Posts Tagged ‘200’
Well designed portable hard drive, transfer file quickly
low noise with clear blue light that tells you it is working.
I bought 2 from these hard drives and i will buy another one soon, i strongly recommend it.
Toshiba 200 GB USB
I bought this scale in January 2010 after searching for a scale with a large, backlit display that I could read without my glasses. I loved the clean design of this scale. I loved the backlit, easy to read display. I loved the ease of use.
What I don’t love is that after only five months it has stopped working.
The ‘tap to turn on’ feature doesn’t work. Period. In order to get a reading from this scale, I have to pull the batteries out and put them back in. Then I have to sit it down and wait for it to turn itself off. Then I lift up the scale and put it down firmly to trigger the display to read ‘0.0′ and step on. Even then, I don’t always get a consistent reading. The scale is really temperamental. I like to take my weight at least twice, sometimes three times. This scale used to be super accurate. Now I’m getting three different readings in the space of a few minutes. I doubt I can put on 20lbs in that time.
I researched all the different scale brands before making my purchase. I was really hoping that this scale would be what I was looking for. It is disappointing that this scale didn’t work out for me. I’m surprised it didn’t, especially since other Amazon customers have given it such great reviews.
American Standard 9850 200
In the character of Hilly Holbrook, Stockett has created one of the most vivid illustrations of the notion that absolute power corrupts absolutely: even it it’s only at the Junior League. I raced through the pages, confident that Hilly would get her just desserts in the hands of this confident storyteller and boy does she ever! The privileged Miss Skeeter’s story is not quite as gripping or believable as the the maids’ tales, but this is a small quibble for a novel that presses all the right buttons and makes yesterday’s headlines go down like porkchops. This novel earns the Stern Librarian’s commendation as the best novel of 2009. The Stern Librarian (I hate ironing pleats too).
Vidpro BP 200 Photo