some defects can take a while to manifest as system failure. some defects manifest as a reduced lifespan of some component.
5/4/2006 12:11:00 AM
maybe
5/4/2006 12:11:30 AM
5/4/2006 12:13:15 AM
^^I mean for most electronic components you're right though, they usually don't just fail 2 years after being built because of defective manufacture. Something like a harddrive, power supply, cpu fan, and other partially mechanical components undergo wear as part of simply being on. They're expected to survive a certain ammount of time, and a defective bearing or contact point or whatever might manifest as dead computer in 2 years or so.[Edited on May 4, 2006 at 12:15 AM. Reason : ]
5/4/2006 12:15:10 AM
The disconnect is that you're probably a problem customer.
5/4/2006 12:18:08 AM
5/4/2006 12:18:35 AM
You tell me. What's the single most responsible defect that causes motherboards to fail?Also, hard drives are a different thing, because they have mechanical wear. Even if they are born not defective, some drives suffer more wear than others.From personal experience, I have never had a hard drive failure ever since 1991.*touches wood*
5/4/2006 12:20:54 AM
5/4/2006 12:22:05 AM
^ Voice recognition protocol in the phone system identifies you. You've cost them THAT MUCH. For shame man, if you keep it up they'll have to end coupon codes and charge us all more for our rock-bottom priced sale items.[Edited on May 4, 2006 at 12:24 AM. Reason : ]
5/4/2006 12:23:40 AM
yeah, sorry I missed that...but truly outsourcing isn't the root of this issue.IBM owns India's biggest call center.HP/Compaq uses a lot of Indian call centerssame goes for Toshiba.Clearly, this isn't an outsourcing issue.As for scripts, I think they all do, even credit card companies.
5/4/2006 12:24:12 AM
5/4/2006 12:25:05 AM
5/4/2006 12:25:46 AM
^ Defective manufacturing or, more likely, improper assembly can weaken components such that normal operating temperatures and normal clean power will cause the mother board to fail. About as likely as impropper assembly or damage during assembly is a defective power supply. That could easily fry the motherboard.I wonder how many motherboards fail because the customer has shitty wiring in their house and/or no surge protection.[Edited on May 4, 2006 at 12:28 AM. Reason : ]
5/4/2006 12:27:29 AM
^^ yeah I always get english peeps when calling IBM for thinkcentres/thinkpads.
5/4/2006 12:28:24 AM
5/4/2006 12:30:01 AM
Dude, Synapse, English speaking has nothing to do with your Dell's failure rate.
5/4/2006 12:31:24 AM
5/4/2006 12:33:49 AM
^^^ I have had 2 fail (out 10 machines I've owned.) One was my fault. I was upgrading my 486 dx 33 mhz machine to a 486 dx 4 (in the winter of course... with the heat up to max) and I shocked something when I was working on it. The processor was fine and so was the memory, but the motherboard didn't work anymore.The second time a fan on the motherboard stopped working and the northbridge overheated and eventually stopped working. For some reason temperature sensors didn't go off though, they may have also been defective. This was a dell desktop and not a machine I had worked on. If you're curious, although it took me 3 hours over the course of a day with tech support to get them to agree to fix it, I was back up and running within 48 hours.[Edited on May 4, 2006 at 12:39 AM. Reason : ]
5/4/2006 12:36:01 AM
http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/electronics-computers/desktops-laptops-tech-support-605.htmWhere can I read about Dell's tech support salaries and that Indian culture is about not making good products?Addendum: Also, what about Cisco's shitty service? They always had like communications majors handling stuff and I had to teach one of them what 802.11b meant.[Edited on May 4, 2006 at 12:40 AM. Reason : .]
5/4/2006 12:37:42 AM
You could infer the correlation that the two companies with american based, english speaking tech support got the highest scores (IBM and Apple)
5/4/2006 12:40:44 AM
^^^Yeah i rarely troubleshoot that much (down to exactly went bad on the mobo) I get called in because the PC stops working...once i identify the mobo/CPU as being the problem i try some standard BIOS steps then call in for replacement.[Edited on May 4, 2006 at 12:41 AM. Reason : ]
5/4/2006 12:41:06 AM
5/4/2006 12:47:29 AM
ok lets go by some statistics here.http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=707813http://www.princeton.edu/desc/news/review/individual/reliability.htmlso it seems that Dell has a failure rate of lets say about 10%. What I can infer is that 10% of Dell's customers are so stupid that they cannot understand a global language with just a different accent.Or is there a different inference?
5/4/2006 12:47:48 AM
No, all those numbers seem to suggest that the vast majority are probably due to customer behavior. I know that half of the laptops the bookstore sends back are really because of viruses on the computer that the customer was unable to protect themselves against or remove. Even though the computers basically have a "restore to factory defaults" button on them, people still can't figure it out and don't want to do it themselves. What's worse is when they want to repair the problem without reformatting; it's almost impossible to walk someone through the process to diagnose and fix that over the phone, so Lenovo approves them for "repair" where they just reimage the drive, install new drivers, and update the bios.
5/4/2006 12:54:24 AM
Coincidentally, IBM/Lenovo kinda leads the business in hardware failures statistically speaking.
5/4/2006 12:55:31 AM
They also have a 0 dead pixel policy and consider a laptop with any dead pixels to be DOA...
5/4/2006 12:56:01 AM
IBTL. This shit is now just troll counter-troll.- Indians suck at tech support- No, it's the users' fault somehow that they are receiving bad support! And it's the users' fault for not being able to understand bastardized english that they never hear in real life![Edited on May 4, 2006 at 12:59 AM. Reason : sdf]
5/4/2006 12:56:12 AM
5/4/2006 12:57:26 AM
5/4/2006 12:57:49 AM
^^ Officially yes, but I've sent back 6 laptops for having ONE dead pixel. Lenovo did not argue, they simply approved replacement.Calling it a policy was incorrect. What I should have said is that they are extremely willing to call anything as DOA. I have sent back computers for customers that had a hairline scratch on the LCD screen. The tech support staff asked if it was damage from mishandling. I said "the customer says he doesn't think so, but isn't sure" They said to put it in the airmail return box and replace it with a brand new machine.[Edited on May 4, 2006 at 1:02 AM. Reason : ]
5/4/2006 12:59:23 AM
I am asking you people to post real statistics.I have not met one person who couldn't understand English.So I have to go with statistics.If proving your point in a scientific manner is akin to being trolled, then yes, you're being trolled.
5/4/2006 12:59:32 AM
I... don't think anyone's actually tolling...
5/4/2006 1:00:02 AM
5/4/2006 1:02:51 AM
5/4/2006 1:04:23 AM
^ ah yeah, desktop. Lenovo desktops are a completely different animal from their laptops. Thinkpad still means something. You'll see in that same article that thinkpads still win awards for their reliability and build quality. For some reason though, IBM desktops have just always kind of sucked while their laptops have for the most part been some of the best built. [Edited on May 4, 2006 at 1:08 AM. Reason : ]
5/4/2006 1:06:07 AM
^^ yeah that link doesn't back up your far reaching statement. And wheres data on the 3% stat
5/4/2006 1:08:25 AM
That's just Jamie Kraft's opinion.I am not saying Dell is best I don't get paid by them, but they do have better hardware and customer satisfaction than most PC manufacturers.I bet Jamie Kraft can't locate West Virginia on a map of Eastern USA
5/4/2006 1:14:55 AM
Yeah, dell's got above average quality and reliability (and sadly even customer service) with below average prices. They're not the best, and they're not the worst, and they're also usually pretty cheap.
5/4/2006 1:19:11 AM
5/4/2006 1:19:22 AM
Look manAre we talking about English skills here?or product reliability?or Tech support practices?or culture?or labor laws?or what?Cuz seriously believe meif you goto a University that is able to teach graduate classes only because of the 80% international student enrollment in them, you better prepare yourself to be outwitted by some crazy haggard in Sri Lanka who learned English at the age of 25
5/4/2006 1:19:35 AM
5/4/2006 1:23:49 AM
here's a challenge.Next time you have a support call.Gimme the details.I'll deal with whatever company you want me to.and if I don't get it resolved within the first call.I'll accept defeat.It's a mental block.
5/4/2006 1:24:50 AM
sweet, I'll be in touch I guarantee if you call dell home and SB support with any real volume you'll see the light.[Edited on May 4, 2006 at 1:29 AM. Reason : V as am i]
5/4/2006 1:26:06 AM
I am serious.
5/4/2006 1:27:08 AM
If you call ANY customer service line with real frequency, you WILL be left a souless husk eventually. It's just the way of things.
5/4/2006 1:32:16 AM
I might come across as trolling, but it's just mind boggling to see that a person could have so many tech issues with the same company and different products.I have never called tech support for anything I have owned...never that I remember.and I have owned a lot of stuff.I dunno...I can't be too judgmental here.
5/4/2006 1:33:48 AM
^^ i acutally called paypal today and some dude just picked up the phone. i swear i heard a chorus of angel singing simultaneously. On top of that feat he actually handled both my complicated inquires within a few minutes. but obviously dell and paypal have different incoming call volumes ^
5/4/2006 1:40:34 AM
Anyone have stats on the Dells on campus needing tech support?They seem to be always on and always in use by some crazy buggers.
5/4/2006 1:42:08 AM
5/4/2006 1:42:59 AM
^ yeah thats much more accurate
5/4/2006 1:44:39 AM