Thinkvantage toolbox lies about warranty!!!
Posted: Sat Apr 23, 2011 10:07 am
I sent this email to Lenovo on April 13th and have received no reply. If someone knows some method of getting a decent response, I would appreciate help. This is not how you treat your loyal customers:
I'm on my fourth Thinkpad that I've bought with my own money.
I praise Thinkpads to the sky. I've even tried to convert Apple users-it's hopeless but I try.
I bought a T410 a year ago that I love. It came with a one-year warranty and my intention was always to upgrade to three years before the first expired.
The machine came with ThinkVantage toolbox, which conveniently tells me on its splash page how many days I have left on my warranty.
I got a message from it today telling me my warranty will be up in 59 days and I should renew.
Unfortunately, that message is wrong. My warranty expired in March. I tried to renew it at that time and was told I was ten days late and the $100 extension was now $259--in this day and age, a lot of money to pay. I'm a commissioned salesman who writes on the side. Money's tight.
And the thing that annoys me is that you guys included this software with the computer. I didn't install it myself. If you want a screenshot of my desktop showing the 59 days it still says I have, I'll send it to you. If you've got some sort of remote desktop software, I'll give you permission to use it and see for yourself--just let me know you're going to do it.
I wasn't trying to scam anybody-I could certainly have gone for the extension ten days earlier if I'd known. If Toolbox wasn't on the machine, I would have made a note on my calendar-it wasn't necessary, I thought, because the software on the computer is keeping track for me. Now that software is costing me an additional $159 that I can't afford and shouldn't have to pay.
I also have a hard time believing I'm the first person who's had this problem. If there's a problem with the software, you should own up to it and take some responsibility for it. Otherwise, it feels like a scam to squeeze a more expensive warranty extension out of your customers.
I'm quite willing to pay the $100 for the extension. I want to feel good about Lenovo, as I have up to now.
My next step, if I don't receive some satisfaction from you, would be to contact PC World, PC Magazine, CNET, Tom's Hardware and other sites and have one or more of them contact you. I don't really want to do this.
I hope you will find some way to correct this issue to our mutual satisfaction.
I'm on my fourth Thinkpad that I've bought with my own money.
I praise Thinkpads to the sky. I've even tried to convert Apple users-it's hopeless but I try.
I bought a T410 a year ago that I love. It came with a one-year warranty and my intention was always to upgrade to three years before the first expired.
The machine came with ThinkVantage toolbox, which conveniently tells me on its splash page how many days I have left on my warranty.
I got a message from it today telling me my warranty will be up in 59 days and I should renew.
Unfortunately, that message is wrong. My warranty expired in March. I tried to renew it at that time and was told I was ten days late and the $100 extension was now $259--in this day and age, a lot of money to pay. I'm a commissioned salesman who writes on the side. Money's tight.
And the thing that annoys me is that you guys included this software with the computer. I didn't install it myself. If you want a screenshot of my desktop showing the 59 days it still says I have, I'll send it to you. If you've got some sort of remote desktop software, I'll give you permission to use it and see for yourself--just let me know you're going to do it.
I wasn't trying to scam anybody-I could certainly have gone for the extension ten days earlier if I'd known. If Toolbox wasn't on the machine, I would have made a note on my calendar-it wasn't necessary, I thought, because the software on the computer is keeping track for me. Now that software is costing me an additional $159 that I can't afford and shouldn't have to pay.
I also have a hard time believing I'm the first person who's had this problem. If there's a problem with the software, you should own up to it and take some responsibility for it. Otherwise, it feels like a scam to squeeze a more expensive warranty extension out of your customers.
I'm quite willing to pay the $100 for the extension. I want to feel good about Lenovo, as I have up to now.
My next step, if I don't receive some satisfaction from you, would be to contact PC World, PC Magazine, CNET, Tom's Hardware and other sites and have one or more of them contact you. I don't really want to do this.
I hope you will find some way to correct this issue to our mutual satisfaction.