I found a six-pack of Leinenkugel’s Lemon Berry Shandy on
sale for $3. I am math challenged, but I am pretty sure that’s 50 cents a beer.
I am drinking one. This is part of the current cheering-myself-up project. Yes,
it’s a Blue Monday.
So far it is working:
1) The sun came out. I did not know drinking beer could do
that!
2) Mardi Gras is tomorrow. Yes, beer drinking causes linear
time. Blue Monday will be followed by Fat Tuesday, not only in the blog but in
the religious/drinking calendar of many people.
3) I solved my printer cartridge problem. Shandy, you’re sure
dandy!
4) The Pope resigned. I think I know what he’s giving up for
Lent, and it’s not shandy!
Really,* I know beer did not cause any of these things to
happen. But sometimes I find life a tad confusing and technology more than a
tad. For instance, yesterday, my poems were looking weak, very weak, when I printed them out. I’m
talking ink here, not artistry or meaning or craft, because, you know, that
would be devastating and require another beer.
*Maybe
So I changed the black inkjet printer cartridge. No help.
The poems looked just as faint as before. Must be a dud cartridge, I thought,
resorting to logic.** So I tried again—opened
another box, tried another brand (as in Office Depot brand) new (as in recycled
reconstructed) printer cartridge, just like before. I know someone will say
that doing the same thing and expecting a different result is the definition of
insanity, but that is not supposed to apply to printer cartridges you just took
out of the box. Am I right?
(See logic, above. And crippling self doubt,
below.)
**True, it might have been quantum physics rearranging reality
via crippling self doubt.
Anyhoo, I have learned from experience (and Scarlett O'Hara) to set any technology
problems aside for a day and to solve them the next morning. [Pause to explain that
I did not have beer for breakfast. We are in a flashback back-story part of
this blog narrative.] [Also, I know full well that Scarlett O'Hara did not avail herself of printer cartridges, recycled or not. But on with my shandy tale!]
So today, Blue Monday, I took all of my old and new printer
cartridges back to Office Depot to recycle them and get some new ones, with the
wacko color printouts proving the absence or weakness of colors in the cartridges,
and the great guy there was very honest and said the reconstructed cartridges
only work 50% of the time and to stick with the brand name cartridges, here
meaning Hewlett Packard.
So I did. This would have been pretty annoying except for
the joy of 1) honesty in commerce and 2) full refund applied to the new
purchase!
I celebrated with a) very strong, dark poems b) very light,
refreshing citrus and berry beer!
5 comments:
A+ for math.
Q2. Six pack - 1 =?
I have learned the hard way to always check all my printer settings so I don't print (1) airline etickets on expensive glossy photo paper, and (2) so I don't use the "fast print" or "grayscale" functions. Fifty cent beer is good.
Fifty cent beer, hear, hear!
I do not trust them when their answer is "Don't buy cheap cartridges," but that doesn't mean they're not right. (Holy guacamole, check out those negatives!)
I don't usually give technical advice, because, I mean, well, really, but sometimes using the "clean" thingie helps.
I have a super-cheap, black-and-white laser printer, which I love.
Thanks, dears. All is well with the new ribbons, but I will read up on how to clean this wonderful, reliable, old printer!
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