Posts Tagged ‘snap’

I bought this when there was an offer for an upgrade to 2010. Some of the reviewers claimed to have gotten it, but I did not. Nor can I find any good place to ask Amazon about it. I used to really like Amazon. The customer service is really not as good as it once was.

The product itself is typical Microsoft fare. You’d do better to stick with Open Office for free if you can help it.
Professional Snap On Lens

I’ve had this card for a couple of months, and at first everything was fine. I’ve now had several instances of corruption. when I try and move photos from my camera to my computer they are unreadable. I’ve started to do an in-camera format in between each use, which is supposed to help reduce corruption but to no avail.

I’ve now lost hundreds of photos because of this junky card.
37mm Snap Cap Lens

I have been using the furminator on my yellow lab. It works just as advertised. The amount of fur that comes out is unbelievable. Nothing else I have tried has worked as well. With a yellow lab, there is no end to the shedding but at least I remove some of it before it hits the kitchen floor!
67mm Snap On Lens

I’m extremely happy with this purchase. It’s portable and very easy to use on your dashboard. Way better than that stick-on thing for your windshield. The product is new and exactly as described on Amazon. I highly recommend this product by this seller, the delivery was fast and definitely worth the shipping cost. Again, it’s a great buy.
Professional Snap On Lens

Let me start by saying that I can see why a lot of people wouldn’t like this book, especially a lot of people who have to read it for school. To many people, it seems like the typical “teenage angst” kind of book, and it’s very easy to think that the whole way through the book. If you learn nothing from this book then you didn’t get the meaning behind it – it’s a blunt statement, either you agree or you don’t. And if you *do* get the meaning behind it, but found it to be boring or repetitive anyway, then that is your opinion. Some people just simply don’t like the same books.

I have to admit, when I first started reading Catcher in the Rye I was a bit struck at why it was considered a classic in literature. With me, I started seeing something deeper when I got to the middle of the book. It isn’t until you start seeing the same things being repeated that you start to notice. The title of my review is a great example. Holden Caulfield is a prime example of questioning youth. Most teenagers aren’t focused on morals, nor do many of them think deeply about what goes on in the world. And the few that do are like Holden; they’re confused, lonely, and scared as hell. So the more I read and the deeper I delved into the meanings behind Holden’s thoughts and ideas, the more I began to understand. Holden Caulfield isn’t just the average 16-year old. He is, yet he isn’t. He *thinks* deeper than the average teenager. He’s still immature in a lot of his thinking throughout the book but overall his character is just this mass of confusion. He seems confused at a lot of things, at why a lot of people are the way they are, yet he himself isn’t perfect. That is what shapes his character. He isn’t flawless, and the author, Salinger, clearly brings that out to the reader. Sometimes Holden contradicts himself – a flaw within himself that is telling the readers that he is human. By developing his character in this way, I saw it as a way to make you both like and dislike him. If you liked
Professional Snap On Lens