Arthur Entlich
Guest
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Posted:
Mon Nov 07, 2005 5:51 am Post subject:
Re: Ink in Canada |
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Gee, do you think he's now writing for AARP? Perish the thought! They
may seniors, but they likely can smell a fraud from miles away, too.
What I do find funny is that he had to go to an article from a totally
lay organization (when it comes to inkjets and technology) to plagiarize
to find something that agreed with him.
If he had any integrity at all, he would have just supplied the link or
the source.
Truly sad.
Art
drc023 wrote:
| Quote: | "measekite" <inkystinky@oem.com> wrote in message
news:fljaf.12009$dO2.437@newssvr29.news.prodigy.net...
drc023 wrote:
While refilling ink cartridges yourself is the cheapest, it is not
necessarily the best way to go. Refilling can be messy. If your print
cartridge has a chip in it, the refill may work the first time, but may
refuse to work as the cartridge is reused and ages. Using
remanufacturered and off-brand cartridges is also chancy. They may leak
causing print head damage. If your printer is old or you only paid $30
for it, the cost savings may be worthwhile. If you paid $150 or more for
your printer, you may want to stick to purchasing cartridges from the
manufacturer.
That's a pretty decent response. You actually make some valid points. I
may not necessarily agree with your position, but that's not a problem for
me. If you would continue with these kinds of replies and discontinue the
abusive behavior you might actually get a few people to respond to you in
a positive way.
--
Ron
DANK U
I assume that the baby talk means Thank You. Unfortunately I wrote the
response prior to doing any fact checking about the origin of your
statement. A quick Google search brought up the article from an AARP
newsletter where you copied the eighth paragraph in its entirety with no
credit given to the author. That is known as plagiarism and copyright
infringement. Here's a link to the article.
http://www.aarp.org/learntech/computers/life_online/costly_ink_cartridges.html
--
Ron
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measekite
Guest
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Posted:
Mon Nov 07, 2005 10:40 pm Post subject:
Re: Ink in Canada |
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Arthur Entlich wrote:
| Quote: | Gee, do you think he's now writing for AARP? Perish the thought!
They may seniors, but they likely can smell a fraud from miles away, too.
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*DA NEW PHILOSOPHY*
GO GET AFTERMARKET UNBRANDED INK
GO GET A HEADCLOG
EMAIL ART FOR HIS UNCLOG MANUAL
GO BUY A CANON
HA HA HA HA
| Quote: | What I do find funny is that he had to go to an article from a totally
lay organization (when it comes to inkjets and technology) to
plagiarize to find something that agreed with him.
If he had any integrity at all, he would have just supplied the link
or the source.
Truly sad.
Art
drc023 wrote:
"measekite" <inkystinky@oem.com> wrote in message
news:fljaf.12009$dO2.437@newssvr29.news.prodigy.net...
drc023 wrote:
While refilling ink cartridges yourself is the cheapest, it is not
necessarily the best way to go. Refilling can be messy. If your
print cartridge has a chip in it, the refill may work the first
time, but may refuse to work as the cartridge is reused and ages.
Using remanufacturered and off-brand cartridges is also chancy.
They may leak causing print head damage. If your printer is old or
you only paid $30 for it, the cost savings may be worthwhile. If
you paid $150 or more for your printer, you may want to stick to
purchasing cartridges from the manufacturer.
That's a pretty decent response. You actually make some valid
points. I may not necessarily agree with your position, but that's
not a problem for me. If you would continue with these kinds of
replies and discontinue the abusive behavior you might actually get
a few people to respond to you in a positive way.
--
Ron
DANK U
I assume that the baby talk means Thank You. Unfortunately I wrote
the response prior to doing any fact checking about the origin of
your statement. A quick Google search brought up the article from an
AARP newsletter where you copied the eighth paragraph in its entirety
with no credit given to the author. That is known as plagiarism and
copyright infringement. Here's a link to the article.
http://www.aarp.org/learntech/computers/life_online/costly_ink_cartridges.html
--
Ron
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