Cruentus
Grandmaster
I just bought a laptop from the evil best buy (just wanted one for overseas business and I took advantage of the "black friday" deals, so keep the jerk-off techie-elitist responses to yourself please, or I'll send the jocks over to break up the world of warcraft party
).
Anyway, I go to pick it up. The guy brings out the computer. I look at it, and I exclaim, "cool... I didn't know my computer has an alien on it!" The guy just looks at me like I'm insane. Then he is like "We have to put in your fingerprint."
I say, "Really....this is pretty sweet, dude, but are you sure this is mine." I am thinking, I don't remember mine having that security feature, or an alien on it.
The dude looks at the computer, then looks back at me, and does this a few times. Then he sort of looks at me in horror and slowly walks away with the computer. When he comes back with my laptop, he says, "Sorry...that wasn't yours. That was someone elses $3,000 gaming computer..." Mine was about 1200 retail (a lot less on black friday though). I laughed and jokingly said, "Well, screw this piece of crap then, can't you go find me something else that I can sneak out of here with?"
Anyway, the moral is that the dude was about to let me walk out with the latest and greatest Alienware, which is a gaming computer that starts at about 2800 and works its way up. They don't even sell those at best buy, so some dumbass had to have brought it to the 'geek squad' to get it worked on. Had I have known what the hell the computer was that he had, and had I have been a bit more dishonest, I could have not said anything and walked out with someone elses 3,000 dollar computer, with the security settings set to my specifications. And who's ever it belonged to would be SOL.
Could you imagine? The moral here is: if you buy a $3,000 plus computer, take to a reputable person to have it worked on. The "geek squad" has it's place to do warranty work and to cure simple problems for housewives and the uninitiated, but they aren't for handling more expensive pieces.
I am glad I didn't screw someone and walk out with that thing on accident.
But really, what if I had? What would anyone have been able to do about it?
It gets you thinking...

Anyway, I go to pick it up. The guy brings out the computer. I look at it, and I exclaim, "cool... I didn't know my computer has an alien on it!" The guy just looks at me like I'm insane. Then he is like "We have to put in your fingerprint."
I say, "Really....this is pretty sweet, dude, but are you sure this is mine." I am thinking, I don't remember mine having that security feature, or an alien on it.
The dude looks at the computer, then looks back at me, and does this a few times. Then he sort of looks at me in horror and slowly walks away with the computer. When he comes back with my laptop, he says, "Sorry...that wasn't yours. That was someone elses $3,000 gaming computer..." Mine was about 1200 retail (a lot less on black friday though). I laughed and jokingly said, "Well, screw this piece of crap then, can't you go find me something else that I can sneak out of here with?"
Anyway, the moral is that the dude was about to let me walk out with the latest and greatest Alienware, which is a gaming computer that starts at about 2800 and works its way up. They don't even sell those at best buy, so some dumbass had to have brought it to the 'geek squad' to get it worked on. Had I have known what the hell the computer was that he had, and had I have been a bit more dishonest, I could have not said anything and walked out with someone elses 3,000 dollar computer, with the security settings set to my specifications. And who's ever it belonged to would be SOL.
Could you imagine? The moral here is: if you buy a $3,000 plus computer, take to a reputable person to have it worked on. The "geek squad" has it's place to do warranty work and to cure simple problems for housewives and the uninitiated, but they aren't for handling more expensive pieces.
I am glad I didn't screw someone and walk out with that thing on accident.
But really, what if I had? What would anyone have been able to do about it?
It gets you thinking...