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On Reconditioned or
Refurbished Notebooks
by Richard Keir
Copyright 2005 Richard Keir
What exactly is a reconditioned or
refurbished notebook computer? Depending on where you are buying, it
normally should be a used - or possibly a returned notebook - that has
been factory rebuilt. A refurbished notebook computer is basically a
cheap, used (maybe) and renovated computer that satisfies all your
performance and portability needs and provides all the advantages you
would get on buying a new notebook - such as warranty and technical
support. This is critical - do not buy a so-called reconditioned or
refurbished notebook computer if it does not have the same warranty or
guarantee as a new machine.
I'm writing this article right now
on a factory reconditioned notebook that I purchased well over two years
ago at a very substantial savings over the same machine "new". It came
with a full factory warranty and it has performed like a champ. Granted, I
was nervous when I first bought it, but I'm now convinced that if you can
find a reconditioned or refurbished notebook that has the features you're
looking for, you'd be foolish to pay full price -- the discounts are
incredible, and the products are functionally identical.
If you just need a computer that is
portable, one that you can use to perform simple computing tasks, why
spend a fortune in buying a new notebook from some well-known brand? Look
for a refurbished notebook computer instead. You will get a notebook that
will give you the required performance at a much lower price - and it will
still be covered by a warranty.
There is normally a difference
between "refurbished" and "reconditioned" (or factory reconditioned).
Refurbished usually means that this is an older notebook that has been
used and then reconditioned - often by a third party. Depending on the
warranty being offered by the refurbisher, this could be an excellent
deal. As always, it depends on whether the refurbished notebook meets your
specifications. If so, and the price - and guarantee - are good, then you
have nothing to lose.
Reconditioned machines, when you
find them in a retail outlet, usually are returns that had some problem,
went back to the manufacturer, were fixed and now are available at a very
substantial discount but have the full 'new' machine factory/manufacturer
guarantee. This can be a huge savings and an incredible deal. Often these
reconditioned notebooks sell at a discount of 50% or more - and they may
even be current models.
Maybe I've just been lucky, but my
experience with factory reconditioned notebooks has convinced me that it's
foolish to dump a bunch of dollars into a new machine if an equally
capable refurbished notebook is available. After all, every reconditioned
notebook was once a new notebook that had some kind of problem causing its
return. If the factory did its job, then the reconditioned notebook is
less likely to have a problem than a new model. And if it does have a
problem, you will still have the warranty that new notebooks have.
Students, and of course their
parents, who are on the look out for a low-priced notebook to meet school
needs, should definitely consider buying a refurbished notebook computer.
Education is expensive enough without throwing away money by paying top
dollar for a notebook when an equivalent refurbished or reconditioned
notebook would serve as well. Check out the computer shops in the local
area - or even check online sites like Amazon.com that may showcase a good
refurbished notebook computer on sale.
So before you spend - possibly waste
- a lot of money buying a brand new notebook that might have features you
will never need and accessories you never asked for, look into the
possibilities of a suitable and low-priced reconditioned or refurbished
notebook computer.
About the Author
Richard, a computer professional and
writer, has a strong interest in software and computer hardware. Visit
Completely Notebooks at
http://Completely-Notebooks.net to learn more about all kinds of
notebook computers and accessories.
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