sechs
Storage? I am Storage!
Despite the complaints of myself and others concerning Newegg's horrible packaging of harddrives, they had a good deal on the 1TB Samsung F3, which I had been looking at getting another. Against my better judgement, I bought.
Mistake 1.
Drive came in an antistatic bag, rather than Samsung's plastic shell, with a little box contraption, floating in a sea of packing peanuts. Not even antistatic ones, at that.
The drive seemed fine for about a day, then started giving noticeable data errors, then stopped being recognised at boot, and finally started going click-click-click.
I decided to RMA with Newegg rather than direct to Samsung because the replacement would come back faster.
Mistake 2.
The day after Newegg gets the drive back, I receive an e-mail saying that the serial number doesn't match what they sent. This was a bit surprising since this was the drive that they sent me.
As directed by the e-mail, I opened up a chat session. The rep confirmed the situation, but wouldn't entertain the possibility that they had made a mistake. Nor would she consider the fact that this drive had the appropriate warranty at Samsung, and maybe they could just replace it anyway or save me the cost and ship it to Samsung on my behalf.
The drive was back in UPS's hands that evening. Frankly, I'm impressed at the efficiency at which they screw up.
Now, I understand why they check the serial numbers, but they don't seem to allow for the possibility of error. And that seems to be something that happens more often than one would expect, based on a Google search. Here's a good one:
http://www.cheapassgamer.com/forums/blog.php?b=15397
Although these RMA serial number mismatches are relatively rare, considering the percentage of sales that are returned at all, how often must they make this mistake?
Mistake 1.
Drive came in an antistatic bag, rather than Samsung's plastic shell, with a little box contraption, floating in a sea of packing peanuts. Not even antistatic ones, at that.
The drive seemed fine for about a day, then started giving noticeable data errors, then stopped being recognised at boot, and finally started going click-click-click.
I decided to RMA with Newegg rather than direct to Samsung because the replacement would come back faster.
Mistake 2.
The day after Newegg gets the drive back, I receive an e-mail saying that the serial number doesn't match what they sent. This was a bit surprising since this was the drive that they sent me.
As directed by the e-mail, I opened up a chat session. The rep confirmed the situation, but wouldn't entertain the possibility that they had made a mistake. Nor would she consider the fact that this drive had the appropriate warranty at Samsung, and maybe they could just replace it anyway or save me the cost and ship it to Samsung on my behalf.
The drive was back in UPS's hands that evening. Frankly, I'm impressed at the efficiency at which they screw up.
Now, I understand why they check the serial numbers, but they don't seem to allow for the possibility of error. And that seems to be something that happens more often than one would expect, based on a Google search. Here's a good one:
http://www.cheapassgamer.com/forums/blog.php?b=15397
Although these RMA serial number mismatches are relatively rare, considering the percentage of sales that are returned at all, how often must they make this mistake?