"Placed an order on september the first to be delivered on the seventh between 13:45 and 16:45 for a fifty five inch tv and a soundbar, The time came and went with no call and no show. Driver finally calls at eight fifteen, says they're picking up the soundbar at the at the store. I told them at that point we need to reschedule. I called and talked to customer service, and they said, I would have to call on Sunday. So I did, then they told me, I'd have to wait 24 to 48 hours for them to process it. Here it is monday at twelve noon and still have not received a call back to schedule the new delivery and they've got my money. That has got to be the dumbest ass procedure, i've ever heard about you never make customer wait. And when you screw up that customer should get top priority to get it fixed. I wouldn't trust best lie if they were in church praying. Unfortunately yelp will not allow up me to give them zero stars when they truly deserve negative numbers."
Best Buy
2.5
71
1632 Stringtown Rd, Grove City
OPEN · 10:00 - 22:00 · +1 614-277-2746
"The young lady at the pick up line was extremely polite, and friendly. Had to stay focused or I would have spent a lot more than intended...lol."
Best Buy
2
63
2782 Taylor Road Ext, Reynoldsburg
OPEN · 10:00 - 22:00 · +1 614-863-3442
"I bought a new laptop at the store and asked them to copy my photos and documents from the old one. No one contacted me when it was done. Found out later they did not copy the data to my new computer and I could not access the files on my old one. I had to take it to the Lancaster store where they immediately solved the access problem and copied my files from the old laptop to the new one. Crappy service at the Reynoldsburg store"
Target
3
83
1717 Olentangy River Rd, Columbus
OPEN · 07:00 - 23:59 · +1 614-298-1070
"It's the OSU Campus Target. Not the l\none on Hogh Street, this is the "bigger" one.\nSo, it can be quite busy and hectic but offers all the selections you might expect at a bigger target\nstore.\n\nThis location serves the entire Tri-village, Upper\nArlington & Grandview Heights areas,\nas well as the OSU/Short North/Victorian Village communities. Lots of people and a very busy parking lot.\n\nOfferings include pre-order purchase curbside pick up."
A computer is a programmable device for processing, storing, and displaying information. Learn more in this article about modern digital electronic computers and their design, constituent parts, and applications as well as about the history of computing.
A computer is a machine that can store and process information. Most computers rely on a binary system, which uses two variables, 0 and 1, to complete tasks such as storing data, calculating algorithms, and displaying information.
Computer - Technology, Invention, History: By the second decade of the 19th century, a number of ideas necessary for the invention of the computer were in the air.
Computer - History, Technology, Innovation: A computer might be described with deceptive simplicity as “an apparatus that performs routine calculations automatically.”
Computer science is the study of computers and computing, including their theoretical and algorithmic foundations, hardware and software, and their uses for processing information.
Computer, device for processing, storing, and displaying information. Computer once meant a person who did computations, but now the term almost universally refers to automated electronic machinery.
Computer software is divided into two basic types—the operating system and application software. The operating system controls how the different parts of hardware work together. Application software gives the computer instructions for doing specific tasks, such as word processing or playing games.
Computer - Home Use, Microprocessors, Software: Before 1970, computers were big machines requiring thousands of separate transistors. They were operated by specialized technicians, who often dressed in white lab coats and were commonly referred to as a computer priesthood.
Computer - Memory, Storage, Processing: The earliest forms of computer main memory were mercury delay lines, which were tubes of mercury that stored data as ultrasonic waves, and cathode-ray tubes, which stored data as charges on the tubes’ screens.