Comments on: One tale of woe: Apple, HP laptop 'refurbs'
Refurbished laptops are cheap and virtually new. But it all depends how you define "new."
Refurbished laptops are cheap and virtually new. But it all depends how you define "new."
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http://images.apple.com/legal/warranty/docs/cpuwarranty.pdf
...now compare that to a refurb Dell or HP, where you're lucky to get a 90-day warranty.
Personally, with a 1-year warranty? I actually don't mind buying refurb from Apple at all.
As always, your mileage may vary. But in my case, I'd buy refurb again, wholeheartedly.
Of course, the overnighting thing only works if you have an XPS (since they are supposedly dell's premium brand). I don't think you get the same support level for Inspirons etc.
Not sure they did overnighting back when I owned a dimension.
Half assed article.
You could have made the article whole by explaining the warranty and return policies, which are the same as a brand new product.
So you can get an expensive one for 50% ... do you really need that power? If you Do need that power - Like Hardcore gaming or something - do you really want to trust a refurbish??
more cons than pros with these!
The industry has gone the way of car manufacture, cramming more comonents into progressively more constricted spaces without meaningfully redesigning them. Someday someone will offer a more modular design with interchangeable components and a more logical, easily serviced physical arrangement, as was originally done with desktops. That manufacturer will eat the market.
I've bought a refurbished Dell Inspiron (6 years ago) and a refurbished Dell Precision Xeon-based workstation (just over 1 year ago). I've never had a problem with either system at all. What I like about Dell's website, is that they show you systems that are "scratch and dent", "refurbished" or "ordered new". Their deals are so good at times, that inventory will actually disappear in a day when they issue special savings coupons.
Didn't you just recommended a refurb MacBook Air in your "Dell faces hurdles" article? A 1st-gen MBA refurb no less? ;-)
Don't get me wrong, refurbished items can be a nice deal... but if it's too nice of a deal, there's usually a catch to it.
Since I primarily use my Mac Pro for audio production and motion graphics, any laptop is pretty much underpowered and too limited by RAM (or lack there of) a Laptop is a more or less, a play thing for me to tote around and occasionally use at the office.
I did have a refurb iPhone but the mute button snapped off. I walked into the Apple store and talked to a genius and they did the damnest thing.... they handed me a new iPhone.
I think the lesson to learn is this: If you are going to buy a refurbished computer stay away from laptops because they are not as easy to repair and they never have been as stable and reliable as a desktop.If you really need a laptop buy new but even then it will not last as long as a refurbished desktop.
The first one they sent me was defective, but they replaced it quickly and without much hassle. The replacement has been working perfectly for over two years now.
I'm usually loathe to purchased "used" because I'd rather not inherit someone else's headaches. However, my experience with my current Apple means I'd consider another refurb when this MBP needs replacing.
I've gotten 2 refurbished low-end Mac Books (on in 2003, another in 2008) and they work fine (knock on wood)
On the other hand, I had a friend who got a new computer from a brick and mortar store (Circuit City, long before the bankruptcy) same model - same problem - DOA. He took it back for an exact replacement - again, DOA. He did it two more times - with the same result - again, DOA before he gave up. I wonder why that PC maker is out of business now.
Yes, as posted, you get what you pay for. One thing you pay for when you get a refurb, instead of getting the same thing used off eBay or Craigslist for less money, is a warranty. You paid for it. You got it. Use it. I see nothing in the post that suggests its author tried to get it fixed or replaced. Why not?
I don't see what the big deal is. I'll continue to check refurb availability before buying new, and will have no qualms about getting another refurb if what I want is available that way.
- by AnotherArmchairCritic April 16, 2009 7:23 AM PDT
- 10 paragraphs...not an article, just an annoyingly lame thought fragment. No 'fact's about refurb vs new warranties (for either mega-company mentioned), nothing useful or actionable in the entire piece.
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Showing 1 of 2 pages (33 Comments)"journalism" devolving into junior high school Facebook scribblings. Annoying.