On Wed, 25 Jun 2003 13:31:01 +0900, "Ed" <gwbush@whitehouse.gov>
belched the alphabet and kept on going with:

>My advice is to spend the least amount of money you can that is the size you
>prefer. Whether it's a sony or an orion, it'll hold up for a good long time.
>
>And if it doesn't, just take it back. If it broke within a month of two,
>they'll probably just hand you a new one to replace the one that broke. If
>it lasts longer than a few months, it'll probably last for years.

Many years ago I put a tv in my truck. I tried watching it for a
while, but then realized that I didn't like Japanese television any
more at work than I did at home. It sat in the truck connected, but
totally unused for quite a long time.

Then one day I decided I would fire it up and see what was on. It was
busted. I had dutifully kept the warranty, figuring the vibration of
the truck would likely break it at some point. When I took out the
warranty and examined it I discovered that it had expired the previous
day.




--

Michael Cash



"There was a time, Mr. Cash, when I believed you must be the most useless
thing in the world. But that was before I read a Microsoft help file."

                                Prof. Ernest T. Bass
                                Mount Pilot College


http://www.sunfield.ne.jp/~mike/