I've swapped hard drives in a consumer laptop, recently. Well 6 to be
honest. Only one of them was fairly easy, the rest all required a
significant amount of disassembly of the case. If it's a warranty
replacement and not time sensitive, I'd send it in.
On Thu, May 4, 2017 at 2:24 PM James M. Pul
I should have put a smiley there. I got what he meant.
Op 4 mei 2017 4:06 p.m. schreef "Charles F Sullivan" <
charles.sulliva...@bc.edu>:
> Exactly!
>
>
>
> *From:* listsad...@lists.myitforum.com [mailto:listsadmin@lists.
> myitforum.com] *On Behalf Of *Heaton, Joseph@Wildlife
> *Sent:* Wednesday
It does depend on the warranty a lot. I know IBM/Lenovo have CRU vs FRU,
CRU = customer replaceable unit. If you want a tech for CRUs also, you
pay for the upgrade. That being said, in the business lines(Think
branded products and SystemX servers) they are pretty willing to send a
tech in the l
Exactly!
*From:* listsad...@lists.myitforum.com [mailto:
listsad...@lists.myitforum.com] *On Behalf Of *Heaton, Joseph@Wildlife
*Sent:* Wednesday, May 3, 2017 7:30 PM
*To:* ntsysadm@lists.myitforum.com
*Subject:* RE: [NTSysADM] Strange memory issue on a DC
Nope. Based on the context, I figur
Am 04.05.2017 um 02:34 schrieb Jonathan Link:
Crappy consumer warranty... Dell isn't any different here than other
vendors in the consumer space.
It is strictly "you get what you pay for". Purchase from their business
series, pay on-site service, and they send someone next day at 8am who
rep
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