Posted on 01/10/2002 6:46:47 AM PST by colette_g
Angry Hewlett-Packard customers have forced the computer manufacturer into a U-turn after it scrapped recovery disks for its latest range of Pavilion PCs.
HP ditched the standard backup CDs in favour of installing Windows XP recovery files on a partition on the hard drive, prompting scores of users to complain.
Customers posted irate messages on HP's technical support site and bombarded the manufacturer with phone calls demanding to be sent the disks.
One customer wrote: "I really think that HP is putting out a raw deal when you buy their new XP systems and you don't get any recovery CDs. What happens if the warranty runs out and the hard drive physically dies?"
Another Pavilion customer returned her machine in disgust. "One person from [HP] support said I would have to purchase a retail version of XP if my hard drive failed. Another said I could purchase a hard drive from HP with XP preinstalled, but could not tell me how much it would cost," she wrote.
Customers complained that the move could jeopardise recovery following damage to the hard drive and would also prevent deliberate partitioning of the drive to add a second OS like Linux.
According to HP's product description recovery CDs are included in the Pavilion package. But when silicon.com reader, Ian Rowe, contacted HP he was initially told that CDs for the model did not exist.
An email from customer support told him: "HP recommends that you do not replace the hard disk as it is preloaded with Windows XP. The operating system will be lost if the hard disk is replaced. If you further wish to replace the hard disk, please purchase a retail version of Windows XP from your reseller and install it on the new hard drive."
Rowe told silicon.com: "From the moment I bought the PC, to the current time, it is not mentioned that you will not be able to upgrade the hard disk in the PC. Certainly nothing in any agreement that states that I am not entitled to do so without purchasing a new copy of XP."
Contrary to HP's advice, Microsoft claims that even if XP recovery files on the hard drive are damaged or lost, the company can use its authentication technology to identify legitimate users and replace the OS for free.
Under pressure from angry customers, HP began sending out CDs in late December. But according to a spokeswoman for HP UK, recovery disks will only be provided for customers who complain and will still not be included with the original PC.
"The recovery data is now stored on the hard drive, and you're not usually going to lose the hard drive if it crashes," she said.
But this explanation is unlikely to pacify angry customers.
"I bought HP because they stood for quality and getting a good piece of equipment for the value," one Pavilion user wrote on HP's message board. "When cutting corners like this starts affecting the morale and attitude of customers, then nobody wins."
Have you had problems with HP? Or recovering Windows XP? Let us know by posting a reader comment below or emailing editorial@silicon.com
I believe the correct term is FlyingMonkeyXP.
I think HP is probably doing the same thing my father explained about the automakers when I was ten years old. He said that if they can get away with removing one screw or rivet, it'll add up to millions of dollars when they add up all the cars they sell. So, I imagine some beancounter at HP says hey, we can save fifty cents by not including a CD, if we sell two million boxes, we just made a million bucks.
Your posts on Microsoft are too stupid to warrent a response, that is why you are ignored.
Sorry to tell you but Publius6961 is dead on correct about XP
I been in the computer/telcom biz since 1980 from bench tech to network engineer and installed more OS's then I care to remember. I also build custom PC on the side (doing two this week)
I tell you what I tell all my customers .. XP is a bullshit OS and I refuse to support or work with with it.
The problem is not the OS's in and of itself. It's Microsoft security and protection schemes
A good OS should be well behaved XP will bite you in the ass HARD! if you try to do a upgrade or repair
To use a Freeperism, XP is the OS for the sheeple
I just went through this with a Kitchen aid dishwasher. Widely known as the best dishwasher on the marked 8 years ago. Little did I know that Whirlpool had bought it two years prior to my $800 purchase. I got a lemon. 5 major repairs in 4 years and it does a poor job of washing dishes. I trashed it and got a Bosch machine. (oddly enough the machines with the Whirlpool brand on them are now top rated as to frequency of repair by CR)
So this time around I got a Sony VIAO. Sonny is presently in a brand building mode and is lapping up a big portion of the market. Their machines are not just an assemblage of parts as well. They actually make most of the components. Not that I love Sony and think they can do no wrong. Their cordless phones sucked last time I had one. But I sure like my flat screen Wega and this VIAO has me enthralled. For now.
You know, when you think about it ... calling the vast majority of the population sheeple is really elite snobery of the worst ilk. When one is talking about fools who voted for clintoon and still support him I suppose it is warranted but when speaking of OSs it really is insulting. We regular people have jobs. We have kids. We do not have the time to understand computers. Just like you do not have the time to understand brain surgery. Yet you think we should venture into the rarified air of Linux or Unix. This is not particularly insightful on your part.
Microsoft obviously wasn't going after the educated and informed user market.
These nonstop daily accusations of homosexuality are really starting to get old.
To each his own. But Mac has only a 5% share of the market for a lot of reasons, the most significant being that it only meets the needs of 5% of home computer users. This isn't criticism, it's just an observation.
I'm sure this happens but how often? I couldn't use up the capacity of this machine if I became a professinal digital photgrapher AND a CAD user ... tomorrow. So I add another drive. I doubt Bill will cut me off. Face it. You're just a Gates hater. I understand. It bugs me too that one guy has such a monopoly. I used to use Netscape just to feel like I had not sold out completely. Now I'm sticking with Corel for the same probably useless reasons. It's not a perfect world. So what.
At least they now have a telephone service center. (It turned out that the source of the problem was probably a Windows '95 problem)
I just purchased a new Dell 8200 which came with a back up XP CD, but I also purchased the extended warranty.
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