.com
created Google Fiber in
San Francisco which is a totally-free gigabit-fiber-Internet ISP
that uploads/downloads at gigabit speed but I don't know when this
totally-free ISP will become
operational in San Francisco, for more information go to
www.google.com to type in "Google Fiber" "San Francisco" and check
out
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Fiber.
If you want to subscribe to a gigabit ISP vs. DSL ISP for
just $10 a month or $20 a month, in 2020 America's federal
government created Emergency
Broadband Benefit at https://www.fcc.gov/broadbandbenefit,
it's a nationwide program that forces many major gigabit ISPs
including AT&T Gigabit and
Comcast Gigabit to sell monthly subscriptions to gigabit ISPs for
$50 off a month so you only need to pay $10 a month or $20 a month
total for a gigabit ISP,
but the only people who qualify for this nationwide program are
parents with children who get free lunches from school and
low-income people who receive
food stamps or SSI.
Also, if you want to find a free-webhosting provider
so you can make a free website or free blog or free online store
about yourself or your company or
even your family, please check out http://dannychan.rf.gd (I made
that website). Everything there is totally free, and I
deliberately left out all stuff
that is only "free trials" or cost money. http://dannychan.rf.gd doesn't
just talk about all places where you can get a free website or free
blog or free
online store, but also explains how you can get free Internet just
by buying a $30 USB wireless adapter and explains what a 24-dbi
directional WI-FI
antenna is, and if you don't understand the forementioned
information about 24-dbi directional WI-FI antennas please
visit http://dannychan.rf.gd
for
a lengthier more-in-depth explanation...http://dannychan.rf.gd also
talks about how AT&T telephone company in San Francisco
currently offers AT&T
Lifeline to low-income people in San Francisco, right now AT&T
Lifeline can only be used for home telephone service or cellphone
service and can't be
used for AT&T DSL ISP, but around the the year 2022 supposedly
"lifeline Internet" will come out nationwide in North America aka in
the year 2022 all major
telephone companies nationwide throughout North America supposedly
will offer lifeline discounts not just on home telephone service or
cellphone service
but also DSL ISP service too, and in the year 2022 the entire city
of San Francisco might have "lifeline Internet" aka low-income
people can subscribe to
AT&T DSL ISP at lifeline pricing vs. regular pricing.
Also, if you like to call social networking websites like
Facebook or like to do online chat check out
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_social_networking_websites
and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_chat_websites
and
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_virtual_communities_with_more_than_100_million_users.
Thank you very much for visiting this website!!! If
you're a financially-rich person in San Francisco, you might want to
visit all major department stores
and major shopping malls in San Francisco just to buy their products
and services (e.g. brand-name designer-label clothing, expensive
food//drinks,
and exotic delicacies imported from Western Europe) while maybe
attending their events (e.g. Macy's Passport fashion runway show),
read "Modern
Luxury" magazine at http://www.modernluxury.com
aka North America's #1 magazine for rich people and read ""Modern
Luxury magazine: San Francisco
Edition" at http://www.modernluxury.com/san-francisco
aka San Francisco's #1 magazine for rich people, visit http://www.sfgate.com/parties
to get a list
of all high-society parties in San Francisco so you can attend them
to do corporate networking, visit San Francisco's most-expensive
restaurant aka Saison
at http://www.saisonsf.com to
have a power lunch with a power tie and power suit with major
corporate clients or buy a romantic candlelit dinner for your
wife or girlfriend, visit "San Francisco's first cat cafe" aka
KitteaSF at http://www.kitteasf.com
to play with kittens and cats while maybe attending a a cat
circus called "Samantha Martin and The Acro-Cats" at http://www.circuscats.com (if
you like dogs you should visit Lafayette Dog Park at
Gough/Washington
which is part of San Francisco's Lafayette Park), visit North
America's largest museum about modern art aka SFMOMA aka San
Francisco Museum of
Modern Art which had a re-grand-opening in 2016 at a cost of $700
million to look at artwork and paintings and sculptures and attend
high-society parties
inside SFMOMA, and visit San Francisco's largest videogame arcade
aka EmporiumSF. If you're a financially-poor person in San
Francisco, you might
want to visit all major shopping malls and major department stores
in San Francisco to find out if they have a sale on anything you
might be interested in
buying (e.g. you might want to buy school uniforms/clothing or
school supplies like backpacks for your children for the first day
of school in each fall semester,
buy expensive food for your children to eat to reward them for
getting straight-A+ grades on their report cards, and buy special
mementos for special occasions
like weddings and Mother's Day and Father's Day). Finally,
please remember to get free food from McDonald's (if you like
hamburger restaurants like
McDonald's and Burger King and Carl's Jr., starting in 2015
McDonald's created a McDonald's smartphone app and if you install
this smartphone app onto
your smartphone -e.g. Google Android or Apple iPhone- McDonald's
will give you free food all the time, to prove it check out
http://www.thepennyhoarder.com/mcdonalds-app).
[Page 1 of this
website] [Page 2 of this website]
[Page 3 of this website][Page
4 of this website]