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Old June 16th 06, 09:28 PM posted to alt.invest.stocks.amd,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel
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Default 50% price cuts for AMD X2's

On Mon, 12 Jun 2006 15:50:57 -0400, Yousuf Khan
wrote:

Yousuf Khan wrote:
chrisv wrote:
bbbl67 wrote:

The price war is getting underway now, it's great to be a PC consumer
again, if not a shareholder in these companies. It's in response to
Intel's imminent release of the Core 2 architecture.

"AMD Strikes Back: 50% price cut to dual core"
http://www.hkepc.com/bbs/itnews.php?tid=613657

A new PC for me in August. 8)



I was thinking exactly the same thing.


And anther thing going for those of us in Canada is that we have a sales
tax (which we call the GST) cut coming online just about that time of
year too. It's going to be an extra special time to buy computers for us.

Yousuf Khan


Is that cut just for a few days? We have something similar in many US
states, where they specify a few days in August to be a sales tax
holiday so the "back to school" crowd can get their stuff without
paying sales tax. It varies state by state though, since sales tax is
paid to the state and local governments and not the national
government.

The rules for what's taxable vary by state as well. For example, in
some states, food items aren't taxable.

I worked in retail automation for many years and calculating sales tax
is a nightmare. There are options for counties and cities to collect
sales tax as well, and they can use different calculations and
different (often weird) rounding for each of those. It's a mess to
calculate and some states allow the tax to be based on where you live
in the state (provided it's the same state), not where the store is
located. Mostly that's ignored unless you get a big ticket item and
live in a place within the state that has a much lower tax rate. And
this is just if you physically go to the store.

If you order through mail/phone/internet from a store in another state
AND have it delivered to an address in your state, then you might not
be charged sales tax at all, depending on whether the merchant you
ordered from has a physical business presence anywhere in your state,
even though the location in your state never had anything to do with
the order. In the case where they aren't charged sales tax for
something mail/phone/internet ordered from another state, the consumer
is technically supposed to fill out a form and pay sales tax on it
directly to their own state, which rarely happens in reality. Of
course, if you physically visit a store in another state to order or
pickup the item, then you pay the other states tax for that store
location. Sales tax is a mess here in the US.

-- David