Why would anybody buy an Acer for work purposes?
Should have got a ThinkPad.
Perhaps when IBM were manufacturing them but not now, Lenovo have ruined the brand.
Why would anybody buy an Acer for work purposes?
Should have got a ThinkPad.
Is haggisman for the chop?
You?![]()
My wife made a good analogy which will get most young men on the OPs side.
Let's say you go to buy a car and you ask the dealer if you can put a go faster stripe on it and he says 'Yes'.
You ring the car company to confirm that you can fit a go faster stripe and they say 'Yes'.
All the brochures and adverts say you can add a go faster stripe.
You buy the car and then decide to fit the go faster stripe but you can't, it is impossible to put one on
You contact both the dealer and the company and they now both confirm it can't be done.
What do you do OCUK?
Just shrug your shoulders?
I'm with Haggisman, the blurb states 'up to 8GB ram' and the specs state 4GB on board meaning that another 4GB should be able to be put in.
Quite why the guy at Asus even went as far as telling you which RAM to order to install.. I don't know. He clearly was unclear about what he was talking about.
It's not like Asus are a one man band. They won't care about a single sale, certainly not the point where they'd deliberately lie about the spec. Hell they've already sold the product to the retailer, what do they care!
This is the best display of covering ones arse I've seen for a while.
You ****ed up, now expect someone to clean up your mess.
I've already admitted that expecting a professional to be able to do their job properly was a massive mistake on my part.
Obviously the fact that the manufacturer's representative lied to me is completely my fault.![]()
You've not done your job properly. You didn't ask the retailer. You should've asked the retailer. They were the one trying to make the sale. If you'd asked them, and they'd misinformed you then you'd be able to send it back to them.
Again, you don't know that he lied. He just didn't fully understand the product. Which is poor. But the fact remains, you should've asked the retailer - not the manufacturer.
Yep. Sadly, this is the bottom line.The problem here is that you should've asked the retailer, and only the retailer - and done it via email. Then you'd have recourse.
Quite. However anyone would reasonably expect to be given correct information by the manufacturer, and not have to double check with multiple sources.
He did lie. He may not have done so intentionally, but he still lied.
The request was made by a director who travels a lot, hence wanting thin & light, wanted a metal chassis for strength/durability, but needs relatively high-spec, as they demo our products to clients on VMs. Also wanted an on-board RJ45 port for connectivity.
This was the only product that (supposedly) matched that specification (other than a couple OcUK have which aren't released until Mid-October).
Thinkpad x230? Thin, light, magnesium chassis, full speed i5 CPU unlike an ultrabook, battery life to exceed an MBA when battery slice added, docking station, user upgradable memory to 16gb and hard drive. A plethora of ports including RJ45, displayport and traditional VGA for connection to okd skool projectors, etc. USB3 and expresscard for expandability. Absolutely bomb proof and built specifically for travellers who need mobile power. Probably an international onsite warranty too.
Perhaps when IBM were manufacturing them but not now, Lenovo have ruined the brand.