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sdduuuude
ParticipantSet the minimum wage to $0.00 and the country would re-learn what work is.
sdduuuude
ParticipantSet the minimum wage to $0.00 and the country would re-learn what work is.
sdduuuude
ParticipantSet the minimum wage to $0.00 and the country would re-learn what work is.
sdduuuude
Participant[quote=Arraya]I’m still waiting for the government jobs for home purchase program.[/quote]
How does that work ? If you buy a forclosed house, the gov gives you a job ?
sdduuuude
Participant[quote=Arraya]I’m still waiting for the government jobs for home purchase program.[/quote]
How does that work ? If you buy a forclosed house, the gov gives you a job ?
sdduuuude
Participant[quote=Arraya]I’m still waiting for the government jobs for home purchase program.[/quote]
How does that work ? If you buy a forclosed house, the gov gives you a job ?
sdduuuude
Participant[quote=Arraya]I’m still waiting for the government jobs for home purchase program.[/quote]
How does that work ? If you buy a forclosed house, the gov gives you a job ?
sdduuuude
Participant[quote=Arraya]I’m still waiting for the government jobs for home purchase program.[/quote]
How does that work ? If you buy a forclosed house, the gov gives you a job ?
sdduuuude
ParticipantAlso, your solar “cost per kwH” goes down as you purchase more panels because you need some conditioning equipment (inverters, rectifiers, etc.) that convert the DC power from the panels to AC that can be put back on the grid. That stuff is fairly pricey, and you need one for every X panels.
Also, notice the “tiered” cost this creates. i.e. if you buy X+1 panels, your cost per kwh goes up.
sdduuuude
ParticipantAlso, your solar “cost per kwH” goes down as you purchase more panels because you need some conditioning equipment (inverters, rectifiers, etc.) that convert the DC power from the panels to AC that can be put back on the grid. That stuff is fairly pricey, and you need one for every X panels.
Also, notice the “tiered” cost this creates. i.e. if you buy X+1 panels, your cost per kwh goes up.
sdduuuude
ParticipantAlso, your solar “cost per kwH” goes down as you purchase more panels because you need some conditioning equipment (inverters, rectifiers, etc.) that convert the DC power from the panels to AC that can be put back on the grid. That stuff is fairly pricey, and you need one for every X panels.
Also, notice the “tiered” cost this creates. i.e. if you buy X+1 panels, your cost per kwh goes up.
sdduuuude
ParticipantAlso, your solar “cost per kwH” goes down as you purchase more panels because you need some conditioning equipment (inverters, rectifiers, etc.) that convert the DC power from the panels to AC that can be put back on the grid. That stuff is fairly pricey, and you need one for every X panels.
Also, notice the “tiered” cost this creates. i.e. if you buy X+1 panels, your cost per kwh goes up.
sdduuuude
ParticipantAlso, your solar “cost per kwH” goes down as you purchase more panels because you need some conditioning equipment (inverters, rectifiers, etc.) that convert the DC power from the panels to AC that can be put back on the grid. That stuff is fairly pricey, and you need one for every X panels.
Also, notice the “tiered” cost this creates. i.e. if you buy X+1 panels, your cost per kwh goes up.
sdduuuude
Participant[quote=Ms Pington]The good thing is I didn’t write a check.[/quote]
Oh. You didn’t say that. That should make it much easier for you.
“Not writing a check” is always a good strategy 🙂
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