Are these any good

  • Thread starter Thread starter Michael C
  • Start date Start date
kony said:
I take back everything I wrote.
Clearly the 2nd sticker is evidence that it's defective!

Contrary to my last recommendation that you return it if it
troubles you, I now suggest that you keep it, even though
it's defective.

Nevermind that it works fine, you have to put a 3rd sticker
on it to remind you to accidentally not use it. Although,
if two stickers = defect, then three stickers might = no
defect. Do you have a couple spare stickers lying around?
Maybe if you just PEEL OFF that 2nd sticker? Naw, that's
too easy. Maybe if you shut your eyes while someone else
peels off the 2nd sticker?

Hey! What if you put it in the device so you can't SEE the
2nd sticker?

Wouldn't it be three state?

0 = unknown
1 = good
2 = defective
3 = unknown
4 = good
....
 
kony said:
It's not that I didn't understand your theory, it's that
you're just plain wrong. You invented it, pulled it out of
thin air, it's not true and has no factual backing. In
other words, you're full of it.

WHERE IS YOUR EVIDENCE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Oh, you don't have any? All you
keep doing is giving me your *opinion* based on nothing but your *opinion*
and getting angry because I question your *opinion*.

Michael.
 
WHERE IS YOUR EVIDENCE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Oh, you don't have any? All you
keep doing is giving me your *opinion* based on nothing but your *opinion*
and getting angry because I question your *opinion*.

Michael.

Evidence that they aren't defective?
Well, there are folks using mobile phones, cameras, MP3
players, and of course the card you have that started all
this.

Prove all <insert non-flash product here> aren't defective.
Prove your theory about 2nd labels isn't defective.

Question anything you like, but doing so with no basis,
nothing but evidence to the contrary, is senseless.
 
Kony's 'opinion' accurately reflects how the industry
works. Manufacturers are fanatical that parts with their name
work. In a quality environment, any defective part shipped
means your best customers - who took ten years to earn - will
drop you like a rock. Before they look at your price, first,
they look at your quality.

We had some Motorola transistors that did not meet specs.
Motorola was all over the place because some transistors did
not work correctly. Turns out the transistors were
counterfeit. It meant an FBI investigation. No responsible
manufacturer would ever sell inferior product - because
electronic manufacturers cannot afford defective parts.
Quality dictates that any part with the Sandisk label - even
if under another sticker - must meet specs. Bankruptcy is the
alternative. Quality is that critical in the electronics
industry where every component must work right the first time
- and without testing.
 
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