Not quite, I bought my minisplit from them based on the testimony that I read here:LOL, I know this crowd. If I name the great vendor, they will be attacked. They aren't mentioned on this forum. I searched. Apparently they are busy fulfilling orders and answering questions.
It's a trap!
By stock market valuation, that would be Apple, then nVidia and I wouldn't know who's third... Microsoft?Um Wal-Mart isn’t even close to the largest company in the world …..The largest company in the world actually has great customer service. FYI
Yes, but they are jostling. Broadcom right up there now too.By stock market valuation, that would be Apple, then nVidia and I wouldn't know who's third... Microsoft?
60% at leastI wonder what percentage of people in the diy solar community are worried about things that haven't happened yet?
I told them this almost a Year Ago and nothing has changed.Jess, thanks for the reply. I wanted to make sure you read this link I left in the original post because you might want to edit that post above...
https://www.findlaw.com/smallbusiness/business-operations/laws-governing-shipping-advertising.html
By posting on a public forum that your policy is to charge the card when the order is placed even when you know the order will take longer than 30 days to ship is opening Signature Solar up to some serious liability. You're basically admitting that your company policy is in violation of federal law and you don't care... Here's what the law says...
If your business plans include shipping online or telephone orders, you must follow the Mail, Internet, or Telephone Order Merchandise Rule from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). Also known as the "30-Day Rule," this regulation describes how businesses must fulfill orders. The rule ensures that customers receive orders in a reasonable time while giving businesses and shippers the flexibility they need.
This article discusses the 30-Day Rule, federal and state laws about shipping, and where you can look for additional information.
The 30-Day Rule Defined
The 30-Day Rule says that when a business advertises merchandise for shipment, it must have a "reasonable basis" for saying or believing it can ship within a certain time. For instance, if your ad says "10-day shipping guaranteed," you must reasonably believe you can ship the product within 10 days. If your advertisement does not have a shipping time, the product must ship within 30 days.
The truth is an absolute defense against a defamation claim.Given US libel laws, "lies" is a pretty strong word.
Yes but truth can be expensive to prove.The truth is an absolute defense against a defamation claim.
The truth is an absolute defense against a defamation claim.
I would take a bit of that bet. It is a money flow thing. IF and that is a big IF, someone would need to complain to the Texas AG, an investigation and then IF the AG said stop, they would stop, perhaps a small fine in the overall scheme of things.I would bet they have lawyers that have vetted all their policies and find them acceptable even if we as a collective group find them lacking.
Yes but truth can be expensive to prove.
Lawyering up could cost more than a nice solar system.
But it still costs you money, even if you win.
And saying, "She LIED ..." just cost someone $100,000,000.
(even though the jury didn't find that someone had done what she said.)
Best to avoid words that could be treated as slander/defamation.
You're totally missing the point.You're totally missing the point.
Good to hear. Solar sovereign has 3 pallets left on their site of the 370w aptos panels. Perhaps they earmark a certain quantity presold to solar sovereign. I'm hoping that's the case since I ordered mine a week ago. Solar sovereign has continued to take orders, but signature solar has been out of stock for a week. I always expect anything shipped freight takes a bit longer to ship, update tracking etc. Amazon has ruined us all for order updates and shipping times.Happy ending to my story, tracking number was good but the wrong carrier specified. Scheduled the pallet for delivery tomorrow.