[ale] Reliable seller of refurbished MacBooks?
Michael Potter
michael at potter.name
Mon Jun 5 17:45:54 EDT 2017
On Mon, Jun 5, 2017 at 12:45 PM, Jerald Sheets <questy at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Jun 5, 2017, at 12:41 PM, Michael Potter <michael at potter.name> wrote:
>
> The apple store could not replace my trackpad without sending it in for
> three days.
>
>
> …which is why there are local service providers...
>
Apple could have referred me to the local service provider then. I will
call them and see what they say.
>
>
> As I had previously received same day service from them (At Lenox) I was
> very persistent in asking for additional options (I am not shy).
>
>
> …some repair items have been removed from the purview of stores. Shipping
> “all the things” to all stores for on-hand repair stock costs money.
> Training a genius to the required level does as well. Instead, depot is a
> common send-off for screens & logic boards.
>
So you do agree that they do not offer same day service. Before you were
certain they offered same day service. This is a track pad. They should
be able to replace a trackpad and keyboard at the store. It does not need
a "Genius" do replace a trackpad.
>
>
> So perhaps they offer while you wait service, but if there is no way for
> me to actually receive that service, then that service does not exist.
>
>
>
> Onyx Consulting is specifically who I was referring to, and they
> absolutely *do* offer immediate repair for a premium, and it is found on
> their fee schedule here:
>
> http://onyxconsulting.com/personal/rates.pdf
>
I will look them up. I only checked one other provider and they laughed at
me when I suggested they could fix my mac while I wait.
>
>
> So far I am just living turning on tap to click and will eventually send
> it in if there is another problem.
>
>
> That’s where we differ. I turn it off the second I open a new machine.
> That annoying KA-THUNK every time I push a track pad bothers the crap out
> of me.
>
>
> I am not "Manufacturing" Apple's problems. They are doing a fine job of
> that themselves.
>
>
> No, they are beholden to company-wide moires that are set in Cupertino
> with an eye toward global needs and costs rather than our little corner of
> the world, regardless of how large it is.
>
>
What you wrote seems like you are agreeing that the they are the problem.
They are abandoning the professional level equipment.
>
> 1. No central ticketing system for resolving developer type issues with
> itunesconnect, developer, or itunes. This allow Apple support to just
> point the finger at each other and wash their hands of any problem.
>
>
> There absolutely *is* a central ticketing system, and if you put in a
> ticket with AppleCare, the store can pull it up by number as can a local
> service provider.
>
You are talking about consumer level stuff between the apple service 800
and the genius bar.
I am talking about the developer services. As a developer I have to work
with three different groups at Apple that WILL NOT talk to each other.
1) Developer
2) Ituneconnect
3) itunes.
They will not talk to each other; they each have their own ticketing
system. itunes connect has a 48 hour turn around on submissions. One time
their response was: "Are you still having a problem?". I responded in 5
minutes. Then the 48 hour clock started over again. That is completely
aggravating when your app is not available in the app store.
I am now much smarter. I create a forum post on developer.apple.com. Then
I tell itunesconnect that I will post any status update on that forum
post. Then they will know the status.
>
>
> 2. Dropping professional level HW. (17" Macbook Pro and the fully sized
> Mac)
>
>
> I don’t want to have to go to the gym to pick up my laptop. 15” is the
> standard, and 17” is phased out as of 2012.
>
> the same number of options != less quality.
>
So what. You value portability over high performance. My point is that
are dropping the high end stuff.
>
>
>
> 3. iPhones with camera bumps.
>
>
>
> Ok, I’m with you here. Why in the hell in 2017 do we have a camera bump
> on the chassis? Should be flush.
>
>
> 4. Forgoing repairability to get a mm less thickness. The utility of
> getting thiner is getting to be very small. However the utility of being
> repairable still has value. They are making the wrong tradeoffs,
> especially on the professional HW.
>
>
>
> It is no secret that Apple does not want you to repair your own phone
> (opening the case voids the warranty) and this has never changed. Being
> mad about a more than decade old corporate practice is a waste of effort.
>
I was talking about the laptops. I don't care to repair my own stuff
anyway, but i do want it repaired quickly.
>
>
> —j
>
>
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