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Archive for March 2008

10 reasons Quickbooks is evil

  1. 15% of the dashboard space of my company is dedicated to getting me to spend more money with Quickbooks instead of forecasting profits like it should
  2. Often when I write a check it prompts me to buy Quicken checks
  3. My email box gets spammed from Quicken
  4. They offered me 20 key tips every business should know. Click on the link and I have to buy something to get the tips. I already spent hundreds of dollars with these people. Are they withholding information that could help me be successful?
  5. Every year it gets more complicated without getting better
  6. It costs a fortune compared to Peachtree, but Peachtree makes more sense to my CPA
  7. When listing the reasons to upgrade to 2008 quickbooks they failed to mention my current software can actually do the same thing
  8. There’s no easy way to get the clients PO number and my invoice number to appear on the same line when I print a statement, I have to make a special customer remark to do it. How does it benefit me not revealing PO numbers on a statement. Don’t AP people pay the vendors first when there are no questions?
  9. Everything is proprietary, it doesn’t play well with other children.
  10. Quickbooks makes it easier to use a payroll service than pay employees through their software.

How to repair a scratch in your vehicle’s paint

Scratched paint is the hardest paint repair there is, barring paint and body work, but with a little information you’ll be ready to tackle the biggest headache.

If you can see the scratch, but when you run your fingernail across it you can’t feel it, this is good news. The scratch will polish out. Recon recommends 3M Perfect-It 3 Extra cut Compound, you can buy it at any auto paint store, if they don’t have it, the fellow at the counter will recommend a product for you. Get a paper towel or a soft terry cloth rag, put a thimble full of compound on it and rub it vigorously into the scratch. The compound goes through a process, first of being a white colored liquid sandpaper, you’re rubbing will turn this into a clear polish in a couple of moments, when you see the white stuff go clear, change your rubbing motion into a light circular pattern until all the compound is rubbed in, wipe with a dry part of the towel and take a look. Repeat till the scratch is history.

If you feel the scratch with your fingernail, try the last process any way, usually a good part of the scratch will disappear leaving a smaller less noticeable scratch.

If the paint is gouged into the color, there are two repairs. First, you can run a bead of touch up paint over it, this fixes it 50%, it’s still visible, just not as ugly, unless you get globby with the paint. Keep trying and wiping it off till it looks appealing. The other way to make it go away is to sand it out and respray, this is the only way to make the damage disappear 100%.

We use a squeegee method sometimes, pushing paint into a scratch and then polishing with a chemical afterwards. Langka has a similar product, but the color is an eyeball match, I prefer the more expensive Paint Bull method, it uses Standox paint for a perfect color match, necessary with pearls and metal flakes, and an easier to use liquid polish over Langka’s solid compound. You can try this at home, but expect to mess it up a couple of times before getting it right. Buy some touch up paint from your local car paint store, put a bead on a squeegee and wipe it into the scratch. Let it flash dry, usually a minute or two, then carefully rub the excess off the undamaged paint with rubbing compound being careful not to pull paint out of the scratch.

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