[ale] OT: BestBuy PSP

Christopher Bergeron christopher at bergeron.com
Thu Jun 23 00:35:29 EDT 2005


Natalie (and I) had a great experience with the Best Buy service plan.  
She bought an HP laptop a few years ago, and when she had problems with 
it, she had them look at it.  They said they fixed it, but they didn't.  
When the same issue popped up a second (and third) time, she ultimately 
ended up with a brand-new 17" widescreen laptop (one of the $2,200 
dealies).  Part of the contract stated that they had to provide a 
reasonable alternative computer, and thanks to Georgia's Lemon Law, Best 
Buy had to provide her with the "current" similar HP model.  The fact 
that she's an Attorney probably didn't hurt the situation, and it's 
possible that the Best Buy manager knew the implications of the Lemon 
Law/Arbitration of the PSP.  I use the term Lemon Law loosely here, 
because I'm not sure what the actual legalese is.

Anyway, that was our experience with Best Buy.

Kind regards,
CB



Jim Popovitch wrote:

>On Wed, 2005-06-15 at 16:51 -0400, Jonathan Chum wrote:
>  
>
>>I worked for CompUSA a couple of years ago and I know with the extended
>>warranty on PDAs, if you broke the screen, you'll get a new one of the exact
>>same model because they couldn't fix it. If they did not have one, they
>>would get the next comparable model at the same price you bought yours
>>originally. Laptops were also exchange, but I'm not sure what the condition
>>the managers exchanged it for since it's rather difficult to break the
>>laptop's screen unless you spilled coffee all over it.
>>    
>>
>
>I recently returned a high-end Toshiba labtop to CompUSA for ESP repair.
>I was, to say the least, very satisfied with the process and the work
>done.  The USB ports (and touchpad) on the laptop had stopped working,
>the fix was a complete new laptop motherboard.  They quoted the work as
>2 weeks but called me within 5 days to pick up the repaired laptop.  $0,
>and all my data was intact on the harddrive.
>
>  
>
>>Warranty is the highest marked-up item in the store because it's relatively
>>free for the store to save your contact information in a database. Most
>>people loose their warranty information on don't know about loop holes such
>>as the one described above. That's why these companies are making a killing
>>by pushing warranty.
>>    
>>
>
>I did NOT have my warranty paperwork.  What I did was call CompUSA and
>they gave me a 1-800 number to call.  The person on the phone
>established the validity of the warranty based on the laptop serial
>number and issued me a claim number that I took to a local CompUSA (not
>the original purchase location) for the repair (which they shipped out).
>
>This particular laptop was 2.5 years into a 3 year service plan.  The
>original laptop cost close to $3,000 and the ESP was $350.  Well worth
>it from my point of view.  Previously the dvd drive had quit working,
>but that was within the first year and was covered under the OEM
>(Toshiba) warranty and done via Richards Computers up in Roswell.
>
>I am, to put it nicely, quite brutal on laptops.  Therefore an ESP makes
>perfect sense to me.
>
>-Jim P.
>
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>Ale mailing list
>Ale at ale.org
>http://www.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
>
>  
>



More information about the Ale mailing list