T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
384.1 | | GAVEL::JANDROW | | Wed Apr 12 1995 13:55 | 13 |
|
as deb pointed out in a conversation we had regarding this, is the
post office looking to be just a provider (where one can choose someone
other than the usps) or are they looking to be able to monitor it
(e-mail)???
if they are looking for monitoring priviledges, i say no way. they
(the government) already have enough to say about what we do behind our
closed (private) doors...
|
384.2 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | no, i'm aluminuming 'um, mum | Wed Apr 12 1995 14:09 | 3 |
|
one can almost sense mr. bill champing at the bit.
|
384.3 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Special Fan Club Baloney | Wed Apr 12 1995 14:28 | 1 |
| What about Auntie Sluggo?
|
384.4 | | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Wed Apr 12 1995 14:40 | 2 |
| Wonder what the electronic Elvis stamp will look like.....
|
384.5 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Wed Apr 12 1995 14:52 | 10 |
| I'd like to point out that the proposal does not require email users to
get their messages "stamped." It offers an authentication service,
nothing more and nothing less.
However, secure authentication is already available through the use of
the freeware PGP system, whose author is currently being prosecuted by
the US gummint for exporting military technology without the proper
blessing. (Encryption software is considered military technology.)
Hence, the USPS is a day late and, as ever, a dollar short.
|
384.6 | Look at this issue very carefully, that's all. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed Apr 12 1995 15:19 | 21 |
| I'm with Binder on this deal. Going out of my way to NOT be
paranoid, I think the USPS has a legit reason to provide this
service.
We (should) have the ability to use it, or NOT. Personal choice,
freedom... you know.
Reread genes message and notice the "using a stamp PROTECTS someone
from..." see, privilege has strings attached. Use a stamp and they're
entitled to make sure everythings on the up&up. Use zipcode and
you admit your in a federal zone (per IRS code, not postal regulations).
Ah... Ahhhhh....
set mode=madmike
The USPS and the federal government will work very hard to make sure
this (transmission medium) is monopolized and controlled by the usps.
That way they score revenue they're loosing, big time, and they can
also keep tabs on the troops.
Oh geezus... there I go again...
|
384.7 | | PATE::CLAPP | | Wed Apr 12 1995 16:14 | 10 |
|
If they do for EMAIL what they've done with snail mail.....
Something to consider, since the government started regulating
features of automobiles, cars have quadrupled in price. During
that same time, the unregulated computer industry has driven
costs down, while producing a better/faster product.
If they get involved in EMAIL, they will try to regulate it,
if they regulate it, we'll pay for it.
|
384.8 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Apr 12 1995 16:19 | 12 |
| > If they do for EMAIL what they've done with snail mail.....
Far be it from me to defend the postal service, but what _have_ they done
with snail mail?
> Something to consider, since the government started regulating
> features of automobiles, cars have quadrupled in price. During
> that same time, the unregulated computer industry has driven
> costs down, while producing a better/faster product.
Apples and lemons. Do you think that cars would have gone down in price
if there had been no government regulations?
|
384.9 | | PATE::CLAPP | | Wed Apr 12 1995 16:29 | 36 |
| re: <<< Note 384.8 by NOTIME::SACKS "Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30
DTN:381-2085" >>>
> If they do for EMAIL what they've done with snail mail.....
Far be it from me to defend the postal service, but what _have_ they
done with snail mail?
Continued to raise rates, while providing less/slower services. When
I was a kid we used to get mail delivery twice a day.
> Something to consider, since the government started regulating
> features of automobiles, cars have quadrupled in price. During
> that same time, the unregulated computer industry has driven
> costs down, while producing a better/faster product.
Apples and lemons. Do you think that cars would have gone down in
price if there had been no government regulations?
Actually there may have been a chance, but we'll never know.
Road and Track did an article a few years back showing
what you paid for that was dictated by the feds.... It was astounding.
For example, those 5MPH bumpers cost a lot, yet last I heard they
were proven not to actually save money. I for one do not want an
air bag. I used to race sports cars (SCCA), I now note with interest
that while loaded with safety features, racing cars do not have
airbags. There is a reason. I don't like the idea of forking over
pile of money for a "feature" I do not want. I gather they cost a few
hundred.
|
384.10 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Apr 12 1995 16:54 | 12 |
| > Continued to raise rates, while providing less/slower services. When
> I was a kid we used to get mail delivery twice a day.
Wow, you must be old! I believe first class rates haven't exceeded inflation.
When I was a kid, the rate was 4� and candy bars were 5�. How much are candy
bars now? I'm not convinced that delivery times have really deteriorated.
> Actually there may have been a chance, but we'll never know.
Take a look at a country where cars aren't regulated. They made Beetles
in Brazil long after they stopped making them in Europe. Did they get
cheaper and cheaper?
|
384.11 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | no, i'm aluminuming 'um, mum | Wed Apr 12 1995 17:12 | 3 |
|
We used to get the mail only once a day, as I recall. That horse was
always sweatin' up a storm too.
|
384.12 | | MPGS::MARKEY | The bottom end of Liquid Sanctuary | Wed Apr 12 1995 17:15 | 5 |
|
I wonder if the post office gets involved with e-mail if
oneday some disgruntled worker will open fire on a bunch
of servers and telecom equipment...
|
384.13 | \\ | SUBPAC::SADIN | One if by LAN, two if by C | Wed Apr 12 1995 17:15 | 7 |
|
I hope I'm there with my video camera! It'll be like another
shootzenfest.....;*)
jim
|
384.14 | I get other people's mail | SWAM1::MEUSE_DA | | Wed Apr 12 1995 17:18 | 6 |
|
does this me I will not be able to download Penthouse mag pictures?
I object!
|
384.15 | | PATE::CLAPP | | Wed Apr 12 1995 17:23 | 27 |
| re: Note 384.10 by NOTIME::SACKS
>Wow, you must be old! I believe first class rates haven't exceeded
>inflation. When I was a kid, the rate was 4" and candy bars were 5".
>How much are candy bars now? I'm not convinced that delivery times
>have really deteriorated.
Only 42. Think it was 4 cents as a kid. Now 30 that's 750%
(granted compounding makes it less). Even at 5% inflation over
say 30 years compounded, don't think that's 750%. As to the candy
makers, they actually make healthy profit per bar, figure the markup.
>Take a look at a country where cars aren't regulated. They made Beetles
>in Brazil long after they stopped making them in Europe. Did they get
>cheaper and cheaper?
As to Brazil making bugs, that country is so rife with inflation
no economic argument can be based on it. But cars certainly
would be cheaper without the government regulated costs. $400
for airbags, $500 for bumpers, $200 for automatic restraining
devices, etc etc etc...
It's just the general principle that regulation costs. I don't want to
pay the $400 for the airbag, or in this case for the postal service to
provide a service I never even asked for in the first place.
|
384.16 | | DASHER::RALSTON | Ain't Life Fun! | Wed Apr 12 1995 17:38 | 17 |
| They should be able to provide this service, as long as it is run as a
business, for profit, and not be subsidized with taxpayer dollars. The
problem is that because these government entities do not have to make
the effort to be competitive and supply a service that is worthwhile in
the marketplace, this because the consumer is forced to use them,
they soon become a failed business if not bailed out with tax money. A
normal business can't afford to give financial for life, without threat of
layoff, and then let all of their employees retire after 20 years with
lucrative retirement benefits, and stay in business for very long. As
always happens with government agencies, the USPS will not be able to
compete with real business, therefore they will either us laws that
force us to use them or to continually drain the tax dollars of citizens
in order to support their unnecessary, worthless, uncompetitive venture.
IMHO of course!
...Tom
|
384.17 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Apr 12 1995 17:41 | 12 |
| It's pretty simple to determine if the increase in first class postage has
exceeded the inflation rate in the last 40 years. I leave it as an exercise
to the reader. I wasn't claiming that candy bars track inflation. It's just
that they're something I knew the price of when I was a kid.
> But cars certainly
> would be cheaper without the government regulated costs.
No question. But you compared cars with computers, saying computers
are much faster and cheaper than they used to be due to the lack of
government regulation. There's been no technological revolution in
cars to compare to the one in computers, so your comparison breaks down.
|
384.18 | | PATE::CLAPP | | Wed Apr 12 1995 17:55 | 29 |
|
re: <<< Note 384.17 by NOTIME::SACKS "Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30
DTN:381-2085" >>>
>No question. But you compared cars with computers, saying computers
>are much faster and cheaper than they used to be due to the lack of
>government regulation. There's been no technological revolution in
>cars to compare to the one in computers, so your comparison breaks
>down.
Actually, in the last few years both the design and manufacture of
cars has become much more automated. If you subtract out the several
thousands of dollars in government mandated equipment, you might find
the cost of cars has not kept up with inflation.
The reason for mentioning computers is that it's an example of what can
happen if government does not regulate an industry. What free market
forces are capable of. While it may not true to say lack of regulation
means lower cost, it is fair to say the presence of regulation leads to
higher costs in most cases.
|
384.19 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Wed Apr 12 1995 17:55 | 30 |
| .9
> Far be it from me to defend the postal service, but what _have_ they
> done with snail mail?
> Continued to raise rates, while providing less/slower services. When
> I was a kid we used to get mail delivery twice a day.
And you had to walk through 6-foot-deep snow to school. Uphill. Both
ways.
Consider for a moment the huge increase in mailed pieces over the past
few years. When I was a kid in the '40s and '50s, we'd see maybe two
or three pieces a day (one delivery, not two), except at Christmas. No
junk mail, no local shopper newspapers, no merchandise samples, no
color catalogs, none of that stuff. Today it's a bare day when my take
isn't at least eight or ten items, and usually there are more than a
dozen, including two different weekly shopper newspapers. This doesn't
require more resources per customer than it used to?
Consider the increase in mail delivery points due to the expansion of
housing caused by our increasing population. This doesn't require more
resources per carrier than it used to?
Consider the increase in labor and material costs. When I was a kid,
an RFD carrier's car cost $1,000. Today it costs $10,000 or more.
When I was a kid, $10,000 a year was a decent wage. Today it's not
even close to the poverty line. Getting a letter hand-delivered from
my house to a house anywhere in the entire country within three days
for 32 cents is, to my mind, a good deal.
|
384.20 | Both ways?? :) | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Yap!Yap!Yap!Yap!Yap!Yap!Yap! | Wed Apr 12 1995 17:59 | 3 |
|
Uphill?? You too??
|
384.21 | | MPGS::MARKEY | The bottom end of Liquid Sanctuary | Wed Apr 12 1995 18:01 | 13 |
|
>Consider for a moment the huge increase in mailed pieces over the past
>few years...
>Consider the increase in mail delivery points due to the expansion
>of...
>Consider the increase in labor and material costs...
Consider the rise in ammo prices...
-b
|
384.22 | | DECLNE::SHEPARD | Crashin' and Burnin' | Wed Apr 12 1995 18:07 | 9 |
| Why is it some people feel it necessary to defend the government and
it's institutions at all points? Companies like FED-X, UPS, etc.. have proven
they can deliver on time, if given the "right" to deliver private residential
mail, at a cost lower than the current $0.32 per. This discussion has
degenerated into one trying to change the subject from should the USPS aka the
government be given monopolistic control of electronic communications. Whether
or not postal rates have kept up with the inflation rate is irrelevant fluff.
Mikey
|
384.23 | | CONSLT::MCBRIDE | Reformatted to fit your screen | Wed Apr 12 1995 18:14 | 7 |
| Binder's right (as usual) in that the price is a good deal. It's a
great deal actually. What do folks think it should cost to mail a
letter? Free? $0.10? $0.25? How do our rate compare to other
countries? If ours aren't the lowest per ounce, I'd bet they are very
close.
Brian
|
384.24 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Whatever happened to ADDATA? | Wed Apr 12 1995 18:15 | 9 |
| The argument goes that USPS must have the monopoly to ensure
that all first class delivery to ALL U.S. locations (even
out-of-the-way places) remains at the same price. If FED-ex
took all the "easy" routes, who would do the hard ones?
Well, I'd be willing to pay premium prices to get my occasional
out-of-the-way mail delivered to the outbacks of Kansas if it
meant that I would benefit from lower mail delivery prices to
all the other places.
|
384.25 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Wed Apr 12 1995 18:29 | 14 |
| .22
> Companies like FED-X, UPS, etc.. have proven
> they can deliver on time, if given the "right" to deliver private
> residential
> mail, at a cost lower than the current $0.32 per.
Horsepuckey. These companies have demonstrated that they can deliver
an occasional parcel to a small percentage of the houses in the
country, at a rate no lower than a couple of dollars per. You ain't
seen NOTHIN' until you've seen a central post office's sorting system -
as good as FedEx's and UPS's systems are, they would be absolutely
SWAMPED by the need to deliver half a billion pieces of mail five or
six days of the week.
|
384.26 | | DECLNE::SHEPARD | Crashin' and Burnin' | Wed Apr 12 1995 18:46 | 8 |
| >at a rate no lower than a couple of dollars per.
How much more money would be pumped into the economy at "a couple of dollars
per", if business were permitted to use private carriers exclusively for just
their packages. My original question still stands. What is there to recommend
the USPS, as the best there is, for our money?
Mikey
|
384.27 | | CONSLT::MCBRIDE | Reformatted to fit your screen | Wed Apr 12 1995 18:52 | 6 |
| They are permitted to use private carriers for just their packages.
There is no "have to" whgen it comes to parcel post. You can even send
a letter UPS, FED-EX etc. but you would put yourself at an economic
disadvantage compared to your competition.
Brian
|
384.28 | | PATE::CLAPP | | Wed Apr 12 1995 18:59 | 18 |
| re: 384.19
The math doesn't work.
The more mail the more revenue the mail generates.
The higher the population the higher the population density
thus the higher the efficiency of the service.
There is also the issue of automation, which should drive costs down.
And yes when I was a kid we had better service...
This really boils down to some folks want big govt, and some folks
don't. It's a shame those that want big govt, help pay for it with my
money.
|
384.29 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Wed Apr 12 1995 19:29 | 25 |
| .28
> The more mail the more revenue the mail generates.
If the charge to deliver a piece covered the costs of delivering that
piece, you're right. It doesn't, so you're wrong.
> The higher the population the higher the population density
> thus the higher the efficiency of the service.
If the amount of time required to deliver to 10 houses were the same as
that requried to deliver to 3 houses, you'd be right. It doesn't, so
you're wrong. (If we'd all accept having our mail delivered to a kiosk
at the end of the block and walking down to our boxes there, there
would be increased efficiency. Most of us won't accept that minor
inconvenience.)
> There is also the issue of automation, which should drive costs down.
*Relative* costs are down. *Total* cost is up, and the difference is
not accounted for by increases in rates that haven't kept up with
inflation.
I don't want big gummint, but I'm not anything like convinced the
existing private carriers can - and would - be better.
|
384.30 | | DECLNE::SHEPARD | Crashin' and Burnin' | Wed Apr 12 1995 19:36 | 10 |
| RE:.29
>I'm not anything like convinced the existing private carriers can - and would -
be better.
Why is that please support your argument, with reasons/opinions.
Also what can be done to improve the quality of the USPS?
How do you feel about the Postal Workers Union, and the effect it has on service?
Mikey
|
384.31 | | EVMS::MORONEY | Verbing weirds languages | Wed Apr 12 1995 20:44 | 21 |
| re .29:
> > The more mail the more revenue the mail generates.
>
> If the charge to deliver a piece covered the costs of delivering that
> piece, you're right. It doesn't, so you're wrong.
Yup.
> > The higher the population the higher the population density
> > thus the higher the efficiency of the service.
>
> If the amount of time required to deliver to 10 houses were the same as
> that requried to deliver to 3 houses, you'd be right. It doesn't, so
> you're wrong.
Actually if the time to deliver to 10 houses is less than 3.33 times the
amount of time requried to deliver to 3 houses he'd be right. And in many
cases that's true (it takes longer going between 2 farmhouses in a rural
area than it does between 2 houses after the same area has been developed
into a subdivision)
|
384.32 | | PATE::CLAPP | | Wed Apr 12 1995 21:28 | 41 |
| re: 384.29
>If the charge to deliver a piece covered the costs of delivering that
>piece, you're right. It doesn't, so you're wrong.
not really true. If each house recieves 1 piece of mail I have
a worse case scenario since my cost of delivery is the same. If I
deliver 2 pieces to each house I double the revenue at roughly the
same cost. The cost of delivery to a given geographical area should
stay fairly constant if the population stay fairly constant. If I
add few houses to the same area are I can use the same resources to
deliver more mail.
>If the amount of time required to deliver to 10 houses were the same as
>that requried to deliver to 3 houses, you'd be right. It doesn't, so
>you're wrong. (If we'd all accept having our mail delivered to a kiosk
>at the end of the block and walking down to our boxes there, there
>would be increased efficiency. Most of us won't accept that minor
>inconvenience.)
There are more people living in apartment houses and townhouses than
ever before, and this leads to higher efficiencies. In rural areas
more and more areas are being subdivided thus increasing density.
And yes 10 house in the same acreage as 3 houses would take about
the same time to deliver. But again the cost of delivery per letter
should go down.
>*Relative* costs are down. *Total* cost is up, and the difference is
>not accounted for by increases in rates that haven't kept up with
>inflation.
You lost me on this -
Nobody was promoting privatizing the post office. The issue raised in
.0 was that the USPS is looking into getting involved in EMAIL, perhaps
regulating it. This kind of intervention, IMHO, based on their
track record is the last thing we need. The only thing I appreciated
from the post office was when they formally declared Chris Kringle
as Santa Claus.
|
384.33 | Here we go.. | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Friend will you be ready? | Wed Apr 12 1995 23:45 | 9 |
|
More people have been shot in post offices than on the info superhiway and
FED-X combined.
Jim
|
384.34 | | DASHER::RALSTON | Ain't Life Fun! | Thu Apr 13 1995 00:03 | 3 |
| HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!! Soooooooooo True!
...Tom
|
384.35 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Apr 13 1995 02:33 | 5 |
| The price for a domestic letter in Germany is DM 1.00.
At current exchange rates, that's about 78 cents.
/john
|
384.36 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Yap!Yap!Yap!Yap!Yap!Yap!Yap! | Thu Apr 13 1995 09:55 | 5 |
|
re: .33
yet another gun note...
|
384.37 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Thu Apr 13 1995 10:45 | 35 |
| re: Note 384.28 by PATE::CLAPP
> This really boils down to some folks want big govt, and some folks
> don't. It's a shame those that want big govt, help pay for it with my
> money.
It boils down to choice. Will the USPS MONOPOLIZE/REGULATE electronic
messaging in such a way that they can get their meathooks on our
bizness?
I don't want the USPS minding my own business.
I want the USPS to join the game of providing "mail" however it looks
in the "90's" and beyond at a competitive price, efficiently and
unsubsidized. I don't want to be forced to use it, but they should
provide it. Because if they don't they're going out of business, OR
will have to be subsidized bigtime for their lack of vision in keeping
up with the times.
The issue is in the details. The idea/concept is good. How they
do it, and what the implications of using it are the issues. Many
folks (including me) are highly suspicious of anything that comes from
DC these days. One problem I forsee with this is in order to
use the system you'll need a social security #, or "national identity
#". Ya, and what if I ain't got one? Can I still use the system
to send mail? Can I get some non-malicious number so I can use the
system too? I need to know the legalities of the deal. Understand
the legalities of the USPS today and what it means when a mailman
puts mail in your mailbox at your home vs. you having a box at the
post office.
Watch them closely, that's all.
|
384.38 | But can they throw tons of -mail in dumpsters ? | CSSREG::BROWN | Just Visiting This Planet | Thu Apr 13 1995 12:49 | 5 |
| Some enterprising soul in the USPS will have to devise a way to mangle
and misdeliver E-mail.
Algore is salivating at the prospect of yet more kontrol of the medium.
|
384.39 | | OOTOOL::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Apr 13 1995 13:00 | 6 |
| A while ago, I was thinking what institutions would take it on the chin
if we actually had a info highway system comparable to the interstate
highway system. It seemed to me that the USPS would be a reasonable
entity to handle residential email, since they already keep track of
who lives where. You could send mail to "fred.whozit.03062-1234" or
some such thing.
|
384.40 | USPS rates should be based on performance! | LIOS01::BARNES | | Thu Apr 13 1995 13:02 | 16 |
|
Recent visit to post office to buy stamps, they had none OUT, ZIPPO,
NONE, unless of course my envelope was big enough to take 32 one cent
stamps! Marvelous planning on their part. I have since found out that
this is the case at post offices throughout my region.
Anniversary card sent by next door neighbor takes 6 days to arrive at
my house and it was mailed in the Post office that services my route.
Mail sent by reletives several states away never arrives.
At least two to three times a week I receive mail addressed to someone
else, not necessarily a neighbor.
And the USPS wants to get it's hooks on E-Mail? As soon as I can get
some stamps I am writing my congresscritters about this!
|
384.41 | But PLEASE do not forward this to the USPS!!! | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Whatever happened to ADDATA? | Thu Apr 13 1995 15:00 | 4 |
| I just can't relate to lists of USPS horror stories.
I figure that if they are really so common, I would have
experienced some of them myself.
|
384.42 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | It's the Champale talking! | Thu Apr 13 1995 15:36 | 9 |
| Good USPS story - mailed out watch to be repaired on 4/4. Got home
last night to find new watch waiting for me.
Stopped at PO at lunch - plenty of stamps, nice people, and a fully
stocked and working stamp vending machine.
YMMV
Dan
|
384.43 | | MPGS::MARKEY | The bottom end of Liquid Sanctuary | Thu Apr 13 1995 15:37 | 4 |
|
If the USPS was any better what would all us "check's in the mail"
types do! :-) :-)
|
384.44 | | CSOA1::LEECH | yawn | Fri Apr 14 1995 16:41 | 34 |
| My USPS story.
I bought a nice Christmas present for my mother that I sent priority USPS.
It arrived mangled (and not within two days, as promised)- the contents
inside the box destroyed.
I guess they ignored the FRAGILE warnings I put all over the box, as
well as the 'PLEASE handle with care' in bold letters by the FRAGILE
warning.
It was well packed with bubble wrap, and with crumpled newspaper and penuts
for fill to keep the contents from rattling around.
I was not a happy camper at all.
As far as the argument goes, I have mixed feelings. I don't so much
mind the USPS supplying this service, but in my paranoia of government
intrusiveness, I can't help but see a government monopoly happening in
the future. And if this happens, goodbye privacy. Big brother is reading
your mail.
This is certainly fodder for the conspiracy buffs, to be sure.
I also find it interesting that the designer of PGP was arrested at the
same time he was working on encryption for voice communications through
PC's. With the Federal Wire Tap Bill, and the ever increasing Big
Brother mentality of federal organizations, I wonder if the timing of
his arrest is coincidental. Imagine, secure lines that the feds cannot
easily listen in on. Guess they didn't like that idea at all.
-steve
|
384.45 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Fri Apr 14 1995 17:05 | 9 |
| .44
Re FRAGILE, here's what the CD says...
fragile adj. Formerly, an adjective meaning delicate or prone to
breakage. Presently, an instruction to post office workers,
meaning "throw underhand."
Sorry about your bad experience.
|
384.46 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Fri Apr 14 1995 17:54 | 3 |
|
Steve, did they replace it or give you the money you paid for it?
|
384.47 | | EVMS::MORONEY | Verbing weirds languages | Fri Apr 14 1995 21:24 | 19 |
| re .44:
> My USPS story.
> I bought a nice Christmas present for my mother that I sent priority USPS.
> It arrived mangled (and not within two days, as promised)- the contents
> inside the box destroyed.
> I guess they ignored the FRAGILE warnings I put all over the box, as
> well as the 'PLEASE handle with care' in bold letters by the FRAGILE
> warning.
I have discovered the secret of quick service from the USPS. A year ago I
had a package shipped from Georgia on a Saturday, it arrived in Mass. the
following Monday, and the intervening Sunday was Easter Sunday.
The secret? The package was honeybees. Live bees. Not just a cardboard box
that buzzed, but a wood-and-window screen cage where you could see them all.
Approximately 12,000 of them. No way they'd toss this, not even underhand.
|
384.48 | | CSOA1::LEECH | yawn | Mon Apr 17 1995 10:23 | 3 |
| re: .46
No.
|
384.49 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Mon Apr 17 1995 13:10 | 4 |
|
Bummer Steve..... you would think they would be covered if they ruin
something.... oh yeah, you need to buy insurance to cover their mistakes...
|
384.50 | | CSOA1::LEECH | yawn | Mon Apr 17 1995 14:08 | 1 |
| Yup, and I did not insure it (silly me).
|
384.51 | from a well-travelled memo | XELENT::MUTH | I drank WHAT? - Socrates | Thu Jun 15 1995 12:17 | 6 |
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Anagram: I'm on a huge wispy rhino fart
Bill
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