Publisher says no printer . . . Word prints fine

B

Brian Kvalheim - [MS MVP]

Hi °°°MS°Publisher°°° ([email protected])
in the Microsoft® newsgroups
you posted:

|| Thankfully I will never ever buy any more American made aircraft or
|| diesel engines.
||
|| Buy decent gear now made in Brazil, Japan, Taiwan, China or India
|| that you can get great service life and parts.

Funny...in my life time, I will NEVER buy an import. Everything I buy will
be at least 76% or more North American built. I would however like the
Chevrolet Silverado that has the Isuzu Diesel. Still a nice truck.

--
Brian Kvalheim
Microsoft Office Publisher MVP
Official Publisher MVP Site:
http://www.kvalheim.org

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and
confers no rights.
 
E

Ed Bennett

After managing to set up OE-QuoteFix on his new PC, Ed reads a message
from Brian Kvalheim - said:
Funny...in my life time, I will NEVER buy an import. Everything I buy
will be at least 76% or more North American built. I would however
like the Chevrolet Silverado that has the Isuzu Diesel. Still a nice
truck.

I will never buy anything of bad quality, if I know the quality to be bad.
I do not shop on the basis of where the thing was made.
/me shrugs
 
°

°°°MS°Publisher°°°

I do try to shop where things are made.
I always try to buy the home grown/made product first, but would not if the
quality was not up to standard.
I also look to the background of what the product is made from and if that
country is known for expertise in that industry.
At the end of the day, I loathe poor quality and bad design, so that rules
everything Blitisher out immediately, but otherwise, I don't really care
where it comes from. The US in many areas are causing the boycotting of
their own industries. Because of some of the bizarre dumb rules the US has
on some things, people are refusing to buy other types of US products.
Personally, I quite like US made major industrial products, as while they
are not always pretty to look at, they are usually well designed and give
good service and ease of service. However, because of the dumb US laws and
discrimination in other areas, a substantial number of people in different
countries recognise the US situation and use a boycott of US products
against the US in retaliation. With the US not changing over to ISO
Standards rules out a substantial of equipment. The US is now technically
backward and still living in the dark ages of industry. The US needs to
urgently change to ISO Standardisation and Metric to get back to be a heavy
weight industrial player.

--
 
M

Mike Koewler

David,
Standards rules out a substantial of equipment.

Geez, I almost live in the hicks of Cincinnati, not exactly a Silicon
Valley of Industry. But within a square mile, I can find at least four
companies that are ISO certified. Maybe you ought to use a small brush
rather than a spray painter.

Mike
 
°

°°°MS°Publisher°°°

Mike that is great news, as there are those that are seeing the light.
If they are ISO Certified, they must be metric as well.

--
 
M

Mike Koewler

David,

Could be, I don't know. Two of the companies I know make precision tools
and parts. I guess there is a metric equivalent for a 9/16 inch bolt?

Mike
 

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