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29 November 2007

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John Hornbaker

OMG! I'm sorry for your travails (especially as I've never had a Mac with such problems, knock on wood)--but I have to say you've turned it into a damn good tale. LOL all the way from SF!

Evan Rudowski

Thanks John. Yes sadly my MacBook has turned into a CrackBook. More updates to follow!

Mark Ramskill

Evan

Think yourself lucky that your MacBook hasn't yet developed the foibles of a menopausal wife, like mine has (yours just needs a little nip and tuck here and there).

My once beautiful MacBook now requires gentle manipulation at the bottom end before creaking into life. Change position with it and it gets upset and shuts down.

Needless to say, it's time to dump it and get a younger model.

Richard

My mobile kit is a four-year-old iBook. Yes, the palm rest is stained. Some of the lettering has worn off the keyboard. I've written three books and six screenplays on it, as well as countless emails and essays and junk like that. I think the keyboard is really second-rate. Still, the darn thing keeps plinking along and runs OS X 10.5 nicely if you don't have more than a couple programs up at a time in its 768 megs of ram. So, it could be better, but it could also be a lot worse, too. For $250 a year over the past four years, not a bad investment.

Your Friend In CA

Oh dear. You got a lemon apple!
At least you now have an appointment.
I think I'm supposed to say "well done" here, so well done!

Mine is going strong with no trouble. I wonder if they switched materials on the newer models.

(Special note to Mr. Ramskill: Why drag women into this as a metaphor? Is ageist sexism somehow perceived as "witty" where you come from?)

James

Evan, I feel your pain. I've been there. Done that. And got the t-shirt to prove it.

ardaz

This is just a stupid rant. You could have just returned it under warrenty and they would have given you a new one. Why the self inflicted diatribe of pain? Oh yes, it sounds better - Apple is persecuting me, me personally!
The process of getting a genius bar appointment is well known and no different from going to the docs, so why should it be different just for you?
"This solution, I have been further warned, stands a good likelihood of requiring me to leave my MacBook overnight, or even for several days." Duh!...you run it into the ground and then expect them to magically fix it in the space of a genius bar visit? Some people don't deserve their bad luck, but for you I hope they keep it a month.

Swordmaker

What?! Your battery didn't overheat, too? No disappointment about a lacking second button on the track pad? Your power jack didn't melt down? You seem to have overlooked a few complaints on the forums from where you gathered your problems. Tell us the truth now, you really didn't buy a Mac, did you?

Martin Pilkington

First off, ardaz and Swordmaker: I suggest you go back to the trolling grounds where you came from and let the real Mac users comment.

Now, onto the post. Unfortunately you occasionally get laptops like that. My dad got a Powerbook in 2002 and in the 3 years he had it it had to go in for repair several times for things ranging from the screen catch breaking (which required a whole new top case) to hard disk and optical drive failures to screen and logic board failures. Eventually he got a brand new Powerbook out of it which wasn't too bad considering his AppleCare had just run out.

That said, there are a few Apple Stores in London, did you try any of the others. I've never had a problem getting an appointment at the Meadowhall Apple Store up here in Sheffield, I suspect the Regents Street Store would be one of the hardest to get in to. In fact in the past week or so my MacBook's battery has been going weird. Booked an appointment with the genius bar Thursday night, got in yesterday and about 20-25 minutes later (I'd got there fairly early so most of that time was waiting for the genius to finish with who he was helping at the time) I was given a new battery. No fuss or anything like that. Simple went in, told them the problem, signed a form about the "repair" and set off home with my new battery.

Obviously a battery is the easiest thing to replace, anything else is going to require them to take it in, which I admit is annoying (or possibly worse given it's a business machine), but overall the service you get when you actually get it is pretty good. Word of advice, if they try to push it off as cosmetic then just try to complain (without being rude) and possibly ask if you can be put through to someone higher up at AppleCare. Apple often bend their rules slightly for goodwill.

Evan Rudowski

To Ardaz and "Swordmaker" --

What can I say but thank you!

My blog is relatively new and I feel proud that I have already attracted two curmudgeons, or conspiracy theorists -- whatever you like to be called. Some blogs take much longer before people like you express such an interest.

So, all I can say is bless you -- my very first antagonists. I love you guys!!!!

All the best,
Evan

Partners in Grime

Hope you got the kinks worked out!

Grace

Few problems, spread over a 2 month period:
-new battery
-new battery charger
-iPod (2nd gen) just decided to give me the sad face!
-and the same problem with the case, but AppleCare is gonna replace it!
I'm so disappointed in Apple!

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