Hi thank you (and Alex too) for all your quick responses and info. I am still 
not sure, I am going to read the vo manual today, bu tI will look around in nl 
(on the web that is) if I import from the usa there will be HUGE vat and 
customs charges, customs are really strict here so after some consideration it 
might not be such a cost-saver after all. I will do some searching on the net 
though, maybe theya re available in nl itself for lower prices then official 
apple store.
Thanks again,
Greetings, Anouk,
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Esther 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, July 18, 2009 4:00 AM
  Subject: Re: mac support/warranty, does it matter where you buy?


  HI Anouk,


  Well, at least one other list member in Germany bought his Mac while visiting 
the U.S.  There are two parts to the power cable -- a power brick and an 
extension cable.  The power brick has a plug attachment, and there is a 
European plug attachment that can go into the connector, which uses a figure-8 
plug insert.  I think these are also called duck-head plugs or IEC-C7 plugs.  
If you feel the power brick without the plug inserted, there's basically a 
small section of the rectangular brick cut away, with an indentation for the 
figure-8 plug connection to get inserted.  Apple sells a world travel adapter 
kit that allows you to switch between 6 different plug connectors for Europe, 
North America, China, the UK, Korea, Australia, and Hong Kong.  (As far as I 
know, you can't buy individual plugs separately, and the travel adapter kit 
seems overpriced at $39.00, but my local Apple Store put some of these on sale 
five years ago at substantial discount.) Here's the link in the U.S. Store:


  http://store.apple.com/us/product/M8794G/B


  Buying a travel adapter plug that switches from U.S. to Continental European 
plug configuration is cheaper, and also works; you can put this on the end of 
either the U.S. adapter plug, or the end of the extension cable (which has 
3-prongs -- just insert the 2 with blades into the travel adapter plug), and 
insert into an outlet. I've used this with my (U.S.) MacBook in Europe.  I 
think you can also use the figure-8 plug from any other laptop and connect it 
into the power brick -- for example, the cord from my Lenovo ThinkPad can plug 
into the MacBook power brick instead of the ThinkPad power brick and power it, 
but this might be less safe for warranty coverage.


  You can certainly just buy an extra Apple MagSafe power adapter for the 
MacBook at your local Apple Store.  I do know of people in Europe who bought 
Apple Products through the U.S. Amazon Store and had them shipped.  This was 
the fastest way to get the new Nano 4G in large capacity when it first came out 
for some folks.  There are links for Amazon Mac products from the 
macintouch.com web page at:


  http://www.macintouch.com/


  Look under Amazon Updates.


  HTH


  Cheers,


  Esther






  On Jul 17, 2009, at 14:55, a radix wrote:


    Hello GREAT so this could mean I could buy a mac in the states (much 
cheaper because of euro-dollar) have it shipped to me and then  buy apple care 
here in nl? (I would of course have to find a company willing to do this or an 
apple which is less then one year old, or is apple care not transferrable? I 
would have to find a new charger I guess but I think as long as the charger 
accepts nl ac input it should be ok since the laptop normally has a much lower 
voltage which i think is not different per ocuntry.
    Thanks
    Greetings, Anouk,
      ----- Original Message -----
      From: Alex Jurgensen
      To: [email protected]
      Sent: Saturday, July 18, 2009 1:51 AM
      Subject: Re: mac support/warranty, does it matter where you buy?


      Hi,


      According to a person working at my local Apple Store, you can buy it 
anywhere and it will work internationally, though Apple recomends you buy in 
the country you are living in. Note: AppleCare can be bought within the first 
11 Months, so you can buy the Mac in another country, ship it with its coverage 
still being covered, and then buy AppleCare.


      Regards,
      Alex,




      On 17-Jul-09, at 11:32 AM, a radix wrote:


        Hello everyone,

        I wonder if it is advisable to buy a macbook pro from the appl eonline 
store or an apple stor ein general or if it is ok to buy one just anywhere? The 
apple store is not very accessible for me bu tI could order by phone although, 
of course I would like to find the cheapest place to buy one, lol. I guess 
apple gives support no matter where you have bought your laptop, as long as it 
is, for me for example, within th eNetherlands? I also wonder about warranty, 
is it still only one year standard. I find that kind of meager, in europe most 
costly stuff like this has standard 2 years, although to be honest some other 
laptop companies do persist in only giving one year as well. Is it possible to 
get on site warranty or is it pick up and return or maybe even carry in?

        Thanks again for all the help,

        Greetings, Anouk,










  



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