Forgot to clean the microwave from last night and now my morning porridge oats taste like ham.
Printable View
Forgot to clean the microwave from last night and now my morning porridge oats taste like ham.
You realize if you cover your food you wouldn't have to degut your microwave after every meal right? RIGHT?!
Ugh.. I see.
3 different customers blowing me up within minutes of one another. Good news is it basically just booked my day, bad news is I already had most of the day booked with other action items that I'm now going to have to reschedule.
LOL I know right!
On a conference call right now with one of them and this is going to be an ugly problem to sort through. Average cost on their inventory looks to be changing from shipment to shipment with no receipt or relief between the shipments so yeah go go tracking down a floating decimal error or some other fun!!!!!
Wrecked rear end on the car and whiplash followed by bad news from home ... having a great few days!
Sorry to hear about that hon. All the best x
(Oh P.S. - At least you're missing the greasy grey slush snow.)
http://money.cnn.com/2011/12/05/news....htm?hpt=hp_t2
I suppose that at least with keeping the refineries running at full capacity (but still importing oil and exporting gasoline) maintains job levels here in the U.S. …Quote:
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- The United States is awash in gasoline. So much so, in fact, that the country is exporting a record amount of it.
The country exported 430,000 more barrels of gasoline a day than it imported in September, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
That is about twice the amount at the start of the year, and experts and industry insiders say the trend is here to stay.
The United States began exporting gas in late 2008. For decades prior, starting in 1960, the country used all the gas it produced here plus had to import gas from places in Europe.
But demand for gas has dropped nearly 10% in recent years. It went from a peak of 9.6 million barrels a day in 2007 to 8.8 million barrels today, according to the EIA.
But *FROWN* @ unlikelihood of domestic gasoline prices dropping since we are exporting the surplus (versus the surplus forcing down prices).