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Dan, I would get a Harvard 13" white MacBook and BootCamp it or VirtualBox it to Linux and/or Win7. On 4/7/11 8:46 AM, Edward Ned Harvey wrote: > This is now a pure tangent - but just to avoid people flaming me over the > warranty comment - I like the dell complete care + gold support warranty > because I get to call in, say I'm a tech, and then they'll replace any part > I say I want replaced. Next day, onsite, either ship me parts or optionally > dispatch a tech with it... Including accident damage. But when I get the > super duper warranty on lenovo, they do all the same stuff except accident > coverage must go through their depot which incurs shipping wasted time and I > have no control over what parts they're going to replace. That's all. It's > a small difference but it matters to me, managing my CEO's and other > peoples' laptops. A few comments on warranties, Dell, and Apple: I know a lot of people rubbish Dell, but I had a few Dell laptops and while several parts failed (keyboard, trackpad, etc.), the warranty servicing was great. They collected the machine next day, and I had it back every time within 48 (or perhaps 72) hours. Once it was out of warranty their online support provides PDFs will full tear-down instructions so I could replace internal parts myself with ease and confidence, plus eBay is full of parts. Anyway, from that and other laptops I've learned that any machine worth >$500 and with a hoped for lifespan of >2 years needs to have a 3+ year warranty. Things break and parts are expensive or (near-)impossible to DIY repair. I had similar problems with a very expensive Mac Book Pro this time last year and after 3 attempts by warranty servicing folks to remedy it I finally had to take matters into my own hands (while on a 5 day trip to Canada and critically needing my laptop working), but was totally stymied by the small star-drive (torx?) screws in the interior of the MacBook Pro. The silver lining on that story was that I went into Chestnut Hill Apple store (for those in the know, the best place to go to ask for Apple repairs -- they are, supposedly, 3x more likely than the average store to immediately offer a replacement, probably due to the demographic of their typical customers) very angry about my chronically sick MBP and within 5 minutes was given a brand new i7 MBP (only 2 weeks on the shelves), in exchange for my unhappy, 2.5 year old MBP. Anyway, my advice: seriously consider a warranty, and look into what accident damage insurance you have from home or work. My wife dropped her MBP and cracked the screen last week -- Apple quoted $1500 to replace (out of warranty, no accident insurance). $100 for parts (and DIY) or $250 for 3rd party mail-in repair -- looks like I'll be buying some small star-drive screwdrivers. Ian -- Ian Stokes-Rees, PhD W: http://hkl.hms.harvard.edu ijstokes-/2FeUQLD3jedFdvTe/nMLpVzexx5G7lz at public.gmane.org T: +1 617 432-5608 x75 NEBioGrid, Harvard Medical School C: +1 617 331-5993
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