holyname.org Review:

Holy Name Medical Center - Holy Name Medical Center is a comprehensive, 361 bed acute care facility providing high-quality healthcare across a continuum that extends from prevention through treatment and on toward recovery and wellness.

  • http://holyname.org/../HolyNameMD.aspx Doctors in Teaneck, NJ : Reviews & Ratings - Doctors in Teaneck, NJ : Reviews & Ratings, See Reviews and Book Online Instantly. It's free! All appointment times are guaranteed by our dentists and doctors.

    Country: 67.225.209.18, North America, US

    City: -84.636 Michigan, United States

  • tdrbat - Good Value

    Be sure to test anything you order. I purchased 2 laser toners, but only 1 of them worked. If I had not tried them both I may not have known the defective one didn't work until after the return period expired. Luckily, I did and called customer support. They sent me a new one with a prepaid label to return the defective item. Great service.

  • windiciti - Not a Memorable Collection

    Disappointing. I know because I cannot remember even ONE of these stories. Nothing outstanding or provocative here.

  • Patrick F. Hart - I am very disappointed with this product

    I purchased this version of Nero after I bought a new computer and found out my old version wasn't compatible with my new computer. I am very disappointed with this product. I could always copy DVDs and burn them in the past but now it is harder to do and the end result is not very good. When a DVD is burned on a blank DVD and I try to play it in a DVD player many different individual files come up on the screen and it is very confusing. The last DVD I burned played but in Spanish! When I navigated to the main menu where you can normally change the language settings it would NOT let me change it. Nero customer service is non existent. There in NO customer service number where you can call up an actual person. You have to email them and wait until they respond. This is unacceptable for a big company like Nero. They need to improve there products and their customer service.

  • L. McNeal - Higher Wattage - Lower Performance

    I bought this unit to supplement a little 1000-watt Proctor Silex model I got for a few bucks at Big Lots years back. I wanted to boil down some maple sap, and the Proctor was almost but not quite bringing it to a boil (it was about 25 degrees outside). So, I bought this one, thinking from the 500 extra watts and reviews about quick boil, it would work better. (Boiling point of sap is just 7 degrees above the boiling point of water.) Fast forward to a 67-degree day, I turned them on at the same time, intending to use the Proctor as the warmer burner, and was surprised to find the Proctor heated up MUCH faster. Then, throughout the day, once in a while I'd get a boil out of them if I left the lid on (which you can't do if you want to boil something down...)...but could also get a tiny boil out of the Proctor without the lids! The Chefman here didn't ever do that. So, lesson learned. More power + more $$ doesn't always equal more performance.

  • Jason Pearson - At The Least, It Helped

    I'll admit in advance that I've not followed up like I should have, but wanted to post my experience anyhow. My 2002 Ford Taurus was not doing well. If you put power steering fluid in, it would all be on the ground within 24 hours or less. I had no power steering regardless of whether or not I put any fluid in, so I actually stopped altogether as it was obviously just a waste of money. The fix is right at $1,000 despite the part being under $100. Crazy talk.

  • Farmuel - Quicken - the biggest rip off

    Quicken is making millions making every business buy new payroll software every year. It takes a programmer about 5 minutes to put in new tables and they make millions WHAT A RIPOFF. Someone needs to design a payroll program that will allow the consumer to simply change the tables yearly

  • keplertwostars - not a good buy

    The plastic is very hard with a textured surface, and their large plastic nameplate is not welcome, as I just wanted a comfortable mat. The hard surface is even further from a comfortable carpet that the car starts with. The fit of the molded pieces is OK but the overall size is too small to cover all the area one's shoes will be touching, such as the entry side and up into the foot well, which is pretty cheap for an expensive mat. Also, strangely for such a stiff material, the mats seem sticky and difficult to clean compared to a good quality rubber mat. The only possibly good feature is if you spill a drink squarely onto the small mat, it might be contained due to the upraised edges, which my wife likes, but the driver's side snaps holding the mat in place might leak? And those snaps make it difficult to take the mat in & out. What happened to good old heavy rubber mats?