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#12
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In article ,
says... On 5/19/13 11:06 AM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On 5/18/13 6:03 PM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Sat, 18 May 2013 14:20:07 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: The on-off switch on my iPhone 5 misbehaved once in a while. You could press it and nothing would happen. Maybe once every 50 times, no biggie. So, I was in Annapolis near the local Apple store this morning and when the store opened at 10 am, I asked if one of the techies could see if there was a speck of dirt stuck under part of the switch, or maybe just replace the switch. "We'll just give you a new phone," he said. He transferred my SIM card to a new phone, I "registered it," and then downloaded the nightly backup I do from the Cloud, and, in 20 minutes, I was on my way. The "old" phones are shipped to an Apple depot, where they are taken apart, fixed, and sold as refurbished phones. I don't know what was wrong with the switch and...I don't care. ![]() I doubt they repair them at all. The slaves in China will bang one out for a few dollars. It is not worth shipping them anywhere. That's true. Cost more for shipping than it does to have the slave shop just make one more. How the hell would either of you know how much it costs to ship a barrel full of broken iphones to wherever they go for repair. The phones are repaired, because Apple frequently offers "refurbs" with new phone warranties. Of course they are repaired, no one said they weren't! And actually, I know quite a bit about international shipping rates. Would you like to compare notes? I didn't think so. Who said they weren't repaired? "I doubt they repair them at all. The slaves in China will bang one out for a few dollars. It is not worth shipping them anywhere." Next? He didn't say they weren't repaired. I thought you could comprehend what you've read? |
#13
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posted to rec.boats
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On 5/19/13 12:05 PM, iBoaterer wrote:
In article , says... On 5/19/13 11:06 AM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On 5/18/13 6:03 PM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Sat, 18 May 2013 14:20:07 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: The on-off switch on my iPhone 5 misbehaved once in a while. You could press it and nothing would happen. Maybe once every 50 times, no biggie. So, I was in Annapolis near the local Apple store this morning and when the store opened at 10 am, I asked if one of the techies could see if there was a speck of dirt stuck under part of the switch, or maybe just replace the switch. "We'll just give you a new phone," he said. He transferred my SIM card to a new phone, I "registered it," and then downloaded the nightly backup I do from the Cloud, and, in 20 minutes, I was on my way. The "old" phones are shipped to an Apple depot, where they are taken apart, fixed, and sold as refurbished phones. I don't know what was wrong with the switch and...I don't care. ![]() I doubt they repair them at all. The slaves in China will bang one out for a few dollars. It is not worth shipping them anywhere. That's true. Cost more for shipping than it does to have the slave shop just make one more. How the hell would either of you know how much it costs to ship a barrel full of broken iphones to wherever they go for repair. The phones are repaired, because Apple frequently offers "refurbs" with new phone warranties. Of course they are repaired, no one said they weren't! And actually, I know quite a bit about international shipping rates. Would you like to compare notes? I didn't think so. Who said they weren't repaired? "I doubt they repair them at all. The slaves in China will bang one out for a few dollars. It is not worth shipping them anywhere." Next? He didn't say they weren't repaired. I thought you could comprehend what you've read? Oh, please. I have no interest in your ceaseless hairsplitting. |
#14
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posted to rec.boats
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In article om,
says... On 5/18/2013 6:08 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 5/18/13 6:03 PM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Sat, 18 May 2013 14:20:07 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: The on-off switch on my iPhone 5 misbehaved once in a while. You could press it and nothing would happen. Maybe once every 50 times, no biggie. So, I was in Annapolis near the local Apple store this morning and when the store opened at 10 am, I asked if one of the techies could see if there was a speck of dirt stuck under part of the switch, or maybe just replace the switch. "We'll just give you a new phone," he said. He transferred my SIM card to a new phone, I "registered it," and then downloaded the nightly backup I do from the Cloud, and, in 20 minutes, I was on my way. The "old" phones are shipped to an Apple depot, where they are taken apart, fixed, and sold as refurbished phones. I don't know what was wrong with the switch and...I don't care. ![]() I doubt they repair them at all. The slaves in China will bang one out for a few dollars. It is not worth shipping them anywhere. That's true. Cost more for shipping than it does to have the slave shop just make one more. How the hell would either of you know how much it costs to ship a barrel full of broken iphones to wherever they go for repair. The phones are repaired, because Apple frequently offers "refurbs" with new phone warranties. The referbs are actually working units that were returned for whatever reason. The defective ones are thrown away as someone else said Why are they referbs? I don't want junk that the manufacturer determeined was not working. |
#15
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posted to rec.boats
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On 5/20/2013 10:02 AM, BAR wrote:
In article om, says... On 5/18/2013 6:08 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 5/18/13 6:03 PM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Sat, 18 May 2013 14:20:07 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: The on-off switch on my iPhone 5 misbehaved once in a while. You could press it and nothing would happen. Maybe once every 50 times, no biggie. So, I was in Annapolis near the local Apple store this morning and when the store opened at 10 am, I asked if one of the techies could see if there was a speck of dirt stuck under part of the switch, or maybe just replace the switch. "We'll just give you a new phone," he said. He transferred my SIM card to a new phone, I "registered it," and then downloaded the nightly backup I do from the Cloud, and, in 20 minutes, I was on my way. The "old" phones are shipped to an Apple depot, where they are taken apart, fixed, and sold as refurbished phones. I don't know what was wrong with the switch and...I don't care. ![]() I doubt they repair them at all. The slaves in China will bang one out for a few dollars. It is not worth shipping them anywhere. That's true. Cost more for shipping than it does to have the slave shop just make one more. How the hell would either of you know how much it costs to ship a barrel full of broken iphones to wherever they go for repair. The phones are repaired, because Apple frequently offers "refurbs" with new phone warranties. The referbs are actually working units that were returned for whatever reason. The defective ones are thrown away as someone else said Why are they referbs? I don't want junk that the manufacturer determeined was not working. They call em referbs because it would be too embarrassing to say they work fine but the customers didn't want them for whatever reason. |
#16
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posted to rec.boats
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In article om, hank57
@socialworker.net says... On 5/20/2013 10:02 AM, BAR wrote: In article om, says... On 5/18/2013 6:08 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 5/18/13 6:03 PM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Sat, 18 May 2013 14:20:07 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: The on-off switch on my iPhone 5 misbehaved once in a while. You could press it and nothing would happen. Maybe once every 50 times, no biggie. So, I was in Annapolis near the local Apple store this morning and when the store opened at 10 am, I asked if one of the techies could see if there was a speck of dirt stuck under part of the switch, or maybe just replace the switch. "We'll just give you a new phone," he said. He transferred my SIM card to a new phone, I "registered it," and then downloaded the nightly backup I do from the Cloud, and, in 20 minutes, I was on my way. The "old" phones are shipped to an Apple depot, where they are taken apart, fixed, and sold as refurbished phones. I don't know what was wrong with the switch and...I don't care. ![]() I doubt they repair them at all. The slaves in China will bang one out for a few dollars. It is not worth shipping them anywhere. That's true. Cost more for shipping than it does to have the slave shop just make one more. How the hell would either of you know how much it costs to ship a barrel full of broken iphones to wherever they go for repair. The phones are repaired, because Apple frequently offers "refurbs" with new phone warranties. The referbs are actually working units that were returned for whatever reason. The defective ones are thrown away as someone else said Why are they referbs? I don't want junk that the manufacturer determeined was not working. They call em referbs because it would be too embarrassing to say they work fine but the customers didn't want them for whatever reason. Actually the are refurbs. |
#17
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posted to rec.boats
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#18
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sat, 18 May 2013 22:02:44 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:
On 5/18/13 9:21 PM, wrote: On Sat, 18 May 2013 18:08:40 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: How the hell would either of you know how much it costs to ship a barrel full of broken iphones to wherever they go for repair. The phones are repaired, because Apple frequently offers "refurbs" with new phone warranties. Maybe because I was in the computer hardware biz for 30 years? Most "refurbs" are returned *working* products that are just not factory fresh (missing original packaging etc) or products that just needed a software reload. You are not "fixing" much on these machine soldered boards with SMT components. I know IBM sold monitors for over $400 and our cost was ~$39 FOB in Korea. You couldn't pay a guy making $20 an hour to do anything with a flaky one for that kind of money. We chucked them in the recycle The stuff actually being refurbed is shipped back to China and refurbed in the same factory that built it to begin with, according to some Apple guys who seem to know all, see all, and post all. Same folks that WalMart buys stuff from, huh? But WalMart's bad for doing so. Uh, huh! John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! |
#19
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posted to rec.boats
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In article , says...
In article om, hank57 @socialworker.net says... On 5/20/2013 10:02 AM, BAR wrote: In article om, says... On 5/18/2013 6:08 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 5/18/13 6:03 PM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Sat, 18 May 2013 14:20:07 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: The on-off switch on my iPhone 5 misbehaved once in a while. You could press it and nothing would happen. Maybe once every 50 times, no biggie. So, I was in Annapolis near the local Apple store this morning and when the store opened at 10 am, I asked if one of the techies could see if there was a speck of dirt stuck under part of the switch, or maybe just replace the switch. "We'll just give you a new phone," he said. He transferred my SIM card to a new phone, I "registered it," and then downloaded the nightly backup I do from the Cloud, and, in 20 minutes, I was on my way. The "old" phones are shipped to an Apple depot, where they are taken apart, fixed, and sold as refurbished phones. I don't know what was wrong with the switch and...I don't care. ![]() I doubt they repair them at all. The slaves in China will bang one out for a few dollars. It is not worth shipping them anywhere. That's true. Cost more for shipping than it does to have the slave shop just make one more. How the hell would either of you know how much it costs to ship a barrel full of broken iphones to wherever they go for repair. The phones are repaired, because Apple frequently offers "refurbs" with new phone warranties. The referbs are actually working units that were returned for whatever reason. The defective ones are thrown away as someone else said Why are they referbs? I don't want junk that the manufacturer determeined was not working. They call em referbs because it would be too embarrassing to say they work fine but the customers didn't want them for whatever reason. Actually the are refurbs. What specifically qualifies as a "refurb?" Does wiping the screen down with a damp cloth qualify? |
#20
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posted to rec.boats
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In article ,
says... In article , says... In article om, hank57 @socialworker.net says... On 5/20/2013 10:02 AM, BAR wrote: In article om, says... On 5/18/2013 6:08 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 5/18/13 6:03 PM, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Sat, 18 May 2013 14:20:07 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: The on-off switch on my iPhone 5 misbehaved once in a while. You could press it and nothing would happen. Maybe once every 50 times, no biggie. So, I was in Annapolis near the local Apple store this morning and when the store opened at 10 am, I asked if one of the techies could see if there was a speck of dirt stuck under part of the switch, or maybe just replace the switch. "We'll just give you a new phone," he said. He transferred my SIM card to a new phone, I "registered it," and then downloaded the nightly backup I do from the Cloud, and, in 20 minutes, I was on my way. The "old" phones are shipped to an Apple depot, where they are taken apart, fixed, and sold as refurbished phones. I don't know what was wrong with the switch and...I don't care. ![]() I doubt they repair them at all. The slaves in China will bang one out for a few dollars. It is not worth shipping them anywhere. That's true. Cost more for shipping than it does to have the slave shop just make one more. How the hell would either of you know how much it costs to ship a barrel full of broken iphones to wherever they go for repair. The phones are repaired, because Apple frequently offers "refurbs" with new phone warranties. The referbs are actually working units that were returned for whatever reason. The defective ones are thrown away as someone else said Why are they referbs? I don't want junk that the manufacturer determeined was not working. They call em referbs because it would be too embarrassing to say they work fine but the customers didn't want them for whatever reason. Actually the are refurbs. What specifically qualifies as a "refurb?" Does wiping the screen down with a damp cloth qualify? Holy Cow!! You need the simplest of things explained to you. Yes, it does. http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/refurbish |
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