I hope that the pic associated with this news isn't a grim look at the future of your drive:
Spouting colourful toxic smoke into the air. lol
Spouting colourful toxic smoke into the air. lol
Mmm smells nice. Mum whats for dinner?TheAussieReaper wrote:
I hope that the pic associated with this news isn't a grim look at the future of your drive:
http://www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com … ilures.jpg
Spouting colourful toxic smoke into the air. lol
<3 Seagate.
yep.Sup wrote:
Its their fault anyway, its something they must do
if a company did this i would expect them to automatically do this tbh
then again, seagate are bad (imo)
No - they are legally obliged with warranties to give you a replacement drive. Nothing else..Sup wrote:
Its their fault anyway, its something they must do
So I have an affected model, and I'm trying to find out if I have an affected firmware revision but both the Drive Detect program and Seatools come up blank when scanning for drives
Should I still install the new firmware? I've had this drive since October and it works fine.
edit:
Should I still install the new firmware? I've had this drive since October and it works fine.
edit:
Last edited by GGF0RCE (2009-01-19 10:01:42)
i think sup means "are morally obliged to"kylef wrote:
No - they are legally obliged with warranties to give you a replacement drive. Nothing else..Sup wrote:
Its their fault anyway, its something they must do
i would leave it
who doesnt want their harddrive shooting colorful smoke in their case?
looks sexy imo
who doesnt want their harddrive shooting colorful smoke in their case?
looks sexy imo
No sir.JoshP wrote:
then again, seagate are bad (imo)
Very solid drives, and customer support when needed. I had a brand new (month old) 250GB drive get totally fucked in a power outage, and I got a replacement drive about 2 weeks later, no questions asked and hassle free.