The Gear Diary Store Has Gift Certificates

Posted on 13 December 2006 by


This is a public service announcement that Steve, the manager of the Gear Diary Store, has asked me to post:

gift_certificate_small

“Today, we’ve launched a new eGift service in our store that provides a way for you to purchase cash-value gift certificates at various levels including $15, $20, $30, $50, $75, and $100. The certificates are good for all software applications in the store.  So recipients can choose from thousands of the best applications like music players, games, utilities, ringtone managers, and PIMS for virtually any smartphone or PDA device.  You don’t  need to know the recipient’s device model or ID. And, best of all, the certificates act like debit cards so the recipient can use them more than once until the gift value is fully spent.  
 
Purchasing is very simple.  Just go to the Gift Certificate page in our store and select the gift amount.  On checkout you’ll be asked for the recipients name and email address. You also get to enter a personalized message and the date of delivery.  On the specified date the certificate will be delivered directly to the recipient.  Ideal for last minute gifts or remote family and friends !”

Thanks for supporting Gear Diary with your purchases! :-)

This post was written by:

- who has written 1699 posts on Gear Diary.

I started Gear Diary on September 30, 2006, and my goal was that this not be an easily labeled site. We all have gear that we use daily – some of it electronic and some of it organic. I think it is fascinating to explore the equipment that makes our lives easier, more entertaining, more productive, and more manageable. My hope is that Gear Diary visitors will find this site to be a comfortable and friendly place to discuss interesting topics – and not only those that are tech related, as well as a location to discover various types of gear – whatever that term may end up implying – that they never knew existed. My specialty is in-depth reviews written in a layman’s terms, because everyone can understand technology, sometimes it just takes a little translating. +Judie Stanford

Contact the author