tankman1989
Active Member
- Reaction score
- 5
Ok, when the customer said that this machine was a POS (Piece of $h1t) he really meant it. I can't figure out when the machine was even made, lol. It is a Compaq Pesario 3443. It has a Quantum Bigfoot 5.25" HD, 12Gb, 128mb Ram
.
He has XP Home with a COA as well.
I don't know what to do with a customer like this. I really need the business and I can make his machine work MUCH better than it is. He wants me to "give him more space" and make it faster. The problem is that this machine will never be considered fast, ever.
I have a bunch of used hardware I told the guy I could use to cut costs. He said keep it under $200 so I figure I can throw in a 120-160Gb HD and 2 sticks of ram, 256MB and 128mb so the guy will have 512 total. I haven't posted the machine to see what speed it is, I'm kind of scared, lol. Oh, I'm installing a DVD-RW as well.
I figure with the hardware upgrades, OS install and updates, Internet setup and installation of apps like OO and McGruff (keep track of kids) I can just barely keep it under $200.
What do you think? Does this seem fair? I get hung up on these situations as I know he is getting his money's worth but I feel bad putting the money into this computer. I know this is stupid, but I want to see what others think.
Would it be more ethical to tell the guy to spend his $200 on buying a new system? I don't think he is going to get a system with a fresh install and all "prettied up" for $200, but for $400, he sure can.
What would you do?
Also, I've looked at the local Craigslist postings and found some decent machines for less than what he is going to spend to upgrade. Would anyone recommend that I call this guy and tell him that I can give him a newer machine that will me much faster? The only think is that I can't really warranty the machine as I can't verify it.
Now, would telling the customer this be in their best interest and would it be better for me in the long run? I know I would appreciate this honesty were the roles reversed. On another note, I can't really make a living by sending customers away like this..

He has XP Home with a COA as well.
I don't know what to do with a customer like this. I really need the business and I can make his machine work MUCH better than it is. He wants me to "give him more space" and make it faster. The problem is that this machine will never be considered fast, ever.
I have a bunch of used hardware I told the guy I could use to cut costs. He said keep it under $200 so I figure I can throw in a 120-160Gb HD and 2 sticks of ram, 256MB and 128mb so the guy will have 512 total. I haven't posted the machine to see what speed it is, I'm kind of scared, lol. Oh, I'm installing a DVD-RW as well.
I figure with the hardware upgrades, OS install and updates, Internet setup and installation of apps like OO and McGruff (keep track of kids) I can just barely keep it under $200.
What do you think? Does this seem fair? I get hung up on these situations as I know he is getting his money's worth but I feel bad putting the money into this computer. I know this is stupid, but I want to see what others think.
Would it be more ethical to tell the guy to spend his $200 on buying a new system? I don't think he is going to get a system with a fresh install and all "prettied up" for $200, but for $400, he sure can.
What would you do?
Also, I've looked at the local Craigslist postings and found some decent machines for less than what he is going to spend to upgrade. Would anyone recommend that I call this guy and tell him that I can give him a newer machine that will me much faster? The only think is that I can't really warranty the machine as I can't verify it.
Now, would telling the customer this be in their best interest and would it be better for me in the long run? I know I would appreciate this honesty were the roles reversed. On another note, I can't really make a living by sending customers away like this..
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