Hi!
> The MacBooks have been known to have heat problems, and many of
> them have been damaged by the high temps that it can get to. Even the
> salesperson at Comp USA, who advocates the Macs said that the heat
> ruined the video on his laptop.
(wandering way off the topic here---tune out now if that bothers you!)
It seems to me that you either get a good one or you get a...not so great
one. Mine has had three repairs, none of which were heat related. A key
popped of the keyboard, the onboard ethernet port somehow came unglued (may
well have been my fault?) and the hard drive was replaced as a pre-emptive
measure when it started making the odd "click" sound while working. I have
heard the horror stories of the "mooing" and of many thermal problems with
the Macbook Pro. I've also heard of Magsafe power adapters burning up. I
haven't had any mooing, thermal failures or power adapter problems.
In day to day use, I've not been able to make mine get all that hot--no more
than maybe 160-165. With distributed.net left running for days, it would get
quite hot. But it never seemed to mind much apart from cranking up the fan
speed. That's the only thing that really gets my goat--for what is such a
nice machine otherwise, is there a reason why the fan has to sound so darn
cheap and high pitched?
> It is a serious design issue that I hope Apple fixes, because I would
> sell one of my two Windows laptops and use a MacBook.
> I may buy a Mac Mini when it comes with Leopard.
Now the mini...I could highly recommend that. I have two and love them. They
just run and run. No trouble from either one. If you'd like, take a look at
the reviews I wrote:
http://greyghost.dyndns.org/mmreview/ (PPC model)
http://greyghost.dyndns.org/mmintelreview/ (Intel Core Duo model)
http://greyghost.dyndns.org/mmintelreview/windows/ (...and Windows shortly
after the announcement)
> Now though, Apple isn't advertising Leopard as much because it would
> cause people to wait, and would hurt current sales. Before, it might
> have been to keep users who might have defected to Vista, but now the
> release date is much closer. It would be nice to see Apple offer a
> free upgrade for people to buy now.
Apple's had two generations of solid operating systems now...both 10.3.x and
10.4 have proven very stable in a corporate network of about ~25 machines
spread across two locations. I don't have a lot of trouble with them. Unless
you know you need something offered in Leopard, I'd go consider a machine
now and run with it if that's what you want to do.
Apple has traditionally offered a free (or very, very low cost) OS upgrade
program to hardware that is purchased within 30 days or so of an OS release.
I have done of these and they came through without hassle each time.
> I think the default warranty for Apple notebooks is 30 days! Given
> the heat problems, I wouldn't touch one (no pun intended) right now.
One year for parts and hardware. Telephone support is where they get you! 90
days is the standard fare. You can get Applecare and dial up both the phone
support and warranty for "three" years. (However, the first year is your
standard warranty.) It's $250 for that and you'd have to decide. I went
against it and stuck with the stock warranty/support.) They are real
sticklers on the 90 day support policy and getting them to go a little over
is like pulling teeth.
Telephone support problems can be circumvented by having access to a good
independent Apple dealer. I wouldn't have bought my Macbook direct from
Apple, not after dealing with them to get a good replacement set of restore
media discs for the Intel mini. (There's something I should probably stick
into the review.) I went around and around with them before they sent a set.
At the same time, playing my ace in the hole, I went to the independent
Apple dealer and was taken care of immediately without any undue noisemaking
or fussing.
> As far as the Vostro and Ron's experience, all I can say that on the
> 640m I have, the M1210 I have, and a friend's D520 which I have used
> on several occasions, NONE of them get very hot and they are properly
> ventilated with a very silent fan.
My D800 is a great machine. Ever since the mainboard was replaced (busted
port, cosmetic damage only), the fans seem a little louder but are by no
means intrusive. I couldn't complain, especially when it will stand up and
deliver computing for over four hours on a battery.
A desire to have a system that I could take with me to work on others
computers and have both the MacOS and Windows handy drove me to purchase the
Macbook. I bought a black one, although I paid nowhere near retail for it.
(Hint: Wait for a "speed bump" and order then. A $1499 machine dropped to
$1103 just that quickly for me.) Since the D800 is my main computer, and has
many things on it that would not be good to lose (even with regular backups,
the data on it is quite dynamic in nature), I thought a second laptop with a
small size would be nice. The Macbook has certainly delivered, although I
feel it is too expensive if you have to pay full retail price.
William