I have recently had a few threads here about heat and temperature, because I just bought a new laptop. I have been using PC's for many years but made the switch to Mac a few years back and bought an Asus Eee with Ubuntu in between. I like to try out different OS's and such, but I haven't been into the PC hardware scene for years. In other words, I know computer basics (ie. no i havent put tonnes of spyware on the computer, I know a laptop is not ideal for gaming but no it is not useless for it either etc.) but haven't bought a laptop in years. My Macbook recently died a tragic death so I wanted to buy a cheap replacement to just watch films on and do a bit of writing, and of course game. I have been gaming purely on consoles and not on the PC for ages, but I did a lot of research on hardware and found an Acer 5750G within my price range, and it boasted nice hardware for its price. An i5 with Geforce 540M 2 gig video and 4 gb of system ram - decent specs for a lot of games. I bought it and played on it for a while, and realized that Real Temp recorded temperatures of 90 degrees in both CPU's and 80-85 degrees on the GPU after just an hour of gaming. The framerate and everything was super decent, so it was only by looking at the log I could see that there might be a problem (I had a few game crashes, but I was playing a heavily modded game so I expected I would have a few of those).
Now the customer support here is absolutely useless - they made some sort of unholy alliance with the specific retailer that they take care of support, and in my retailer's case they don't do phone or email support. My only option was to send in the computer and then wait for them to look it over and then send it back - when all I wanted to know is if 90 degrees could be a sign of malfunction or if I shouldn't worry about it. I did a bit of browsing and I found out that US/Canada have chat support, I contacted them and told them my story and they were super helpful, even though they knew I bought my computer in Europe and that it is a Europe-only model. I got redirected to their pay-for-service chat for free, which was really super nice of them and much much appreciated.
The tech guy was super helpful, but the answers he gave were downright shocking to me. Perhaps it is because I have been out of the "Windows PC world" for so long, but he basically told me that 90 degrees is way too much, but it is because the system isn't "optimized". The manufacturer does a remote "optimization" for an extra 100 bucks that actually lets me use my purchased hardware without turning my laptop into a frying pan. To me this is downright apalling - if this is the general scenario among laptop manufacturers today then how am I going to make an informed purchase? If I can't go by the specs because some computers will fry themselves if I actually use the hardware without paying a fee to get it "optimized" (that's "unlocked" in my book) - how am I ever going to make the "right" purchase? Perhaps I have just been living in my little "Apple-bubble" for too long, also not using my computer for gaming and having to deal with these issues, but is this the norm?
I have a few options though:
1) In my country there is a two week period where I can take the product back to the retailer and switch it for something else (that runs out this week, so I gotta move fast). And that also puts a heavy research burden on me to find out who "locks" their computers - I'd rather have lower "unlocked" specs than what I have now, because this is basically useless unless I want to pay an extra 100 bucks (the computer in total was 850 bucks, so it is quite an increase in price - what other laptops could I get for the extra 100 bucks?) Or fry the computer...
2) Which brings me to number 2. If the computer suffers hardware malfunction within one year of purchase I can get my money back. So I can game on and not care about ridiculous temperatures and hope it will burn out fast so I can get something else instead. However this option really sucks if it takes the computer say 1.5 years to die. Not to mention the moral issue of just wasting stuff for the sake of wasting it in this "green" age.
3) Deal with it and just accept that this is how the Windows PC market is, and the exact same thing would happen to any 850 bucks laptop from any manufacturer. Try and find workarounds (and make damn sure to get a mac next time I buy something - especially if the Windows PC specs can't be counted on anyways).
I really don't know what to expect - if this is the norm and how I should react to this situation, so any inputs would be really nice. If I want to get out of having a product from this specific manufacturer I have to move really fast though. I only got a few days left, so plz any thoughts and comments would be awesome! I saved a transcript from the chat with the tech guy for documentation - he said they don't do official transcripts, but I saved it for reference. To me this is shocking news.
Now the customer support here is absolutely useless - they made some sort of unholy alliance with the specific retailer that they take care of support, and in my retailer's case they don't do phone or email support. My only option was to send in the computer and then wait for them to look it over and then send it back - when all I wanted to know is if 90 degrees could be a sign of malfunction or if I shouldn't worry about it. I did a bit of browsing and I found out that US/Canada have chat support, I contacted them and told them my story and they were super helpful, even though they knew I bought my computer in Europe and that it is a Europe-only model. I got redirected to their pay-for-service chat for free, which was really super nice of them and much much appreciated.
The tech guy was super helpful, but the answers he gave were downright shocking to me. Perhaps it is because I have been out of the "Windows PC world" for so long, but he basically told me that 90 degrees is way too much, but it is because the system isn't "optimized". The manufacturer does a remote "optimization" for an extra 100 bucks that actually lets me use my purchased hardware without turning my laptop into a frying pan. To me this is downright apalling - if this is the general scenario among laptop manufacturers today then how am I going to make an informed purchase? If I can't go by the specs because some computers will fry themselves if I actually use the hardware without paying a fee to get it "optimized" (that's "unlocked" in my book) - how am I ever going to make the "right" purchase? Perhaps I have just been living in my little "Apple-bubble" for too long, also not using my computer for gaming and having to deal with these issues, but is this the norm?
I have a few options though:
1) In my country there is a two week period where I can take the product back to the retailer and switch it for something else (that runs out this week, so I gotta move fast). And that also puts a heavy research burden on me to find out who "locks" their computers - I'd rather have lower "unlocked" specs than what I have now, because this is basically useless unless I want to pay an extra 100 bucks (the computer in total was 850 bucks, so it is quite an increase in price - what other laptops could I get for the extra 100 bucks?) Or fry the computer...
2) Which brings me to number 2. If the computer suffers hardware malfunction within one year of purchase I can get my money back. So I can game on and not care about ridiculous temperatures and hope it will burn out fast so I can get something else instead. However this option really sucks if it takes the computer say 1.5 years to die. Not to mention the moral issue of just wasting stuff for the sake of wasting it in this "green" age.
3) Deal with it and just accept that this is how the Windows PC market is, and the exact same thing would happen to any 850 bucks laptop from any manufacturer. Try and find workarounds (and make damn sure to get a mac next time I buy something - especially if the Windows PC specs can't be counted on anyways).
I really don't know what to expect - if this is the norm and how I should react to this situation, so any inputs would be really nice. If I want to get out of having a product from this specific manufacturer I have to move really fast though. I only got a few days left, so plz any thoughts and comments would be awesome! I saved a transcript from the chat with the tech guy for documentation - he said they don't do official transcripts, but I saved it for reference. To me this is shocking news.