ManBearPig618
Well-known member
- Aug 29, 2011
- 1,156
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Re: Received 7 defective Nexus 7's and Google is now refusing RMA
I'm not sure who your referring to, but yes, I put as much effort into my work as I expect from others. Of course some are going to have issues - that's understandable. But it's also understandable that when those tablets make their way to consumers' hands, they have a right to exchange them. I'll repeat what I said before: this is not an indictment of Google or Asus in any way...it's just saying that a substantial amount of defective tablets were shipped, and people that purchased them get to return them for a product that conforms with its description.
And trust me, I went through four at launch before I gave up. I finally gave it one more shot yesterday and got a C70 that has only really, really slight screen lift. I'm more than happy with it. But the first four I got were plainly defective. It wasn't a matter of me being "picky"...it was a matter of them not being usable for their intended purpose.
I'm happy for anyone that got a good unit (which there are clearly many). But that doesn't mean that people complaining about manufacturing defects are automatically in the wrong. It doesn't matter if they've gone through 1, 2, 4, or 8....a lot of tablets shipped defective and I can personally attest to the fact that Google continued, at least during the early period, to send defective units through the RMA process.
For the record, here's a picture of what light bleed can look like. This isn't my picture (I didn't photograph any of my early N7's), but it's a sample of what light bleed can look like:
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-qm4Zh5iSLrs/UAncxFClSDI/AAAAAAAAH9M/OjEtH5ne8og/s1600/nexus7.jpg
I think we can all agree that no one wants their tablet to do that. Moreover, I think light bleed pales in comparison to the frequency of screen lift. So before everyone criticizes people for going through 4+ units, can we at least stop and think that just maybe, people have gotten several defective units? I can tell you it's happening.
I certainly hope you put as much effort into your job as you expect from others. It's a $249 tablet that was mass produced, of course some are going to have issues. Your test for light bleed is set up for the tablet to fail. I imagine most tablets would fail that test. Just for fun I took my C60 tablet into a closet and performed your test, guess I got lucky or either I don't notice what it is that caused you to return 7 devices.
I'm not sure who your referring to, but yes, I put as much effort into my work as I expect from others. Of course some are going to have issues - that's understandable. But it's also understandable that when those tablets make their way to consumers' hands, they have a right to exchange them. I'll repeat what I said before: this is not an indictment of Google or Asus in any way...it's just saying that a substantial amount of defective tablets were shipped, and people that purchased them get to return them for a product that conforms with its description.
And trust me, I went through four at launch before I gave up. I finally gave it one more shot yesterday and got a C70 that has only really, really slight screen lift. I'm more than happy with it. But the first four I got were plainly defective. It wasn't a matter of me being "picky"...it was a matter of them not being usable for their intended purpose.
I'm happy for anyone that got a good unit (which there are clearly many). But that doesn't mean that people complaining about manufacturing defects are automatically in the wrong. It doesn't matter if they've gone through 1, 2, 4, or 8....a lot of tablets shipped defective and I can personally attest to the fact that Google continued, at least during the early period, to send defective units through the RMA process.
For the record, here's a picture of what light bleed can look like. This isn't my picture (I didn't photograph any of my early N7's), but it's a sample of what light bleed can look like:
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-qm4Zh5iSLrs/UAncxFClSDI/AAAAAAAAH9M/OjEtH5ne8og/s1600/nexus7.jpg
I think we can all agree that no one wants their tablet to do that. Moreover, I think light bleed pales in comparison to the frequency of screen lift. So before everyone criticizes people for going through 4+ units, can we at least stop and think that just maybe, people have gotten several defective units? I can tell you it's happening.