Mailing List ecs-t6x@2rosenthals.com Archived Message #554 | tilbake listen |
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Lewis G Rosenthal wrote:Indeed. I hadn't thought of my phraseology until your mention made me re-read what I posted.
Hi, Edgar...
On 01/25/10 04:43 pm, EDGAR thus wrote :
Lewis: If you really want to fix the screen communicate with 'Mamdouh Mohedelin" at Laptopdoctor.ca His shop is next door to me and he is the best laptop repair in town (possibly Province). He does HP, Dell, factory work via Best Buy and Future Shop. Certainly, if anyone can do it Mam can.It's not that I *can't* fix the LCD, it's just that it's simply not worth me either spending the hour to do it properly, *and* fix the keyboard issue (parts & time), vs simply taking the opportunity to upgrade the machine.
Hello Lewis:
I think you mean "replace" rather than "upgrade." :->
The problem is that the perversion of the costUnfortunately (or fortunately, depending upon one's POV), we live in a rip & replace world in terms of IT infrastructure. I don't particularly like that model, and strive to provide the best value to my clients. Sometimes, this means maintaining systems beyond their design life. Other times, it means "going with the flow," and simply scrapping out the older stuff. In this case, I can't see it making economic sense to maintain what would end up as an older machine with a new(er) keyboard (assuming that is the problem) and a new backlight or an old LCD (or a new LCD or a new/newer/used/replacement lid assembly).
structure in both national and international
commerce distorts the value of repairing versus
replacing. But, he/she who ignores the monetary
cost is bound to be unable to compete. So, the
only realistic way for most of us is to leave a
trail of electronic units and parts behind us,
although I realize that you certainly don't waste
resources compared to the WinTel model.
HTDATM,Not at all!! :-)
- Mark
(HTDATM = hope this doesn't annoy too much...)
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