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The hard drive on my 15" Aluminum Powerbook G4 is clearly defective and has been for some time. It likes to hang and say "disk0s3: I/O error" into the logs at times when certain files are touched. The Disk Utility thinks the drive is fine and so does the "SMART" status. Maybe a cable is loose in there. The voice of authority in the form of [livejournal.com profile] dr_strych9, who knows, told me to get it replaced but I didn't.

Now of course it's worse. An unknown number of my music files now make this thing happen, and the new iTunes insists on doing a "gapless music analysis" on each file on startup each time that can't be disabled and keeps hitting the problem. I remove a file and it "finds" another. Plus, the update prebindings thing that installers like to do sets it off. My computer is becoming less and less usable.

I realized that I haven't fixed this mainly because I hate dealing with AppleCare and the Apple Store. The last couple of times I went to the Genius Bar, the Genius gave me the third degree. Well sir we might have a K key to replace this broken one, we have some in the back, but if we don't you'll have to pay for a new keyboard. Yes I know you have AppleCare but the wear & tear, sir. Pointing to the spots where the sweat from my wrists had pitted the aluminum and talking about "moisture corrosion damage issues," looking for anything that meant I had been using the thing to hammer nails, etc.

They've clearly been told to be hardasses and refuse AppleCare to anyone they can, especially laptop owners. I understand that they're plagued with people who pour a Coke on their computers and try to get a new one, but being treated like a criminal isn't fun. Considering the expense of the computer and the AppleCare plan itself, I'm aggrieved to find myself having used car lot conversations with a supercilious geek every time I need help.

Plus, of course, I put in my own memory which invalidates everything because Apple wants to insist on selling RAM at a huge markup over retail.

It's hard not to see the whole thing as a scam, and it makes me angry, and I don't like being angry. It's particularly humiliating to have to defend my computer maintenance skills in public to someone who's just going to win if he wants to and has poor enough social skills that he's going to push all my buttons.

So I guess I'll just buy a new hard drive with cash and try to transfer the data over somehow. I'm not sure I'd buy a new Apple now, though, and I'm certainly not very jazzed about AppleCare. It has been useful before when undeniable problems happened early in hardware ownership, but I don't any longer think it's better than another computer vendor's warranty.

I needed native x86 and Windows for radio stuff so I ordered a cheap-ass low-end Dell this week. I paid for the accidental destruction coverage on it. Maybe Apple should offer that separately from the service at a higher rate, instead of making us fight with their employees about whether we're good stewards every time something goes wrong.

I freely admit that my own problems with conflict and my button pushes are at least as much the problem as Apple's policies, but I'm also tired of bait and switch, and tired of Apple's denial about actual design flaws like the AC Adapter. They do so much so well, and then the Reality Distortion Field intervenes and says "We're perfect, and you, the customers, are imagining your problems."

(no subject)

Date: 2006-09-14 07:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eyeteeth.livejournal.com
My experience dealing with Apple customer service was pretty nightmarish not because they were assholes but because I happened to purchase a model of PowerBook that quickly became notorious for failing in many and spectacular ways. It got so I couldn't talk to customer service for any length of time without crying, my frustration was so severe. The people I talked to were all really nice, and I felt bad about making them feel bad, but I couldn't help myself! Eventually they gave me an all-new and more expensive PowerBook in exchange for me promising not to sue them. I don't know how much the sobbing helped, but you could try it on the guys at the Genius Bar.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-09-29 04:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] museumfreak.livejournal.com
The last time I tried sobbing at a Genius Bar (because I had come all the way out to the store which is a long way for me with a heavy computer on mass transit, and this mall is not disability friendly, and they told me i would have to wait 5 hours and i didn't have 5 hours, and i asked if i could leave the laptop overnight and come back in the morning and they said no), they threatened to call mall security and have me forcibly ejected.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-09-29 07:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] substitute.livejournal.com
Wow. That sounds like it would be worth a letter to Apple. I mean, in lieu of the act of domestic terrorism that leaps to mind as a first possible response.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-09-29 08:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] museumfreak.livejournal.com
Do you really think so? It made me really upset.

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