

This too. Cheap laptop PC's have bad build quality, not so good screens and so on. Is really a PITa to find a really good one.Angstrom wrote:I'm mainly a PC user because I'm chained to one location most of the time, but if I actually needed a laptop I'd very likely just go for the top of the line macbook pro. It's expensive, doesn't upgrade well etc. etc. etc. - but they work reliably, are very well constructed and they keep their value for resale very well.
If anyone asks me how you upgrade some component in a macbook I tell them you put a "for sale" ad out and then just buy this years model. The difference in sale/purchase price is probably the price you'd pay for that memory/processor upgrade you wanted.
It's a weird economy they have going on there, but life is weird. Just go with it.
Any time I've said "Ah, instead of this overpriced Macbookpro I can get a 200GHZ Blarptech PRO3 with 400 Teragigabyte harddrive and UberNet" ... 3 years later I have a pile of outmoded junk with a broken hinge and a resale value of £4.10 . My bargain hunting and cost cutting has successfully cost me more than £10k over the years.
The downside of Apple products is the fanboys and their jizzy hands and weird eyes.
qftAngstrom wrote: The downside of Apple products is the fanboys and their jizzy hands and weird eyes.
not that hard... with the exception of motherboard, monitor, and keyboard. once one of those goes YRMV. especially the motherboard... probably not worth the hassle.login wrote:Also, how easy is to find replacement parts after 2 years for those windows laptops? since laptops a lot of time use custom or not very common parts I suppose it might not be easy to reaplce the motherbaord if it fails. With apple at least you have 3-4 years of parts (even if they are expensive).
Oddly enough unless something has changed this isn't correct, or partially so. After warranty replacement of a Logic board by Apple themselves used to have a set price of $350 or under. Hopefully that's still the case, it wasn't a highly publicized thing for sure.H20nly wrote:not that hard... with the exception of motherboard, monitor, and keyboard. once one of those goes YRMV. especially the motherboard... probably not worth the hassle.login wrote:Also, how easy is to find replacement parts after 2 years for those windows laptops? since laptops a lot of time use custom or not very common parts I suppose it might not be easy to reaplce the motherbaord if it fails. With apple at least you have 3-4 years of parts (even if they are expensive).
this is cross platform; no different than the Apple model with the "logicboard" costing your soul AND your first born to replace if you don't have warranty options.
^ That.Machinesworking wrote:Oddly enough unless something has changed this isn't correct, or partially so. After warranty replacement of a Logic board by Apple themselves used to have a set price of $350 or under. Hopefully that's still the case, it wasn't a highly publicized thing for sure.
For everyone's knowledge, at least with my Mac Pro, after they diagnosed that the power supply had failed it was $219 to get a new one installed. This was about $300 cheaper than they were selling on eBay!Tarekith wrote:Still applies to laptops only.
$219 for a power supply installed is a good price period. it's 980watts.H20nly wrote:meh. 350 is not a good price for a motherboard (not insanely over the top, but not good) and 219 is a bullshit price for a power supply, unless it's over 1000 W (and why would you need that?). having said that, 350 for a motherboard *installed* is good. that number was probably for a "refurbished" unit.
but i've seen the cost of a logic board be higher. quick google will find you examples. here are some:
http://www.welovemacs.com/loboformapro.html
https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4936832
those were the first two on the search return <apple logic board>, i adjusted the first one to display the prices for Mac Pros of various years and configurations... since login was asking about laptops.
I'm honestly very surprised that it's a 980 watt power supply... but even a tech who gets paid $100.00 an hour should get no more than $25.00 to install it. It's 4 screws and maybe 8 wires that cannot be plugged into the wrong spot... A few McDonalds happy meals with a Lego toy and basic knowledge of a Phillips screw driver is all the training and skill sets required... Unless you're talking iMac... That's different.Machinesworking wrote:$219 for a power supply installed is a good price period. it's 980watts.H20nly wrote:meh. 350 is not a good price for a motherboard (not insanely over the top, but not good) and 219 is a bullshit price for a power supply, unless it's over 1000 W (and why would you need that?). having said that, 350 for a motherboard *installed* is good. that number was probably for a "refurbished" unit.
but i've seen the cost of a logic board be higher. quick google will find you examples. here are some:
http://www.welovemacs.com/loboformapro.html
https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4936832
those were the first two on the search return <apple logic board>, i adjusted the first one to display the prices for Mac Pros of various years and configurations... since login was asking about laptops.
comparable wattage power supplies are around $150-300
I've seen people say it's higher for logic boards as well, but I can't say that everyone on the apple boards is going to report the truth, i.e. there's that whole "problem is between the chair and keyboard" issue you hear people talk about.
Like I said, the power supply itself is going for more than the cost Apple charged at third party retailers, and Apple instal it. No extra charges there bub.H20nly wrote: I'm honestly very surprised that it's a 980 watt power supply... but even a tech who gets paid $100.00 an hour should get no more than $25.00 to install it. It's 4 screws and maybe 8 wires that cannot be plugged into the wrong spot... A few McDonalds happy meals with a Lego toy and basic knowledge of a Phillips screw driver is all the training and skill sets required... Unless you're talking iMac... That's different.
And yes, the chair to keyboard interface is often where the fault lies.