I'm unsure where to go to get my hair cut. I went onto an Irish forum to see if anyone had good recommendations, and the first thread returned for "men's haircut" was "ARE METROSEXUALS GETTING WORSE? YOU DECIDE!!!!"
I'm not sure if it works as sensibly for an intra-company set-up like your insurance company with bodyshops, but what you do is you treat a company like a regular customer. The customer gives you money and you give them what they asked for. If the customer does not give you money you don't give them what they asked for until they fork over the cash.
That would be tricky. Not least because the full extent of a repair (and thus how much it will cost) often isn't clear at least until the vehicle's been stripped. Then there are frequent fluctuations in parts and consumables prices (like, you will get different prices from factors on consecutive days if it's a high-turnover part). All of which means it is very difficult to fully determine the cost of a job until it's part done and the bodyshop has committed to purchasing the parts. There are a few places (mostly branded dealerships that don't have or choose not to access the kind of credit facilities that full bodyshops use) that will refuse to release a completed vehicle until such time as a job is paid, but they are by far the exception in the industry (the only reason they tend to get accident repair work at all is people who erroneously think "a dealership" will do a better job of a body repair than a proper bodyshop, and they love to illegally make threats about suspension of warranties and such). In general we will refuse to deal with them because they also tend to be disproportionately expensive, take forever over jobs, and often lack certification or specialist technicians.
We'd also have to have a facility to pay them immediately, as opposed to using the usual bank transfer or bordereaux systems which have a few days delay (faster systems exist but they're more expensive). There's also a bit of a regulatory issue around precisely how tightly integrated the two businesses (though they are ultimately part of the same group of companies) are permitted to be.
Right, we charge our quoted price and have an agreement that higher/lower costs will be paid/refunded after we know the exact price. Probably wouldn't work for you, though.
Right, we charge our quoted price and have an agreement that higher/lower costs will be paid/refunded after we know the exact price. Probably wouldn't work for you, though.
We have an authorised cost, which is agreed and then modified as the job proceeds. So it's probably a similar system, just that we pay after everything is done. It's a bit of an odd situation, because we're the ones paying, and yet we're doing the chasing. The fact that at some level we're "the same company" probably has something to do with it, because I don't think the bodyshops are dependent on a credit line or similar with strict terms to meet their day-to-day running costs the way other bodyshops are.
So we get stiff once in a while. So we have a little fun. What’s wrong with that? This is a free country, isn’t it? I can take my panda any place I want to. And if I wanna buy it a drink, that’s my business.
Man the alliance made the Normandy SR-2 ugly. Also I wanted to cry when I went into Mordin's lab and they had a conference table and some boxes in there. Off to the Turian home world, I guess.
I don't usually like the cat photos but that's a great one cass
slept for 2 hours, woke up for no reason. but I'm gonna blame it on seeing the play at my old high school tonight. always makes me emotional in lots of different ways.
Broadly popular social policies, like keeping energy prices low, have pleased Mrs. Kirchner’s constituents. But they come with costs, as reflected in Argentina’s yawning energy imports and the nationalization of YPF.
Galloping inflation is yet another cost, and price increases are absorbed largely by people without the means to try slipping packages of dollars past the dogs at the ferry terminal.
Ramona González, 43, a maid who lives in Florencio Varela, a city on the southern outskirts of Buenos Aires, said she was well aware of the state takeover of YPF. “What is Argentine should be Argentine.”
But she has other concerns. “Inflation is what is worrying me the most, not YPF,” she said.
heh. Bonus points if you can identify how the nationalization and inflation are linked.
I don't usually like the cat photos but that's a great one cass
slept for 2 hours, woke up for no reason. but I'm gonna blame it on seeing the play at my old high school tonight. always makes me emotional in lots of different ways.
I don't usually like the cat photos but that's a great one cass
slept for 2 hours, woke up for no reason. but I'm gonna blame it on seeing the play at my old high school tonight. always makes me emotional in lots of different ways.
I don't usually like the cat photos but that's a great one cass
slept for 2 hours, woke up for no reason. but I'm gonna blame it on seeing the play at my old high school tonight. always makes me emotional in lots of different ways.
if there's a cat that would greet it's owner like that dog did, awesome. but I've known a fair number of cats and none have behaved that way. Every dog I've known has.
I don't hate cats by any means I just don't like them as much as dogs at all. I don't have either, though.
which dog
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VariableMouth CongressStroke Me Lady FameRegistered Userregular
I'm talking about towards a human kag
if there's a cat that would greet it's owner like that dog did, awesome. but I've known a fair number of cats and none have behaved that way. Every dog I've known has.
I don't hate cats by any means I just don't like them as much as dogs at all. I don't have either, though.
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What's the worst that could happen? :P
That would be tricky. Not least because the full extent of a repair (and thus how much it will cost) often isn't clear at least until the vehicle's been stripped. Then there are frequent fluctuations in parts and consumables prices (like, you will get different prices from factors on consecutive days if it's a high-turnover part). All of which means it is very difficult to fully determine the cost of a job until it's part done and the bodyshop has committed to purchasing the parts. There are a few places (mostly branded dealerships that don't have or choose not to access the kind of credit facilities that full bodyshops use) that will refuse to release a completed vehicle until such time as a job is paid, but they are by far the exception in the industry (the only reason they tend to get accident repair work at all is people who erroneously think "a dealership" will do a better job of a body repair than a proper bodyshop, and they love to illegally make threats about suspension of warranties and such). In general we will refuse to deal with them because they also tend to be disproportionately expensive, take forever over jobs, and often lack certification or specialist technicians.
We'd also have to have a facility to pay them immediately, as opposed to using the usual bank transfer or bordereaux systems which have a few days delay (faster systems exist but they're more expensive). There's also a bit of a regulatory issue around precisely how tightly integrated the two businesses (though they are ultimately part of the same group of companies) are permitted to be.
We have an authorised cost, which is agreed and then modified as the job proceeds. So it's probably a similar system, just that we pay after everything is done. It's a bit of an odd situation, because we're the ones paying, and yet we're doing the chasing. The fact that at some level we're "the same company" probably has something to do with it, because I don't think the bodyshops are dependent on a credit line or similar with strict terms to meet their day-to-day running costs the way other bodyshops are.
All these chicks, man. All these drunk weeaboo chicks.
I love drunk weeaboo chicks.
I don't get it.
godspeed, master winky
best of luck in your endeavors...
My costume is pretty thoroughly destroyed by now. Pics incoming when I get home tonight.
what happened
lost pieces, props get crumpled, etc etc
weeaboos try to tear you apart etc etc
argentina - declining unemployment, high inflation, having problems restricting capital flight
something in this tells me "accelerating inflation"
if they do the next likely thing and start imposing across-the-board price controls instead of subsidies, then trouble will really start
heh. Bonus points if you can identify how the nationalization and inflation are linked.
it's a great photo! what can I say
also I'd love to see a cat react like that dog. with love and affection.
I don't like cats, it's nothing personal.
I'd show you a cat full of love and affection, but I'm afraid my cat passed away a couple of years ago.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vw4KVoEVcr0
It should be damn sexy.
People will die.
I want it.
Saltines, chicken noodle soup, breathe in lots of steam.
it looks sexy as hell. it's one of the only MMOs i am even remotely interested in
if there's a cat that would greet it's owner like that dog did, awesome. but I've known a fair number of cats and none have behaved that way. Every dog I've known has.
I don't hate cats by any means I just don't like them as much as dogs at all. I don't have either, though.
Nose is fine, but I'm developing a cough. This does not bode well.