I had a dell, brought it in the US, when I moved to Thailand, had to transfer the warrenty over here. they have excellent in home service here, no complaints on service from Dell.
computers have to take air in from the outside to cool the system, they have fans, It would not be the AC putting water in the computer, never had that problem. I have never been a fan of Sony computers...
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In Topic: Notebook Repair In Thailand,Have Sony Also The Same Bad Service Then In Europe?
2011-10-23 06:08:26
In Topic: E-Bay
2011-10-15 06:11:34
There used to be, but it just did not take off. there is Baht and sold, that is all that I know of....
In Topic: My Usa Cr1 Visa Dilemma
2011-10-10 03:46:56
PattayaXpat, on 2011-10-07 22:12:21, said:
juanellis, on 2011-10-07 03:11:43, said:
When you applied for a CR1 it was basically a CR1/IR1. When your wife enters the USA, USCIS will issue her green card. If on the the date her permanent residency begins you have been married less than two years, they will issue here conditional green card which is valid for two years. After two years she would have to file with USCIS to remove conditions and, if approved, she would get a 10 yr green card. If on the date her permanent residency begins you have been married for two years or longer, USCIS will issue her a 10 year green card.
I am a bit confused by the part that she already passed her interview, but does not have her visa. When my wife interviewed (although it was for a K3) they kept her passport and we went a few days later and picked it up with the visa already in it.
As far as going to the USA, once she enters, they will send her a green card (to the address on the I-130 petition when you applied). Nothing else to do but wait for it (usually takes about a month). Once she has the GC, she can potentially stay outside the USA up to a year without a re-entry permit, but pushing this is not recommended.
http://www.uscis.gov...000082ca60aRCRD
I would look into the re-entry permit guidelines to determine if it might not be a better way to go.
http://www.uscis.gov...ources/B5en.pdf
I am a bit confused by the part that she already passed her interview, but does not have her visa. When my wife interviewed (although it was for a K3) they kept her passport and we went a few days later and picked it up with the visa already in it.
As far as going to the USA, once she enters, they will send her a green card (to the address on the I-130 petition when you applied). Nothing else to do but wait for it (usually takes about a month). Once she has the GC, she can potentially stay outside the USA up to a year without a re-entry permit, but pushing this is not recommended.
http://www.uscis.gov...000082ca60aRCRD
I would look into the re-entry permit guidelines to determine if it might not be a better way to go.
http://www.uscis.gov...ources/B5en.pdf
Thanks Very Much for The Reply!
I'm still weighing my options but will need to decide within a month or so.
As far as my wife passing her interview, she went to her final interview in March, they approved the visa but she requested to pick it up later. You can put off picking up the Visa for up to a year, but will need to renew your medical and police certificate when you do got to get it. When the visa is issued you have 6 months to use it or lose it.
Does anyone know the current processing times for an IR1 visa?
Thank You
The IR1 for me has taken about 5 months,
In Topic: HSBC Survey: Thailand Is The Best Place To Live After Retirement
2011-10-02 13:11:12
I guess the saying of "that is where dreams come from"
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