I'm putting this here because it's pretty clear that someone wasn't paying full attention when they were stocking things.
Hubs had a coupon for 30% off a used CD from one of his favorite shops. He picks one out, successfully uses his coupon, and gets it home. I check the disk for scratches and pop it into my laptop (cause we don't actually have a CD player), and it doesn't play. I spend the next ten minutes trying to figure out why it won't play, then I look it up. The CD is actually a DVD (it even says MDVD in tiny print on the sticker the store put on there), and it only contains six "tracks." However, it looks EXACTLY like a CD in every other way. We're planning on exchanging it for an actual CD.
I can see four problems with the whole situation:
1) WHY WOULD YOU PUT A DVD IN A CD CASE?
2) Why was I able to use a CD coupon on a DVD?
3) Why was a DVD shelved with the CDs?
4) Why didn't we actually read the label a little more carefully?
So, brain farts all around.
Hubs had a coupon for 30% off a used CD from one of his favorite shops. He picks one out, successfully uses his coupon, and gets it home. I check the disk for scratches and pop it into my laptop (cause we don't actually have a CD player), and it doesn't play. I spend the next ten minutes trying to figure out why it won't play, then I look it up. The CD is actually a DVD (it even says MDVD in tiny print on the sticker the store put on there), and it only contains six "tracks." However, it looks EXACTLY like a CD in every other way. We're planning on exchanging it for an actual CD.
I can see four problems with the whole situation:
1) WHY WOULD YOU PUT A DVD IN A CD CASE?
2) Why was I able to use a CD coupon on a DVD?
3) Why was a DVD shelved with the CDs?
4) Why didn't we actually read the label a little more carefully?
So, brain farts all around.