Some years back a friend/client tried washing his keyboard in water;
when it didn't work afterward he gave it to me. I put it in a box
with some other junk, and a year later found it worked fine. Just
needed to dry out. Most important, I think, if anything gets wet, is
to _immediately_ remove a
RE; perhaps, but I should mention lightning damage(florida) homeowners
policy and insurance on lightning protection devices cover such a low (used)
percentage amount,also at the cost of a raised insurance rate,coverage for
electronics damage is poor at best,theft and fire are quite a bit better.but
on 11/22/02 2:19 PM, Donald Keenan at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Is it common for both homeowners AND apartment insurance to cover
> mishaps other than fire or theft
> when it comes to replacing computers?
> How strict is the burden of proof? If someone spills beer, water, etc on
> a computer, thi
On Friday, Nov 22, 2002, at 17:19 US/Eastern, Donald Keenan wrote:
> Is it common for both homeowners AND apartment insurance to cover
> mishaps other than fire or theft
> when it comes to replacing computers?
> How strict is the burden of proof? If someone spills beer, water, etc
> on
> a compu
Is it common for both homeowners AND apartment insurance to cover
mishaps other than fire or theft
when it comes to replacing computers?
How strict is the burden of proof? If someone spills beer, water, etc on
a computer, this is considered a valid claim?
This makes me think I should consider apa
Been following the thread and thought I should share this story. My brother
hangs out in coffee shops, writing on his laptop and engaging customers in
political discussions whenever possible, working to change the world one
mind at a time.
About a year ago he was pounding away at his PB5300 when