Dear fellow FRIAMers,

Please enjoy the opportunity to be the first audience to observe the opening
salvo in my newly-declared war on Newegg.com.  I just got off the phone with
their Customer Service Department, after having sent then a courtesy advance
copy of the short article included below.  I wanted to give them one last
chance to correct what I believe will be a much larger mistake than they
might have anticipated.  Next stop Slashdot, then Linux Today, then CNET,
Wired.com if they will have it as an editorial.  Linux Journal, Linux
Journal (Facebook).  I'll become a fan & write on their wall for all 6,384
other fans to read. Linux Magazine Online, Linux Online, Linux Magazine
(different from Linux Magazine Online), etc.

This might surprise some of you, but I can become a large pain in the ass
when I get pissed off.

And I am pissed off.

--Doug

______________________________

I admit it up front.  I want to take $399 out of the hide of Newegg.com.
 Here's why:

I purchased a refurbished Asus  K50 Series K50IJ-RX05 laptop from Newegg 4
weeks ago, for -- you guessed it -- $399.  The laptop arrived three days
later, and I installed Kubuntu 9.10 on it.  No muss, no fuss, no hitches.
 Everything worked, right out of the box:  wireless, graphics, the whole
shebang.

Well, *apparently* everything worked.  The laptop was a birthday present for
my wife, you see.  So the first thing she asked for was for me to install
Skype on it so she could make video calls to her daughter.

No problem, says I.  Presto, Skype got installed.  Oops, the picture is
upside down.  This laptop was manufactured/assembled with the webcam
installed 180 degrees out of whack!

Well, ok.  I guess.  There's a Video For Linux patch just for this
situation.  So I installed the patch (a library to pre-load prior to running
apps that use webcam).  Alrighty,  the webcam video is no longer upside down
in Skype.  I handed the laptop back to my wife.

Day two:  the wife says, "My laptop locked up."  I asked her what she had
been doing at the time.  "Moving the mouse."

Oh, oh, this isn't right.  The Asus K50 is running an Intel T4200 dual-core
processor and the Intel 4500 graphics chipset.  The Linux Intel graphics
drivers are pretty solid.  In fact, I've installed Kubuntu 9.10 on several
nearly identical Acer T4200 laptops with the 4500 chipset, and they are all
rock solid under some pretty heavy-duty use.

So, I installed the very latest Kubuntu update, which brought the kernel and
modules up to version 2.6.31-19, and handed the laptop back to my wife.
 Again.

No go.  Three - four times a day the machine just locked up.  Randomly.
 Hard.  Power cycle required to reboot.

So *now* I go to the intertubes to do some research (I know, I know) and
discover [careful, big surprise coming] that the Asus K50 Series K50IJ-RX05
machines had the webcam installed upside down at the factory.  Oh, and they
randomly lock up several times a day.  Linux, Vista, XP.  Whatever.  They
lock up.  There's a reason that so many "refurbished" units of this model
are up for sale.

Clearly an unsatisfactory situation. So I contacted Newegg and explained
that I was unhappy with the defective laptop they had sold me.  After a
brief consultation with her supervisor, the nice lady approved my RMA refund
request and sent me a free UPS return label for me to use to ship the laptop
back.

Not to shabby, I thought.  This kind of service is why I have been a good
Newegg customer for the past 7 years.  Spending about $2,000 - $3,000 per
year.  For seven years.  At Newegg.

Oops, not so fast.  [I bet some of you saw this coming.]  See the email I
just received from Newegg:


*Dear Valued Customer,*
*
*
*Thanks again for shopping at Newegg.com.*
*
*
*We recently received your RMA and your return was then sent to our
Inspections Department for closer examination.*
*
*
*Incomplete return*
*User changed OS to Linux Kubuntu*
*System has been modified/altered original manufacturers operating system
has been removed cannot access restore partition, this voids Newegg
warranty. Unit cannot be accepted or resold as received.*
*
*
*RMA denied return to customer*
*
*
*Because Newegg would be facing a loss if we were to replace this item, we
are returning the product to you and recommending that you contact the
manufacturer directly to request that they repair or replace the item under
your manufacturer's warranty.  Please visit the following link to view a
listing of all the manufacturers whose products we carry:
http://www.newegg.com/app/contactmanufacturer.asp?DEPA=0*
*
*
*Kindest regards,*
*
*
*Newegg.com*
*RMA Inspections Department*
*[email protected]*
*http://www.newegg.com*
*
*
*This email was sent from Newegg's Automated Email System so please do not
reply.*



That's right:  I installed Linux on the laptop, and therefore Newegg is not
going to honor my refund.

Need I say more?  Newegg is now on record as a vendor from whom you purchase
at your own risk.  They have demonstrated that they will knowingly sell
defective hardware, and not honor refund requests on same.

A very good way to go out of business, in my opinion.

Buyer beware.
______________________________



-- 
Doug Roberts
[email protected]
[email protected]
505-455-7333 - Office
505-670-8195 - Cell
============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

Reply via email to