To: Blue Highway
"I dont buy the idea the hard drive is a non user serviceable part."
Either do I, but tell that to the anti-tamper stickers on the screws of my old Compaq.
Had I gone into that machine to fix a "non-user-serviceable part" like the hard disk, I'd have voided its warranty. Not the case with Macs, unless of course you do damage while you're in there. If you replace the hard disk, Apple will no longer warrant the hard disk but the motherboard, display and other bits will still be covered unless you screw 'em up somehow. At least, this goes for my experience with the extended 3-year AppleCare warranty, which I highly, highly recommend.
I haven't mentioned the great service you get in the Apple Stores yet on this thread. I've owned Dell, Sony, IBM/Lenovo and Compaq, and I'm here to tell you that it's a real joy to make an appointment online, saunter into the store at the appointed hour, and talk with a knowledgeable technician who really knows his or her stuff and speaks actual unaccented English. Compare that with the many hellish hours on the phone with Mujibar in Bombay mulishly reading a totally irrelevant script to me as my blood pressure spikes into the stratosphere... no comparison.
94 posted on
07/01/2009 4:43:11 PM PDT by
RightOnTheLeftCoast
(1st call: Abbas. 1st interview: Al Arabiya. 1st energy decision: halt drilling in UT. Arabs 1st!)
To: RightOnTheLeftCoast
Do you mean taking the hard drive itself apart? I wasn’t doing that as I just mean removing the hard drive from the laptop and upgrading to a larger drive.
To: RightOnTheLeftCoast
>Compare that with the many hellish hours on the phone with Mujibar in Bombay mulishly reading a totally irrelevant script to me as my blood pressure spikes into the stratosphere... no comparison. <
Chuckle. Been there, done that many times because of a Linksys POS router that’s now gathering dust on a shelf.
118 posted on
07/01/2009 9:45:35 PM PDT by
Darnright
(There can never be a complete confidence in a power which is excessive. - Tacitus)
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