serious financial stuff
Currently doing lots of maths...
- I need a new phone. Mine keeps dropping battery rapidly. (This morning it went from 96% to 0% in a single jump.)
- It must be an iPhone. It's simply too useful for me.
- Ideally, this would involve waiting until the end of my phone contract, then getting a phone pre-packaged with the new contract.
- My current contract doesn't end for four more months.
Questions currently taking up brain-space:
Can I wait four months before my dying phone is fixed?
Can I afford the extra money to get a new phone right now?
Does the fact that my work hours are about to plummet change any of this?
...and I have no clue.
Silly phone. *grumps*
- I need a new phone. Mine keeps dropping battery rapidly. (This morning it went from 96% to 0% in a single jump.)
- It must be an iPhone. It's simply too useful for me.
- Ideally, this would involve waiting until the end of my phone contract, then getting a phone pre-packaged with the new contract.
- My current contract doesn't end for four more months.
Questions currently taking up brain-space:
Can I wait four months before my dying phone is fixed?
Can I afford the extra money to get a new phone right now?
Does the fact that my work hours are about to plummet change any of this?
...and I have no clue.
Silly phone. *grumps*
no subject
It seems to me, and quite a few other people I know, that the way that Apple insist that only their software can be run on their machinery - and only their shops can repair their products - is exactly the same situation, possibly more so, as it is quite possible to run non-Microsoft software on your PC.
And as this seems to means that, should I need a new battery in an iPhone or any other Apple product, I would be required to spend a lot of money to travel by either sea or air to my nearest Apple shop (rather than just nipping to the local telecom shop in my lunchbreak)I think I'll stick with my Acer computer, my Samsung netbook, and my Nokia phone... :)
no subject