Fun with Notebooks

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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I've posted before that I had a good experience with getting support from Gateway.

My Gateway Laptop - one that I use pretty much exclusively for running projectors in classrooms and reading comics I've downloaded (one of the few good applications for a 16:9 display!) has had minor display issues.

I had a couple issues that I *thought* might've been Vista-related, times when the lamp on the screen just did not come on. The only times I saw them were under Vista, so I thought it was something wonky with the OS.

About a month ago I started seeing regular "strobing" on the display, regardless of OS, and a couple more bouts of "no picture."

Last Friday I finally decided I wanted to send it back. It had become annoying.

So I hopped into their online support center, a java-based IM-application.

I had to confirm my name, address and the serial number of the laptop four times, but my support request of "My screen flickers a lot and sometimes doesn't come on. I would like an RMA." eventually got to the right support area and led, with almost no troubleshooting, to an RMA. Took about 15 minutes; other than an accidental (I think) transfer to a desktop display support guy, it was pretty hassle-free.

And they shipped me a shipping container that arrived this morning.
Spiffy.

My other recent laptop adventure: Trying to buy five Latitude notebooks from Dell Small Business, over the phone. I was helping a decidedly non-technical person named Rifzal (a Bangladeshi immigrant) get his new business started. Rifzal saw there was a 0%-for-two-years financing offer on Dell's web site, which was how the adventure started. Call this toll-free number to apply for financing. So we called.
Except, no one at Dell knew what we were talking about. And ironically, all the Dell salesdroids were Americans, so I had the sheer, hilarious joy of listening to the Dell phone reps pass Rifzal around like a hot potato because they couldn't understand his accent.
Between Rifzal and myself, we spent over four man-hours on the phone trying to find out how to get Dell's 0% finanancing. Eventually, I did speak to someone who indicated that the qualifications for it included at least three years in business, but my communications included reciting the specific URL for the financing offer to at least nine other people, let alone what poor Rifzal was doing.
We then found out that, over the time we spent, the price on the notebook we wanted had changed.
After that, we spent another hour trying to recreate the precise pricing we'd had before, from Dell's web site. Even with an "E-value code", it simply was not possible to get within $150 of what we'd seen before.

In the end, we decided to buy five HP business notebooks instead.
 

ddrueding

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I haven't had problems with Dell; so long as you don't deviate from the specific purchasing program they use. Order from the web, don't use their financing, and if you don't see it; don't try to get it.
 

Pradeep

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I've had good experiences with Dell Business sales, specifically their Medium-Large Business section.

Work out an online configuration of your choice, then call up your Dell rep and they seem to be able to knock 25-33% off whatever you can get on the website. This is for orders of perhaps 5-10 systems.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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More necro-posting!

My Gateway MX7515 died today. Specifically, the Radeon X600 crapped out, and it does funky things whenever it's in any kind of graphics mode other than 80x24 text.

I thought I might be able to replace RAM and get it back to working order, but no, it has discrete memory.

On the plus side, I now have 2GB of notebook DDR, a 100GB 7200rpm Seagate notebook drive, an 8x slimline DVD burner and a mobile Athlon64/4000 for my parts bin.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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Also:
That 22 month old Gateway died, but I also have four perfectly functional IBM notebooks (the oldest one is *eight*, newest about nine months old) and two Dell Latitudes (the newest ones is four years old, a D505, I think).

I would just like to say that this says a lot about the difference in quality between business notebooks and notebooks marketed for home users.
 

paugie

Storage is cool
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I am typing this on a Dell Latitude 500, a gift from a young lady we cared for 6 years. She now works in Dubai. For some reason, the apartment we now live in is a WiFi hotspot.
AFAIK, this laptop was with her for, like, three years. No glitches whatsoever
 

Fushigi

Storage Is My Life
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500? As in CSx, C500, or D500? I'm on a D800 right now with a D830 in the works - waiting on the procurement cycle to bring it to my cubicle.
 

mubs

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Just got a new Latitude D531 from work. Nice machine, but heavy! I'm disappointed with the screen; a 15.4" widescreen. Viewing angle could have been better, and brightness more uniform across all parts of it. My Dell 20" widescreen at home is leap years ahead.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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My brother bought a $400 Acer 1680 a few months back.

Apparently, this morning he cracked its display against the arm of a chair.
The display broke - there's a three to four pixel-wide diagonal line from the upper left to the lower lower right.

This is not covered by warranty. Acer wants $600 for a new screen. The cheapest aftermarket one seems to be $300.

Granted, a decent lappie wouldn't be damaged by that. but it is really utterly galling that his two month old laptop is, for his purposes, now garbage.
 

LiamC

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Priceless. A $400 notebook that has a $600 screen. Oh my eyes (gouge, gouge)
 

timwhit

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Priceless. A $400 notebook that has a $600 screen. Oh my eyes (gouge, gouge)

Every time someone tells me that they are going to replace the screen on a laptop I roll my eyes. It would have to be a really really nice and new one to burn money like that rather than getting a new one.

I have replaced screens on laptops before, it is a royal pain. At least it was with Compaq.
 

LiamC

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Had a pleasant experience with Dell support. The battery died (Inspiron 6400) yesterday. It was 2 weeks over 1 year old. Went through some tests with the Dell rep, ad he just up and ordered me a replacement, with no quibbling. I was only on hold for a little over a minute as well. It might have helped that
it was bought through work though...
 

Santilli

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Jan 27, 2002
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Having fun with laptops.

REcently upgraded to a Seagate 7200 rpm drive, and, it makes it real snappy:
1922-1.jpg

http://www.trustedreviews.com/noteb...sonic-ToughBook-CF-51-Semi-Rugged-Notebook/p1
Had to format with the Seagate tools, even though I had partitioned and formatted on my server, prior to installation, to get the system restore disk to install.

I got the great idea of trying Ubuntu on it, after Ubuntu wouldn't install on my server, and, seems that VMware only
runs on 2003 server, without the XP additions I added.

Installed, and ran for about 5 days, but, each time I booted, windows wanted to do a disk check, and, I stopped it.

Day before yesterday I let the disk check run. BIG MISTAKE.
Next restart, grubb 17 error. Can't get to the two existing operating systems, on different partitions, on the disk.

Great thing about the CF-51 is put the drive in a cushioned caddy, and, flip one switch, and the hard drive pops out.

Pulled the drive, pulled the hours of work, mainly grade books and notices for students done in Onmiform, reformatted, and partitioned, using a Rosewill external drive caddy, which seems to work once in awhile with the USB connections on my server, and, better on the laptop.

Put the 7200 back in, tried using the CF-51 reinstall disk, but, wouldn't work until the drive was formatted using the Seagate tools disk, then it worked, and, reinstalled data quickly.

I took the time to move the 4200 rpm Hitachi from the Rosewill external drive housing into the other CF 51 housing I've kept around, and, now XP will be on one disk, and, Ubuntu on another, at the flip of a switch. Nice setup, but, a pain.

S
 
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