Laptop manufacturers are like airlines. Apparently, they all suck.
Everyone has a horror story about how their laptop failed right after the warranty came up, or how the customer service kept them on the phone for a bazillion hours and still didn't solve their problem, or how they had to bounce their laptop back and forth to the repair shop six times before they finally fixed all the problems, and on, and on, and on...
That said, the next time I buy a laptop, it probably won't be from Dell OR Alienware (since they're just jazzed-up Dell laptops, and the version of my XPS laptop that's now being sold under the Alienware name is susceptible to the same problems, according to the forums). If I do, I'm springing for the 4-year warranty, without a doubt.
So my question is, which company makes the most reliable high-end laptops? I probably won't be spending quite so much on my next laptop, since I hardly ever do anything on it that requires the big video card (which is what added the most to the cost of the unit).
Everyone has a horror story about how their laptop failed right after the warranty came up, or how the customer service kept them on the phone for a bazillion hours and still didn't solve their problem, or how they had to bounce their laptop back and forth to the repair shop six times before they finally fixed all the problems, and on, and on, and on...
Unfortunately, I'm having a really bullshit problem with a $2500 Dell XPS laptop, and yes, the warranty expired last September. In order to keep people from damaging their laptops if you plug in the wrong type of AC adapter there are a pair of chips, one in the AC adapter and on on the laptop system board, that talk to each other when you connect the laptop to power to make sure you're using the correct adapter.
Why you would ever plug in the wrong kind of AC adapter to your laptop is beyond me, but I digress.
Problem is, apparently these chips fail. A lot. And so did mine, after only two years of use, which is way less than I'd expect out of a $2500 computer. Now this doesn't stop the laptop from running, it just won't charge the battery AND it runs about 1/4 as fast as it should due to the decreased power draw.
Now that I'm out of warranty, I'm stuck replacing the AC adapter ($50) and/or the motherboard ($200) out of my own pocket. I won't pay repair bills, since I'm going to dissect this ************ myself if I have to. I've built my own computers in the past, and am fully confident in my ability to perform open-CPU surgery on my laptop.
Why you would ever plug in the wrong kind of AC adapter to your laptop is beyond me, but I digress.
Problem is, apparently these chips fail. A lot. And so did mine, after only two years of use, which is way less than I'd expect out of a $2500 computer. Now this doesn't stop the laptop from running, it just won't charge the battery AND it runs about 1/4 as fast as it should due to the decreased power draw.
Now that I'm out of warranty, I'm stuck replacing the AC adapter ($50) and/or the motherboard ($200) out of my own pocket. I won't pay repair bills, since I'm going to dissect this ************ myself if I have to. I've built my own computers in the past, and am fully confident in my ability to perform open-CPU surgery on my laptop.
That said, the next time I buy a laptop, it probably won't be from Dell OR Alienware (since they're just jazzed-up Dell laptops, and the version of my XPS laptop that's now being sold under the Alienware name is susceptible to the same problems, according to the forums). If I do, I'm springing for the 4-year warranty, without a doubt.
So my question is, which company makes the most reliable high-end laptops? I probably won't be spending quite so much on my next laptop, since I hardly ever do anything on it that requires the big video card (which is what added the most to the cost of the unit).