I feel the same way. Why not just automate the monster killing system so that they drop bombs on the ground that when you touch them kill all monsters on screen, so they can focus more on the WoW-like cartoon graphics?
I loved D1, D2 was so-so. D3 shows Blizzard going too far down a road I can't follow them.
This is an appeal to enforcement. I've had terrible experiences with Apple honoring warranties, though I'm told they're more honorable with their computers than their iPods (also this was several years ago)
If they only enforce it when you break something, they should say it that way.
Also, are you sure this applies to non-Apple hardware or just the customer putting in a genuine Apple part himself?
Fair point. I was only comparing the drives in terms of capabilities that matter to me (IE, don't care about 1394x or eSATA).
My comment was more about using the drives internally, however, but now that I think about it I guess taking a hard drive out of one Mac product and putting it in another voids the warranty.
I also was thinking of the comparison about upgrades when buying a computer from Dell/Lenovo/etc with Apple how equivalent parts go up at several hundred percent, but it's notable that you get ripped off (in general) when you buy upgrades at purchase time.
Who says Apple would try? They could probably push a "void your warranty/tech support" for running OS X on "nonsupported" hardware, if you had any in the first place.
The problem is that Apple makes money on overpriced crap (hardware), so this would in many ways kill their business model.
I love how on newegg, etc, "Apple" hard drives are a separate section, and they cost a LOT more
They'd drag the tax evaders into court and expel the state's congressmen, most likely. I doubt there'd be bloodshed.
I feel the same way. Why not just automate the monster killing system so that they drop bombs on the ground that when you touch them kill all monsters on screen, so they can focus more on the WoW-like cartoon graphics? I loved D1, D2 was so-so. D3 shows Blizzard going too far down a road I can't follow them.
This is an appeal to enforcement. I've had terrible experiences with Apple honoring warranties, though I'm told they're more honorable with their computers than their iPods (also this was several years ago) If they only enforce it when you break something, they should say it that way. Also, are you sure this applies to non-Apple hardware or just the customer putting in a genuine Apple part himself?
Fair point. I was only comparing the drives in terms of capabilities that matter to me (IE, don't care about 1394x or eSATA). My comment was more about using the drives internally, however, but now that I think about it I guess taking a hard drive out of one Mac product and putting it in another voids the warranty. I also was thinking of the comparison about upgrades when buying a computer from Dell/Lenovo/etc with Apple how equivalent parts go up at several hundred percent, but it's notable that you get ripped off (in general) when you buy upgrades at purchase time.
Who says Apple would try? They could probably push a "void your warranty/tech support" for running OS X on "nonsupported" hardware, if you had any in the first place. The problem is that Apple makes money on overpriced crap (hardware), so this would in many ways kill their business model. I love how on newegg, etc, "Apple" hard drives are a separate section, and they cost a LOT more