Posted on 09/11/2013 5:22:00 AM PDT by 11th_VA
Folks,
In honor of the 'Total Recall' victory in Colorado last night, I want to ask for your help in participating in the "Trillion Dollar Boycott" of Gun Grabber States, that will cost you nothing.
One of the largest expenses each of us pay, are insurance payments (Home, auto, life, etc). For me, it's over $5,000 per year - that's $50,000 over 10 years.
When I found out my hard earned dollars I was paying for insurance were going to a Yankee Gun Grabber state, I decided to change my insurance provider and now support a company located in a '2A' friendly state.
That's $50K over 10 years that won't be going to a gun grabber state now.
If I can get 20,000 '2A' defenders to join me, we can easily shift 1 TRILLION DOLLARS of revenue to '2A' gun friendly states.
The states to target include: MA, CT, NY, MD, (feel free to add more)
Here are links to the TOP businesses in each of the gun grabber states - if you see an insurance provider there or other business to boycott, please consider changing the way you spend your dollars:
After switching a service or provider, post the 10 year year TOTAL of dollars that will not be going to a 'gun grabber state' and we'll keep a running total.
You will enjoy really great customer service from USAA as well.
How big of a house do you have that you pay $5k a year in insurance?
.. recent tagline relevance bump ..
Between my four autos and my house, it cost that much. DC area has some of the highest auto rates in the country. But now I’m down to $3K.
$3K for the autos - house is still another $800. I’m still ahead and feeling better about it as well.
USAA rocks. had them since rotc in ‘72. no problems with any claim
Correct. I said I have yet to see a company using SAN storage other than EMC. Meaning I've not worked for a company in my 20 years in IT that uses non-EMC storage. I never said it didn't exist, I said I've not personally seen it.
I’ve used HP’s StorageWorks DAS arrays quite a bit in my years as a data center engineer. They’re perfect for small implementations and very scalable.
I’ve also seen Dell’s PowerVault products but not used them much.
For big iron storage, though, EMC seems to have a lock on marketing. I know they undersold IBM by an extreme margin at my last employer just to get their foot in the door, something like 90%, and with the amount of money they have, they throw around their weight quite freely.
Like I said, I acknowledge other competitors, but EMC is a pretty tough competitor to try to squash or avoid.
Ah. Gotcha.
We used both (EMC and NetApp). Prefer NetApp.
Which vendor is typically determined by the need of the overall project or application, and although EMC is a favorite for some of the larger, it is by no means the only solution. HP’s aren't one of my favorites, but they are usable. LSI made very powerful SAN’s that have been discontinued by NetApp after they acquired them (CTS2600 was a monster), and that's a shame. IBM rebranded that unit from LSI and actually forced them to “throttle down” the performance as it was outperforming their flagship DS8300. Other vendors have also resold that LSI unit and although NetApp has to continue to produce them for now, eventually that tech will fade away as NetApp decided they wanted to sell their overpriced hardware at a much better margin.
EMC is the primary player and will likely continue to be so for many years to come, but new tech is entering the picture from other vendors and they have a lot of work to do to keep themselves on top of the pile.
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