Rentoza customers complaining about long product delivery and refund delays

Jan

Who's the Boss?
Staff member
Joined
May 24, 2010
Messages
14,020
Reaction score
12,044
Location
The Rabbit Hole
Rentoza has a problem

Appliance and gadget subscription service Rentoza has come under fire as customers take to social media and consumer review platforms to complain about long delays in product deliveries and refunds.

Rentoza lets customers rent various products without a credit check over three, six, 12, or 18 months without a credit check. Customers can cancel and return the items at any time.
 
I wonder what could possibly go wrong giving expensive products away without a credit check......
 
If people were actually paying for these things then rentoza would have been rolling in the cash at the ludicrous prices they are charging..


Rog ally 512gb is 850 a month over 18 months with a R3300 buy out fee at the end of 18 months to own the device..
 
Stupid tax, only a moron would rent luxury devices with these prices
 
So people shouldn't be using Rentoza, is my only take away here.
 
In school I learnt that numbers up to and including twenty, not 10, get written as words :p
When I started working, I got something similar, though only ten, thereafter numbers. Rules for presenting info in tables: Aligned numbers to the left, dates in the middle etc. I still use most of those rules, so long as it is consistently used, it helps make any document looks professional.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Jan
This looked cooler. And Grammarly liked it.
Ironically, Grammarly's website says written words all the way to "one hundred" :ROFL:


Interesting, I was taught one to nine, and then 10 or higher are written out. I guess it is dependent on your style guide, or as I am in my 50's the style may have evolved.

When I started working, I got something similar, though only ten, thereafter numbers.
That same Grammarly article says up to ten specifically for technical and scientific writing.

I actually did some Googling this morning, and it seems ten is the most common while twenty is a lot less common.

@Jan If I have to nitpick, almost all sources say don't swap between written words and digits for a series of numbers, so "three, six, 12, or 18" should have been "3, 6, 12 or 18" OR "three, six, twelves or eighteen," with digits being preferred as you're likely to exceed ten/twenty :p
 
  • Haha
Reactions: rh1
Ironically, Grammarly's website says written words all the way to "one hundred" :ROFL:





That same Grammarly article says up to ten specifically for technical and scientific writing.

I actually did some Googling this morning, and it seems ten is the most common while twenty is a lot less common.

@Jan If I have to nitpick, almost all sources say don't swap between written words and digits for a series of numbers, so "three, six, 12, or 18" should have been "3, 6, 12 or 18" OR "three, six, twelves or eighteen," with digits being preferred as you're likely to exceed ten/twenty :p
I have my own personal criteria as editor:

What reads easiest and looks coolest. I have to balance those two because otherwise everything would be in zalgotext.
 
I have my own personal criteria as editor:

What reads easiest and looks coolest. I have to balance those two because otherwise everything would be in zalgotext.
Yeah, I'm just nitpicking because I have nothing of value to add :p

I'd never heard of Rentoza, which is why I opened the article. The numbering you used caught my eye so I threw in my worthless 2c.
 
  • Love
Reactions: Jan
Top
Sign up to the MyBroadband newsletter