Lemonade is incredible. I had a horrible fire in my condo complex and lost everything. I was so stressed thinking about what I would need to provide insurance, but Lemonade made it so easy. My claims advocate was always incredibly quick to respond and they were so understanding and supportive during a tough time. I’m a Lemonade customer for life.
Based on our record, PlugShare seems to be a lot more popular than Lemonade. While we know about 164 links to PlugShare, we've tracked only 8 mentions of Lemonade. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
It looks like the only way to get information on Lemonade (on https://lemonade.com/ or their Mobile App) is to go through a Q&A session with Maya (their conversational robot). There is no way to look around, get educated/inspired, make up one's mind on Lemonade. This reminds me of the "wizard" interface introduced with Windows 95, where one would be in a unidirectional tunnel to answer specific questions in a... Source: about 1 year ago
If you don't start with the purpose of the layout and a clear idea of the content you're just making pretty pictures. And there's not much 'design' if you're just copying lemonade.com. Source: about 1 year ago
I mean the design doesn't seem hard and for animations look at things like https://www.lottielab.com. But when they say "like lemonade.com" that site definitely has interactive features and user accounts, so some of the elements on that page wouldn't make sense as a plain vanilla site. Source: about 1 year ago
Go online, lemonade.com provides the service for around that price and I know there are others out there. If you want to keep it as cheap as possible, set you deductible high and coverage limit low. Source: over 1 year ago
If you're looking for a provider, I signed up with lemonade.com which seems to have decent reviews. $40(ish) a month covers vet visits, a blood draw, like, 3 vaccines and a few tests. And dental stuff and if we ever need to say goodbye to her. Source: over 1 year ago
Obviously I'm being a little sarcastic, but I'm serious as well. ABRP answers about 90% of such questions, and plugshare.com answers the remaining ones ("how reliable are the chargers at XYZ location?"). Source: 7 months ago
You can check recent check-ins at those chargers and find others in https://plugshare.com. Source: 10 months ago
HOWEVER, you can setup to charge at a J1772 Level-2 charging station which are ALL over the place and often free. Checkout plugshare.com to find them. These are essentially fancy 220v chargers and can be converted to charge power banks and onboard batteries.... The question then becomes the legality of doing it in your area. Some places are designated "EV charging only." You're not an EV. Some places, like Oregon... Source: 12 months ago
Before taking a trip and planning to rely on public chargers, check recent checkins to make sure the chargers you plan to use are working properly and to identify backup options just in case: http://plugshare.com. Source: 12 months ago
Use plugshare.com to find EV charging stations near your gym, grocery stores, restaurants, and other places were you spend some time. Not as inexpensive or as convenient as having a charger at your parking space. But probably much cheaper and convenient then your solution. Source: 12 months ago
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