“I wanted to write and express my concern about some recent problems that I have had with Apple Care. This week, my MacBook Pro unfortunately sustained water damage. I understand this is entirely my fault but it is still something I would like to get fixed. After three or four calls I was finally able to get a straight answer. While I was happy to get a straight answer, I was not at all happy with the answer. It is very worrisome to me that the only way to get my computer fixed is to pay almost $300.00 up front with no guarantee that this will fix the problem. I was horrified to learn that their is no system to assess the problem and bill once all damage is known. I am reluctant to put money into a problem that could easily grow. I have had three Apple computers in a row. I love using them but I am not sure if my replacement will be one. I feel powerless in the situation and the whole experience has turned me off of the Apple company.”
(That’s not the kind of mail I would write to Jobs address. I would talk it over with the support hotline. Apple is usually tolerant and there is very often at least some wiggle room. It’s also not as if you would have to let Apple do the repairing, right?)
Disclosure: I own 2 Apple laptops and pre-ordered an iPad.
I spilled a glass of wine on my Dell Inspiron 1705 awhile ago. I called Dell and told them what happened, and they gave me the same story: $250 to look at it. The only problem I could detect was with certain keys on the keyboard, so I googled around a bit and found a replacement keyboard for something like $25. I also discovered that replacing the keyboard was dead simple, and could be done in under 10 minutes. I did that, and everything was fine.
Contrast this with disassembly of my 13" Unibody Macbook.
Instead of prying out one plastic cover and undoing a couple of screws on the Dell, I have to do all of that just to get to the keyboard.
If you buy a mac laptop, buy a sleeve, buy a snap on cover, get an AppleCare warranty, and sell it before that warranty runs out. They are not meant for you to repair yourself, and much of their value as high-end design products can vanish in a moment of inattention.
If you want a laptop you can maintain yourself, Dell is a better option. They are also well designed, but with very different design goals. (Many also make decent Hackintoshes, I hear.)
I had to replace the keyboard on one of my Dell laptops, and while I would have been able to do it without the manual, it was very nice to be able to just follow instructions and know I was following the minimal path, rather than disassembling everything, with the attendant screw-loss risks.
With the (expensive) Dell complete care, you're supposed to be able to have them fix stuff like that for free. I realize that, long term, it's cheaper to save the money towards a new computer, but it's a nice "peace of mind" thing when the computer is very important to you.
Determining if something is salvageable is at least half of the job of fixing it. If it takes four hours to fix the laptop, and two of them are spent determining if it can be fixed, who should pay for those two hours (especially in cases where mistreatment is not only suspected but confirmed)?
This isn't any different than any other industry (most mechanics charge a "diagnostic fee"). In the case of consumer electronics the situation is compounded by the fact that most people will choose to forgo the repair (once they see that the cost of repair is a large percentage of the replacement cost), leaving the service company on the hook for the cost of the diagnosis.
> That’s not the kind of mail I would write to Jobs address.
Someone was upset with what seems to be a company policy, so they write a letter to the CEO. Happens all the time. (Or is the RDF supposed to deflect these?)
> It’s also not as if you would have to let Apple do the repairing, right?
Apple employees are not the only people allowed to touch Apple hardware. Others can and will repair that stuff, too, and they won’t charge quite so much for mere labor costs (maybe 50 € or less for a check). At least that’s the case here in Germany.
And what possible benefit could you expect from writing such a email to someone as self-rightous as Steve Jobs? Yada yada Symbolism yada yada – but that energy could also be used doing something a little more productive like convincing someone on the Apple hotline or finding someone else who will repair your stuff. Apple’s repairs are expensive – and that’s just how it is. Get Apple Care, don’t drop your device and don’t spill water on it or just don’t buy any Apple hardware at all. Problem solved.
Ah. I assume that the person wanted the repairs done by Apple so that it stayed under Apple Care or at the very least for the same reasons that people tend to go to the dealership mechanics for repairs on their cars.
People still go directly to the manufacturer for repairs many times when there are licensed repair shops elsewhere. People can be less trusting of independent repair shops because there is a view that they will rip you off/nickel and dime you to death (i.e. you go into a mechanic for one thing and he gives you a 'laundry list' of other things that he wants you to pay him to fix).
Apple has usually been pretty good with labour costs in my experience. Recently, they didn't even charge us for labour when the hard drive on our iMac failed.
EDIT: They also accidentally scratched the display while repairing it, so they replace that for free. Win!
Why would you have any hopes of this having any effect? If you think the system is broken, it seems very unlikely some low level employee will take it upon them to escalate the problem to management. They'll just go "sorry, company rules, nothing we can do about it".
Typically hotlines are actually just glorified "choose your own adventure" books. That is, instead of having to do the reading yourself, the hotline staff does it for you. None of the prescripted paths lead to "here is an interesting idea that management might want to hear about".
The Genius bar is a far better bet. When I showed up with a refurbished 24" iMac out of warranty, I was exempted from paying for diagnosis unless replacing the power supply did bring it back to life. (If it was the motherboard, it would be a better deal for me to take my machine apart for parts, eBay them, then buy another entire used machine.)
“I wanted to write and express my concern about some recent problems that I have had with Apple Care. This week, my MacBook Pro unfortunately sustained water damage. I understand this is entirely my fault but it is still something I would like to get fixed. After three or four calls I was finally able to get a straight answer. While I was happy to get a straight answer, I was not at all happy with the answer. It is very worrisome to me that the only way to get my computer fixed is to pay almost $300.00 up front with no guarantee that this will fix the problem. I was horrified to learn that their is no system to assess the problem and bill once all damage is known. I am reluctant to put money into a problem that could easily grow. I have had three Apple computers in a row. I love using them but I am not sure if my replacement will be one. I feel powerless in the situation and the whole experience has turned me off of the Apple company.”
(That’s not the kind of mail I would write to Jobs address. I would talk it over with the support hotline. Apple is usually tolerant and there is very often at least some wiggle room. It’s also not as if you would have to let Apple do the repairing, right?)