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Big Box Store Reps Push Unnecessary Recovery Discs

Posted by Zonk on Thu Aug 30, 2007 04:12 PM
from the cha-ching dept.
Ed Albro, PC World writes "At PC World, we've got a story today on salespeople at Best Buy and Circuit City pushing consumers to pay the stores' technicians to create recovery discs for their new laptops. Recovery discs are important to have, of course, but the fact is that they're easy to make yourself. Or you can get them from the manufacturer of your PC, often for half of what Best Buy and Circuit City charge you. The salespeople often tell you that you can buy from the manufacturer — but they claim you'll pay twice as much as the stores charge."
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  • What happened? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ChrisMP1 (1130781) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:15PM (#20416745)
    I remember when it was commonplace to get a recovery disc along with your computer; now you have to pay (quite a bit) for software that's already on your system. What happened?
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      The manufacturer can make more $ by saving those few pennies. ( even 10 cents adds up when you sell millions of units )

      And, if you dont create one and then have your PC crash they might even get a service call out of you too.
        • Re:Turnabout! (Score:5, Insightful)

          by bteeter (25807) <brianNO@SPAMbrianteeter.com> on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:36PM (#20417055)
          Selling computers without a recovery disk is just not smart IMO. Once you have sufficient problem to warrant restoring the computer, you're already pissed that its broken. Maybe your not pissed at the manufacturer of the PC at that point, because its not necessarily their fault.

          But once you find out that its now NOT fixable because they were too cheap to give you a 25 cent to make recovery disk with your $400+ PC you WILL be pissed at them.

          Its just bad business practice to me.
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            I didn't get a recovery disk, but also didn't care, because I never booted the damned thing into Vista anyway. Ubuntu provides iso's of my "recovery disk" free of charge :)
            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              Yeah, for those of us who know what we are doing a recovery disk is not needed. But that's only about 5-10% of the computer buying population. Most users haven't a clue how to fix even the simplest computer problem and they need that two step process to fix their computer because that's about as much as they can handle:

              Step 1) Insert "Magic Computer Fixing" Restore Disk
              Step 2) Turn on computer and hope it works

              Granted restore disks aren't a cure all, but for most users its the one and only shot they have
        • Re:Turnabout! (Score:5, Insightful)

          by king-manic (409855) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:56PM (#20417339)
          If the salesman refuses, raise hell with his manager. Purchaser gets the disks for free, salesman gets reprimanded (or fired).

          You forget the managers job. His job is to ensure his staff have the tools and pliable morals to sell you things. He won't be reprimanded or fired instead he's be "coached" on how to sell it to you without getting you angry. Perhaps he'll be told a better lie to use.
        • Re:Turnabout! (Score:5, Insightful)

          by iCEBaLM (34905) <icebalm@nOspam.icebalm.com> on Thursday August 30 2007, @05:57PM (#20418081)
          You assume too much:

          1. That the manager will give them to you for free.
          2. That just because you complain, a salesman who is following company policy will get reprimanded or fired?

          While I agree that you should get OS installation media at no charge with your computer (and refuse to buy one that doesn't come with any) why do you think you are entitled to demand it? You are not. Your recourses are: buy it, haggle or don't buy it.

          You may end up getting the media for free, however more than likely the salesman and his manager will talk later on that day about that "whacko customer" they had earlier.
            • Re:Turnabout! (Score:5, Insightful)

              by iCEBaLM (34905) <icebalm@nOspam.icebalm.com> on Thursday August 30 2007, @07:06PM (#20418783)
              And if you stick to your guns, you'll either have free recovery discs, or be certain they didn't rip you off (and get a computer elsewhere, along with spreading bad word-of-mouth about their practices).

              I would love to discuss the mindset trend in North America where people think it is OK to "get free stuff" by creating complete asses of themselves. The very notion that if one were to act childishly and annoying enough that people will just throw stuff at them to make them go away seems completely crazy to me. Why and how do you think this trend started? More importantly do you think this trend can be reversed before our populace is filled with hyper selfish middle agers with an inflated sense of entitlement who refuse to work? This could very well be our empires lead poisoning.

              They're just following orders from higher-up, and if they don't have any moral qualms with it, they're assholes, so who cares what they say amongst themselves?

              How about the moral qualm of working for a living? Feeding your family? Supporting yourself? The way I see it is this: they are offering goods and services for a price. You do not have to buy it. What is immoral about that? As long as they are up front with you, tell you "yes, you can make the discs yourself" then there is no problem. I am always wary of someone who invokes "morals" but insists that anyone who doesn't agree with him is wrong. Because you belive it to be "immoral" you are willing to make an asshole of yourself in an attempt to get items you did not pay for? Remember, the cost of those recovery CDs are not included with the price of the computer. Who is the asshole now?
                    • Re:Turnabout! (Score:5, Insightful)

                      by iCEBaLM (34905) <icebalm@nOspam.icebalm.com> on Thursday August 30 2007, @08:47PM (#20419617)
                      Okay, let me get this straight. You think that not providing someone with a copy of the software that was licensed to them when they bought the computer, and in fact, trying to get them to pay for it *again* is not as bad or worse than someone raising hell to get the CD that they should have been given in the first place?


                      There are a few things you must understand: you can create the recovery discs yourself, and the cost of the recovery media is not included in the price of the PC.

                      On top of that, things change. What you believe "should be given in the first place" is not fact. Simply because you believe that to be so, does not mean others have to abide by it.

                      That being said, your statement "that they should have been given in the first place" denotes that they accepted the terms of sale already, in which case, as long as the sellers were up front about what was being sold, and did not use any form of deceit, then yes, I believe it is not as bad as someone "raising hell" to get recovery discs for free.

                      They can make their own discs, discs were not part of the sale agreement nor included in the price, and "raising hell" to get what you want for free is something a child does, not something an adult does.
                    • Re:Turnabout! (Score:5, Insightful)

                      by iCEBaLM (34905) <icebalm@nOspam.icebalm.com> on Thursday August 30 2007, @09:15PM (#20419857)
                      It's not that severe of an issue, but it's still trying to take away the right to have a copy of what you paid for (and no, most sellers won't tell you that you can make a copy yourself, nor should you have to. The software was part of the purchase price).

                      It is not a "right", and the copy that you purchased is on the hard drive. The copy that you purchased also has built in capabilities to duplicate itself for backup purposes. If you bothered to RTFA you'll notice that most sellers DID inform the buyers that they can make the backup themselves.

                      Again, if you don't like the terms of sale, don't buy it. You do not have some magical "right" to a recovery disc.

                      Personal responsibility, where art thou?
        • Re:Turnabout! (Score:5, Informative)

          by CrayDrygu (56003) on Thursday August 30 2007, @06:12PM (#20418209) Homepage

          What people buying from them should do, is, upon being told about the disks and the charge for them, DEMAND they be included free, or they will not buy the computer.

          If the salesman refuses, raise hell with his manager. Purchaser gets the disks for free, salesman gets reprimanded (or fired).

          I hate to break this to you, but that's not the way it works. I worked for Best Buy for four years, at three different locations across two different states, so I say this with some authority.

          See, you seem to think we (I don't work for them anymore, but I'm going to call them "we" anyway) make a lot of money off the computer, but we don't. In fact, when you count my wages, electricity and heating, and all the other costs associated, we're breaking even if we're lucky. More likely, the store is losing a few bucks on the purchase. And me personally? I'm not on commission, and I'm not rated on how many computers I sell, so I don't really give a crap.

          So, I look at the other stuff you're buying, to see if we're making any sort of profit on you at all. If you're loaded up with stuff that we actually make money on, I'd be happy to do you the favor. Otherwise, I'd be more than happy to sell that computer to someone we'll make a profit on instead.

          Go ahead, threaten to take your business elsewhere. We'd much rather you buy the computer somewhere else, and cause a competitor to lose money. Raise hell with my manager if you want. He'll promise you that I'll be "dealt with" just to make you go away, and then he'll come over and say to me, "man, that guy was a total asshole." I can't even tell you how many times I saw that happen.

          There are exceptions, of course. If it's a slow day (meaning the techs aren't busy with customers who actually paid them), and if you were nice to us, we might just do it anyway. We're people too, after all. So many people don't treat retail salesmen like people. If you do, they recognize that, and will do you all sorts of favors. If you're a prick, forget about it.

          • Re:Turnabout! (Score:5, Informative)

            by rgbscan (321794) on Thursday August 30 2007, @07:08PM (#20418801) Homepage
            Speaking as a former Best Buy employee, I can agree with most of what you say. I would just add that while there was no "formal" commission, I would routinely be reprimanded for letting a laptop or PC be purchased without selling an extended service plan and I would get small things like giftcards and gift certificates if I met my extended warranty "goals" (quota might be a better word with the way they railed on us to sell them). Part of the first day of training they made it clear that in the shopping cart with that PC I better have sold them a $30 gold plated parallel cable for their printer, an extra ink cartridge, and a warranty.
    • Re:What happened? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by eln (21727) * on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:53PM (#20417295) Homepage
      Yah, and software used to come with handy instruction manuals too, but now you're lucky if you get a scrap of paper with a website address on it. It's all about squeezing every last cent of profit out of your product. It's no longer about how you can make the best product for your customers, it's about how many corners you can cut before people just stop buying from you. As it turns out, consumers will put up with a lot of garbage like this before they'll even consider not buying.
      • Re:What happened? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by ScrappyLaptop (733753) on Thursday August 30 2007, @05:49PM (#20418013)
        Hey, we the buying public wanted our $299 PC's and laptops and we got 'em! Why pay for documentation that let's face it is going to be around a lot longer than the system it describes? B'sides, if a PC/laptop lasts three years and then something goes wrong, the average joe or jane is just going to go out and get a new one.



            My question is, when you buy a top of the line system are you treated the same way? I'm not talking about the corporate 'buying experience' which is a whole different game...

    • I remember when you got the whole OS in it full retail box... With manuals no less. Heckpirate., I remember when MS was spouting that getting your manuals was a primary reason not to illegally copy your software.
      • by Anne Honime (828246) on Thursday August 30 2007, @05:46PM (#20417973) Homepage
        You obviously are one yourself, for I clearly remember the page in my CP/M manual urging to and explaining how to actually duplicate the full system and utility disks from the originals as soon as possible, just in case. Going as far as suggesting to make more than one copy.
    • Most do come with recovery cd's. These the employees often steal when they perform their "system setup" of crapware installation. I had thought it an urban legend until I checked the box from my dads laptop before he checked out and lo and behold, no discs. At first I was told the laptop never came with any. I might have accepted this except there was a nice little "troubleshooting" sheet in the box that detailed how to use the discs... They were "found" immediately.
      • by daveywest (937112) on Thursday August 30 2007, @05:46PM (#20417971) Homepage

        Easier for tech support and users who lose discs far too often.

        Funny, I always just cracked open the case and taped the recovery cd(s) to the inside of the case. Always seemed to save me a lot of headaches finding the exact right installer for that paticular revision machine.
  • Old Dupe? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Cpt_Kirks (37296) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:15PM (#20416747)
    I think this was covered in the story a while back about the ex Circuit City employee who disclosed all their "secrets". It wasn't in the main story, but was in the linked story.

  • by Orange Crush (934731) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:16PM (#20416755)
    Best Buy and Circuit City are pressuring customers to buy overpriced add ons they don't need? Hogwash!
  • extended warranty (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Rixel (131146) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:17PM (#20416775)
    Pretty sure that anyone who knows how to make a recovery disk either won't get suckered in, or will purchase it just so they don't have to do it themselves.

    The real retail rape is extended warranty.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        I did a few stints at Comp USA, and the management at both stores harped on the extended plans really hard. The hardware guys were on commissions, but us software guys weren't. We had a 'performance reward' though if we managed to push those pieces of crap. They even wanted us to peddle crap warranties on mice, keyboards, speakers, and other crap that is so cheap, there was no reason to worry about a warranty in the first place.

        Not that Comp USA was a great place for management. I had 1 manager who was skim
  • by cromar (1103585) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:17PM (#20416783)
    If they are lying to the customers, that is bad. But I would imagine most people do not know how to make a recovery CD, painfully easy as it may be. Also, it would be more convenient than contacting the manufacturer for one.
  • What?! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Scutter (18425) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:18PM (#20416801) Journal
    A salesperson lying to a customer?! That's unpossible!
  • No suprise (Score:5, Informative)

    by Dynedain (141758) <slashdot2&anthonymclin,com> on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:19PM (#20416815) Homepage
    And the sales associate at Fry's, while trying to sell me the extended warranty, said that warranty replacements on the Wii take forever and are expensive because you have to pay to ship to Japan.

    He was flat-out lying, as warranties for North American Nintendo sales go through a center in California, and Nintendo pays for the shipping. But the Fry's employee (a department manager nonetheless) insisted that the shipping/replacement costs and delays were a reason to purchase their warranty instead.

    Never underestimate the sleazy, underhanded attempts that a salesperson will go through to get your money, especially if they work on any kind of commission. As a corollary, the less knowledge and understanding the salesperson has about the product they are pushing, the more likely they are to be underhanded in their push.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      And you didn't mention to him that this was attempted fraud, (while writing down his name)?

       
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward
        I hope you're joking (or trolling). Have you ever sat down and done the math on those kinds of insurance? You are always losing money on those deals, since the expectation cost of equipment failure (probability of failure times cost of replacement) is much lower than the cost of the insurance. (If it wasn't, then the store would lose money on selling the insurance.)

        To those of you still under the delusion that insurance on small-cost items is the same as insurance on high-cost items: it isn't. The reason it
          • Re:No suprise (Score:5, Informative)

            by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 30 2007, @05:03PM (#20417435)
            Good for you.

            However, just because in this particular case you came out on top (replacement costs were higher than insurance costs) doesn't change the fact that, on average, you lose money when you buy small-scale insurance. If this were not true, statistically, then the insurance company would be losing money.

            So, unless you know ahead of time that the thing you are buying is in some way defective, it's best not to get the insurance. This will lead, on average, to more money in your pocket at the end of the year.

            But otherwise: winning once on a slot machine doesn't mean that the house doesn't win on average.
            • 100% correct. (Score:5, Interesting)

              by KingSkippus (799657) * on Thursday August 30 2007, @05:25PM (#20417695) Homepage Journal

              However, just because in this particular case you came out on top (replacement costs were higher than insurance costs) doesn't change the fact that, on average, you lose money when you buy small-scale insurance.

              I hope someone mods this up, especially since there are a lot of folks like me that have ACs auto-modded down.

              You're right on the mark. Here's the thing. If you buy warranties on everything you buy that they're offered on, at some point, you will come out ahead on some particular item. A laptop, a refrigerator, a microwave oven, a television, an iPod... Something. And, as the parent post noted, good for you.

              However, that thing that you came out ahead on has a nasty way of ingraining itself into your selective memory. You remember that thing that you came out ahead on, because wow, you saved hundreds of dollars. You tend to forget the thousands of dollars you lose $50 to $100 at a time by buying extended warranties that you never need or use.

              It's simple psychology, and retail stores are taking advantage of it, along with people's lack of knowledge about computers and their tendency to react to fear, to make billions of dollars a year. Ask any financial expert or consumer advocate and they'll all say the same thing: The only time you should ever purchase a warranty is if you literally cannot function without whatever it is you're buying the warranty for.

              Plus, that doesn't take into account the fact that most of the time, it's a lot harder to actually get companies to follow through on their warranties than the salespeople claim it will be. Keep in mind that when companies have to pay out warranties, that's taking money away from them that they had considered pure profit. It's very likely that they'll avoid fulfilling the terms based on some technicality. For example, did you keep all of the original packaging? Even the driver CD? My dad got burned on that one once. He tried to claim an extended warranty repair, and they wouldn't fulfill the warranty because he had thrown away a three-year-old driver disc.

              Last, but not least, it may seem like a bargain to buy a $200 five-year extended warranty on a $2000 computer. But in five years, what will that computer really be worth? If you're lucky, maybe $100 on eBay. You can get a replacement cheaper than you can ship the durn thing.

              Just don't do it. Take all money you would have spent on extended warranties and put it in a savings account. You'll earn interest on it, and in no time, you'll have enough money in the bank to replace anything like that that you would buy and you'll never need another warranty again.

            • Point of insurance (Score:4, Informative)

              by DragonWriter (970822) on Thursday August 30 2007, @06:17PM (#20418271)

              However, just because in this particular case you came out on top (replacement costs were higher than insurance costs) doesn't change the fact that, on average, you lose money when you buy small-scale insurance.


              On average, you lose money when you buy insurance regardless of scale. That's, in fact, the whole point of insurance: you pay slightly more than your expected costs up front to negate the risk of unexpected costs greatly in excess of either your expected costs or the insurance cost.

              It doesn't make a lot of sense to insure a computer if you are fairly certain (1) you are going to replace it eventually, and (2) you will always have the reserves to replace it at need in an emergency.

              OTOH, if may be essential to replace it, and you may not be able to do so out of cash, it may be worth insuring.

              So, unless you know ahead of time that the thing you are buying is in some way defective, it's best not to get the insurance. This will lead, on average, to more money in your pocket at the end of the year.


              on average, that's true of every kind of insurance, regardless of scale. Insurance is worth it (if it is at all) based on the consequences of the potential unexpected downside it protects you against and the degree to which it mitigates that risk, not because you will on average save money with it. Risk is a real cost, even though its monetary value may be highly subjective.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Most of these in-store warranties are a substitute for your existing warranty, in that you just bring your console into the store, they replace it with one of their retail stock, and they (are supposed to) mark your old console as defective and return it to the vendor as a sales return. So, your turn-around time is a lot faster.

        However, in today's era of Internet purchases, this usually partially/fully disconnects you with the stuff you bought on the console. For example, if you replace your 360 in Best Bu
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          A lot of places don't do commissions on sales, you're correct. However, a lot of places, in order to get salesdrones to push the ESP's, will give some sort of incentive (10% of the ESP total, etc).
  • by LiquidMind (150126) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:22PM (#20416851)
    for the more tech savvy, i recommend making an image of a harddrive after the OS and whatever other programs have been installed. I did this for my mom's new computer; i reloaded XP (it came with vista home or something along those lines), installed all her favorite programs, set them up, did a virus/spyware scan, etc etc. after everything was said and done, i loaded Acronis True Image [acronis.com], made an image, and burned it to a boot-able DVD using their boot image.
    So now, if there is some weird software glitch or she installed / uninstalled too much crap, i just tell her to back up all her personal documents, pop the dvd in, reboot the computer and voila. a few screens and clicks later, she's back to how it was when she first got it.
    seriously, that little app has saved me so much work and time. (not a slashvertisement! i don't work for them, i swear!)

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Same here, but there is a nifty SystemRescueCd [lifehacker.com] that can do all of that as well - while also being free as in beer (and probably free in other ways as well) Nice write-up on it with screen shots at lifehacker.com
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        While I like SystemRescueCD a lot, and use it for almost every windows install now, you have to see the humor in a set of instructions (from the link, not the disk) that say:

        Note: Before we begin, know that 1.) there is command line work ahead, and 2.) partitioning an existing hard drive is a risky undertaking that could go all kinds of wrong. Make sure your hard drive is well backed up before you begin.

        when the point of the instructions is to help you make that first backup.

        It's a better idea to use the systemrescuecd in combination with a usb drive, and have partimage write the image to the usb drive, rather than try to repartition the image on the first go.

        Another caveat with any of these backup tools is that they may have issu

  • by Otter (3800) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:23PM (#20416863) Journal
    Given that the people who will buy these disks would almost certainly not make their own, let alone request one from the maker, the question is whether the store price is worth the difference between having and not having one. I'd say it is.
  • by The Angry Mick (632931) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:23PM (#20416865) Homepage

    It's been awhile since I bought any computer equipment from a big box store, so excuse any ignorance, but don't the manufacturers include recovery CDs in the packaging?

    Are the big box stores removing the manufacturer's CD from the packaging and either tossing it, or re-selling it? I can't imagine the latter would go over very well with the manufacturers.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      It's been awhile since I bought any computer equipment from a big box store, so excuse any ignorance, but don't the manufacturers include recovery CDs in the packaging?

      Not necessarily. The T61 I bought from Lenovo came with a tool to create recovery disks which, I assume, are based off the recovery partition present on the hard disk. 6 CDs later, and I had a freshly minted set of disks which are now safely stored with the rest of the documentation for the laptop.
  • Odds are... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by dashslotter (1093743) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:27PM (#20416931) Homepage
    ...if you are buying such a disk from them, then you probably don't know how to get one easier/cheaper, so I guess I don't see a problem here. Those with less knowledge in a given domain generally pay more, and are sometimes happy to do so out of convenience.
  • by Joe The Dragon (967727) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:38PM (#20417099)
    You should get the full os install disks for free you are paying for them and M$ should have them up for download as ISO images that need the key on the system.
    I had to download a torrent of XP media center 2005 to run a repair install on a system that I was fixing for some one and they did not get a install disk / restore disk with there system.

    Some recovery disks wipe out all of your data.
  • by SKPhoton (683703) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:53PM (#20417299) Homepage
    Check out this blog post about 27 Confessions of a Former Circuit City Worker [bspcn.com].

    There's lots of insights about what the deal really is behind extended warranties, backup discs, and such. For example:

    10. When buying a PC you will be asked to have a backup DVD made for a charge of $30. This is done through an application found on all computers, sometimes hidden. You could do it yourself for free. Also, it was very common to sell this on Toshiba laptops. Little do the customers know, it's already in the box. So we would charge, and do nothing.
  • by pclminion (145572) on Thursday August 30 2007, @05:05PM (#20417457)

    Every time I check out of one of these places -- which is not often at all -- I'm invariably offered some kind of extended warranty. When I initially refuse, the cashier usually says something like "You'd really be wise to buy it, these things break all the time."

    I respond, "So what you're saying is, this product is a piece of shit and I shouldn't buy it. Check." The look on the cashier's face is always priceless. For a big-ticket item, it's also great to see the sales associate foaming at the mouth because the dumbshit cashier just tanked a sale.

    And yeah, I walk right out without buying it. Half the time I never intended to anyway. Hours of amusement, kids!

    • by mcrbids (148650) on Thursday August 30 2007, @05:24PM (#20417681) Journal
      I respond, "So what you're saying is, this product is a piece of shit and I shouldn't buy it. Check." -SNIP- Half the time I never intended to anyway

      Somehow, I get the feeling from the content of this post, that you've never done this, but wish you had. Especially for a high-ticket item that you can't, in reality, afford.

      I call shenanigans!
  • I have one of those 'Universal Recovery Disks', it helps against spyware, virusses, malware or just plain broken hardware and you can still save your data:

    http://www.ubuntu.com/getubuntu/download [ubuntu.com]
  • by Kenrod (188428) on Thursday August 30 2007, @06:38PM (#20418501)
    Stores are always overcharging for doing simple things for clueless or busy people. It's not "news". If the market didn't support it, they would lower their price or stop offering it.

    Pissing on the big retailers is part of the /. agenda. That's why these stories keep showing up. No one else cares.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Cue apologists who think it's moral to screw over the stupid/uninformed because you can make a buck doing it.
      • Re:stupid people (Score:4, Insightful)

        by bhalter80 (916317) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:44PM (#20417187)
        IANAA (apologist) but I don't see it as screwing over, in exchange for some of my time to perform for you a service you deem to have value you give me some of your cash in proportion to the value you perceive. The fact that you see no value in buying the disks because you are educated enough to make them for yourself and you have the time/interest to doesn't mean that everyone else is. One can easily change the oil in their car and I often encourage/train friends how to but I don't see places that offer to change it for you in exchange for a fee as ripping you off.
    • I is stupid people (Score:4, Informative)

      by mypalmike (454265) on Thursday August 30 2007, @04:54PM (#20417311) Homepage
      > One thing that slashdotters forget is with MS Windows, don't underestimate the stupidity of the average user.
      > Most probably don't even know what a recovery disk is.

      I honestly had no idea what a "recovery disk" was until I just googled for it. I've been using computers for over 20 years, and have made a career as a software engineer for the last 12. I've always just had the full OS on disk. I guess that makes me stupid.
    • As soon as you get a new PC you should call the manufacturer and request recovery media. If they tell you "it's in the recovery partition" or "you can make a set with our BIOS/Windows utility" demand that you want the recovery media. The worst scenario to be in involves a wrecked partition or hard drive, or burned (not pressed) CDs/DVDs that have disintegrated over time. I was able to get recovery media with my Thinkpad free of charge after I received it; I just called, they confirmed that the laptop was in