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TemekuT
ParticipantI once had a 30 year old tub refinished. The tub was sanded and the refinish was applied. The smell was bad for a few days. The finish looked great initially but within 6 months it cracked around the chrome drain and began to peel. It became great sport in our house to peel away part of the finish with every bath or shower. I will never refinish a tub again.
TemekuT
ParticipantI once had a 30 year old tub refinished. The tub was sanded and the refinish was applied. The smell was bad for a few days. The finish looked great initially but within 6 months it cracked around the chrome drain and began to peel. It became great sport in our house to peel away part of the finish with every bath or shower. I will never refinish a tub again.
TemekuT
ParticipantI once had a 30 year old tub refinished. The tub was sanded and the refinish was applied. The smell was bad for a few days. The finish looked great initially but within 6 months it cracked around the chrome drain and began to peel. It became great sport in our house to peel away part of the finish with every bath or shower. I will never refinish a tub again.
TemekuT
ParticipantI once had a 30 year old tub refinished. The tub was sanded and the refinish was applied. The smell was bad for a few days. The finish looked great initially but within 6 months it cracked around the chrome drain and began to peel. It became great sport in our house to peel away part of the finish with every bath or shower. I will never refinish a tub again.
May 1, 2011 at 4:32 PM in reply to: OT: California Prison Academy: Better Than a Harvard Degree #690923TemekuT
ParticipantTrue story – 12 years ago a CPA friend related to me that his college educated brother quit his private industry job to go to work as a prison guard.
1. He got in for the interview because his brother-in-law worked for the prison system, and he was given preference in the initial interview process.
2. He wanted the job because the overtime and perks were so great that he made substantially more than what he made in private industry.
May 1, 2011 at 4:32 PM in reply to: OT: California Prison Academy: Better Than a Harvard Degree #690994TemekuT
ParticipantTrue story – 12 years ago a CPA friend related to me that his college educated brother quit his private industry job to go to work as a prison guard.
1. He got in for the interview because his brother-in-law worked for the prison system, and he was given preference in the initial interview process.
2. He wanted the job because the overtime and perks were so great that he made substantially more than what he made in private industry.
May 1, 2011 at 4:32 PM in reply to: OT: California Prison Academy: Better Than a Harvard Degree #691599TemekuT
ParticipantTrue story – 12 years ago a CPA friend related to me that his college educated brother quit his private industry job to go to work as a prison guard.
1. He got in for the interview because his brother-in-law worked for the prison system, and he was given preference in the initial interview process.
2. He wanted the job because the overtime and perks were so great that he made substantially more than what he made in private industry.
May 1, 2011 at 4:32 PM in reply to: OT: California Prison Academy: Better Than a Harvard Degree #691746TemekuT
ParticipantTrue story – 12 years ago a CPA friend related to me that his college educated brother quit his private industry job to go to work as a prison guard.
1. He got in for the interview because his brother-in-law worked for the prison system, and he was given preference in the initial interview process.
2. He wanted the job because the overtime and perks were so great that he made substantially more than what he made in private industry.
May 1, 2011 at 4:32 PM in reply to: OT: California Prison Academy: Better Than a Harvard Degree #692092TemekuT
ParticipantTrue story – 12 years ago a CPA friend related to me that his college educated brother quit his private industry job to go to work as a prison guard.
1. He got in for the interview because his brother-in-law worked for the prison system, and he was given preference in the initial interview process.
2. He wanted the job because the overtime and perks were so great that he made substantially more than what he made in private industry.
TemekuT
ParticipantNo, I did not pay $250. If I want to replace it with an identical phone I was told the charge is $250. It’s the LG enV3 on the Verizon contract and initially it was $49. It malfunctioned right when the warranty period was over. I just found out that Verizon has replaced 4 of my relatives’ phones due to the same malfunction I am experiencing. I took the phone to the Verizon store and asked them to update the software like the phone tech suggested and one of the workers actually said that the update doesn’t fix the problem and that I need a new phone. Other workers, through their body language, made it apparent that the phone is a POS and one told me the batteries fail on this model. A consumer at the counter told me Verizon updated the software on her daughter’s phone and it worked for a few days, then the phone kept turning off spontaneously again. So obviously Verizon knows about the problem and has continued to sell it anyway. You’ll see lots of complaints if you google enV3.
TemekuT
ParticipantNo, I did not pay $250. If I want to replace it with an identical phone I was told the charge is $250. It’s the LG enV3 on the Verizon contract and initially it was $49. It malfunctioned right when the warranty period was over. I just found out that Verizon has replaced 4 of my relatives’ phones due to the same malfunction I am experiencing. I took the phone to the Verizon store and asked them to update the software like the phone tech suggested and one of the workers actually said that the update doesn’t fix the problem and that I need a new phone. Other workers, through their body language, made it apparent that the phone is a POS and one told me the batteries fail on this model. A consumer at the counter told me Verizon updated the software on her daughter’s phone and it worked for a few days, then the phone kept turning off spontaneously again. So obviously Verizon knows about the problem and has continued to sell it anyway. You’ll see lots of complaints if you google enV3.
TemekuT
ParticipantNo, I did not pay $250. If I want to replace it with an identical phone I was told the charge is $250. It’s the LG enV3 on the Verizon contract and initially it was $49. It malfunctioned right when the warranty period was over. I just found out that Verizon has replaced 4 of my relatives’ phones due to the same malfunction I am experiencing. I took the phone to the Verizon store and asked them to update the software like the phone tech suggested and one of the workers actually said that the update doesn’t fix the problem and that I need a new phone. Other workers, through their body language, made it apparent that the phone is a POS and one told me the batteries fail on this model. A consumer at the counter told me Verizon updated the software on her daughter’s phone and it worked for a few days, then the phone kept turning off spontaneously again. So obviously Verizon knows about the problem and has continued to sell it anyway. You’ll see lots of complaints if you google enV3.
TemekuT
ParticipantNo, I did not pay $250. If I want to replace it with an identical phone I was told the charge is $250. It’s the LG enV3 on the Verizon contract and initially it was $49. It malfunctioned right when the warranty period was over. I just found out that Verizon has replaced 4 of my relatives’ phones due to the same malfunction I am experiencing. I took the phone to the Verizon store and asked them to update the software like the phone tech suggested and one of the workers actually said that the update doesn’t fix the problem and that I need a new phone. Other workers, through their body language, made it apparent that the phone is a POS and one told me the batteries fail on this model. A consumer at the counter told me Verizon updated the software on her daughter’s phone and it worked for a few days, then the phone kept turning off spontaneously again. So obviously Verizon knows about the problem and has continued to sell it anyway. You’ll see lots of complaints if you google enV3.
TemekuT
ParticipantNo, I did not pay $250. If I want to replace it with an identical phone I was told the charge is $250. It’s the LG enV3 on the Verizon contract and initially it was $49. It malfunctioned right when the warranty period was over. I just found out that Verizon has replaced 4 of my relatives’ phones due to the same malfunction I am experiencing. I took the phone to the Verizon store and asked them to update the software like the phone tech suggested and one of the workers actually said that the update doesn’t fix the problem and that I need a new phone. Other workers, through their body language, made it apparent that the phone is a POS and one told me the batteries fail on this model. A consumer at the counter told me Verizon updated the software on her daughter’s phone and it worked for a few days, then the phone kept turning off spontaneously again. So obviously Verizon knows about the problem and has continued to sell it anyway. You’ll see lots of complaints if you google enV3.
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