
The percentage of returned gadgets that have nothing wrong with them.
Of the $13.8 billion worth of returned products in 2007, only 5 percent were because gadgets were actually broken, according to a 2008 study.
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i seriously wanted to buy a htc kaiser since the specs are so good... i have the money and my current hp contract ending soon.
then, after reading the response of htc on http://www.htcclassaction.org/responses.php#update_20080129_1_1, i think im gonna give any products this company produced, and will produce in the future, a miss.
including h/w without the drivers in the hp... having great specs but no s/w to support the h/w..
wat a bloody joke.
and its not even funny, considering how expensive the hp is.
"In addition to making sure the required hardware is present, unlocking extended capabilities of chipsets like the MSM 7xxx requires in-depth and time consuming software development, complicated licensing negotiations, potential intellectual property negotiations, added licensing fees, and in the case of devices that are sold through operators, the desire of the operator to include the additional functionality. To make an informed decision about which handset suits them best, consumers should look at the product specification itself instead of using the underlying chipset specifications to define what the product could potentially become. "
theres a saying in the Army...
"Dont make your problem my f---ing problem!"