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From: Digestifier <Linux-Misc-Request@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu>
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To: Linux-Misc@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
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||||
Reply-To: Linux-Misc@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
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||||
Date: Mon, 26 Sep 94 13:13:22 EDT
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||||
Subject: Linux-Misc Digest #828
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||||
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||||
Linux-Misc Digest #828, Volume #2 Mon, 26 Sep 94 13:13:22 EDT
|
||||
|
||||
Contents:
|
||||
PC HARDWARE VENDOR REVIEW: SW Technology (a.k.a. SW Trading Company) (Jonathan I. Kamens)
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||||
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
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||||
From: jik@cam.ov.com (Jonathan I. Kamens)
|
||||
Crossposted-To: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems,misc.forsale.computers.pc-clone,comp.answers,misc.answers,news.answers
|
||||
Subject: PC HARDWARE VENDOR REVIEW: SW Technology (a.k.a. SW Trading Company)
|
||||
Date: 26 Sep 1994 12:23:19 -0400
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Archive-name: pc-hardware-faq/vendor-reviews/swt
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Posting-Frequency: quarterly
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||||
Version: $Id: swt-review,v 1.12 1994/09/26 16:22:19 jik Exp $
|
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INTRODUCTION
|
||||
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This article details my dealings with a company doing business on the
|
||||
net as SW Technology (although their checks say "SW Trading Company"),
|
||||
referred to as "SWT" from here on. Their E-mail address is
|
||||
swt@netcom.com; their phone number is 214-907-0871; and their address
|
||||
is 251 West Renner Parkway, Suite 229, Richardson, TX 75080. All
|
||||
dealings I had with SWT were through an employee named Marvin Wu (I
|
||||
don't even know if there *are* any other employees in the company,
|
||||
although Wu seemed to imply that there were).
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
ONE-LINE SUMMARY
|
||||
|
||||
Avoid this company.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
THREE-PARAGRAPH SUMMARY
|
||||
|
||||
My experience with SWT is that although they don't seem to be
|
||||
malevolent or intentionally dishonest, they are incompetent
|
||||
technically and in their business dealings. They presented a
|
||||
good-looking facade when I was negotiating with them to purchase
|
||||
hardware, but my problems with them started on the day I sent them a
|
||||
check and didn't end even when I returned the hardware and asked for a
|
||||
refund. Although it seems to me that they tried to address my
|
||||
complaints and make me happy with the system they sold me, there was
|
||||
simply too much wrong with it from the start.
|
||||
|
||||
The net result of my dealings with SWT is that I've lost about $150
|
||||
and learned a valuable lesson about not taking PC hardware vendors at
|
||||
face value.
|
||||
|
||||
I strongly discourage anyone from doing business with this company.
|
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|
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|
||||
THE WHOLE STORY
|
||||
|
||||
I set out in January 1994 to learn how to buy a PC-compatible computer
|
||||
and then to go ahead and buy one. I planned to run Linux on it I sent
|
||||
the specs of the system I was looking for to a number of different
|
||||
hardware vendors, and got back a number of quotes and brochures. On
|
||||
February 2, I posted an article to comp.os.linux.help, asking specific
|
||||
questions about how the Pentium CPU, the PCI bus, and SCSI hard drives
|
||||
and CD-ROMs would interact with Linux. One of the people who
|
||||
responded to that posting was Marvin Wu, with the return address
|
||||
swt@netcom.com.
|
||||
|
||||
On February 7, I sent an E-mail message to all of the people who had
|
||||
responded to my posting in comp.os.linux.help, including
|
||||
swt@netcom.com, with an outline of all the issues I was considering
|
||||
and what conclusions I had (tentatively) reached.
|
||||
|
||||
Marvin Wu responded on the same day, suggesting that I consider
|
||||
purchasing one of SWT's systems, which would meet my specifications
|
||||
and come pre-installed with Linux as well. We corresponded about his
|
||||
bid for about a week, and I sent him a check (after FAXing him a copy
|
||||
of it as proof of acceptance, so that SWT could begin assembling my
|
||||
system immediately) on February 16. I paid $4949 (a good price for
|
||||
what I was getting, compared to the bids I'd gotten from other
|
||||
vendors), plus $95 for shipping and insurance, for the system. The
|
||||
entire purchase agreement, including all the specifications, is given
|
||||
in Appendix A at the end of this article.
|
||||
|
||||
This is where the problems started. I will first list the problems I
|
||||
had with SWT's business dealings (the problems that I consider most
|
||||
significant are marked with three asterisks instead of one):
|
||||
|
||||
* Every mail message I sent to SWT before placing my order was
|
||||
answered within one business day. Since placing my order, I have on
|
||||
numerous occasions waited over a week for responses to my messages.
|
||||
Other messages haven't been answered at all. When pressed on this,
|
||||
Wu claimed that problems with SWT's service provider were making
|
||||
mail unreliable, and that since multiple people read the
|
||||
swt@netcom.com E-mail account, some messages might have been lost.
|
||||
Frankly, I have a hard time believing either of these claims, and
|
||||
besides, they don't justify the delays.
|
||||
|
||||
*** Wu told me on February 15, before I placed my order, "... it'll
|
||||
take 5 five [sic] working days after a firm order to ship the
|
||||
system." I placed my order on February 16, but my system did not
|
||||
arrive until March 16. Even assuming a full week for ground
|
||||
shipping from Texas to Massachusetts, I should have had the system
|
||||
by March 2; instead, it arrived two weeks later than that. At no
|
||||
time did Wu send me E-mail informing me that shipment had been
|
||||
delayed; I found out about delays only through repeated E-mail
|
||||
messages asking why the system hadn't arrived yet.
|
||||
|
||||
The causes of the delay in shipping my system were known to SWT
|
||||
before I agreed to purchase from them, but they still told me that
|
||||
it would be shipped five days after an order was placed.
|
||||
|
||||
* When SWT finally shipped my system, Wu gave me a UPS tracking number
|
||||
over the telephone (I called him because I'd received no response to
|
||||
a week of E-mail asking whether the system had been shipped), after
|
||||
flipping through papers for several minutes, with me waiting (and
|
||||
paying long-distance charges), looking for it. I called UPS to
|
||||
check on the status of the system, and they said the tracking number
|
||||
I had was invalid. Wu subsequently gave me the correct tracking
|
||||
number in E-mail.
|
||||
|
||||
* Wu told me that the machine was shipping on a Monday, and that the
|
||||
shipping company used by SWT introduced a one-day delay before UPS
|
||||
actually got the shipment (so that UPS would get the shipment on
|
||||
Tuesday). However, when I called UPS, they said that they didn't
|
||||
get anything until Thursday.
|
||||
|
||||
* After I received the system and discovered that some manuals were
|
||||
missing (see below), Wu told me that he'd send one of them to me on
|
||||
March 17, but I didn't get it until a month after that.
|
||||
|
||||
*** When I finally gave up and decided to return the machine, both
|
||||
because of the technical problems with it and because of poor
|
||||
responsiveness from SWT, SWT agreed to reimburse me for only the
|
||||
cost of the machine and half the cost of my shipping it back to
|
||||
them. Legally, they were entitled to do that; however, given that
|
||||
the machine never worked properly since the day I got it, I believe
|
||||
they should have reimbursed me for all shipping costs, both what I
|
||||
paid for the machine to be shipped to me originally and what I paid
|
||||
for shipping it back to them.
|
||||
|
||||
*** The refund check that SWT issued bounced, i.e., their bank
|
||||
returned it because there were insufficient funds in their account
|
||||
to cover it, and my bank charged me $4 for depositing a bad check.
|
||||
|
||||
I called Wu on the phone and asked for an explanation. He told me
|
||||
that he was out of town and therefore wasn't around to make sure
|
||||
there was enough money in SWT's checking account (why someone in a
|
||||
stable business would need to be present in order to ensure that an
|
||||
already-written check would clear is beyond me). He told me to
|
||||
redeposit the check when my bank returned it, and then send him
|
||||
E-mail letting him know it had been deposited, so that he could make
|
||||
sure there was enough money in the account to cover it.
|
||||
|
||||
I got the check back on July 16, and I redeposited it on July 18.
|
||||
It appears to have cleared the second time. I've sent E-mail to SWT
|
||||
(three times) asking if they're going to reimburse me for the $4
|
||||
bad-check charge, but I haven't yet received a response (it has been
|
||||
more than a week since I first asked them about it).
|
||||
|
||||
The machine I purchased had the following significant technical
|
||||
problems (I'm omitting some of the trivial ones):
|
||||
|
||||
* The Linux LILO message configured into the system was incorrect --
|
||||
it mentioned booting DOS even though DOS wasn't installed on the
|
||||
machine.
|
||||
|
||||
* Although the purchase agreement promised complete documentation,
|
||||
there was no documentation at all about unpacking and setting up the
|
||||
system. There was also no documentation about the various plugs in
|
||||
the back of the machine, nor was there a list of Linux device names
|
||||
corresponding to installed hardware (e.g., I had no idea what device
|
||||
my tape drive was installed on). Furthermore, the manual for one of
|
||||
the cards in the system (the Seagate SCSI card) and for the tape
|
||||
drive were missing.
|
||||
|
||||
* The CD-ROM drive included with my system had some minor problems
|
||||
interacting with Linux (e.g., "workman" wouldn't start up unless a
|
||||
CD was already in the drive). These problems were not mentioned to
|
||||
me before I purchased the system; I was assured that the drive was
|
||||
fully compatible with Linux.
|
||||
|
||||
* The video board included with my system had problems interacting
|
||||
with Xfree86; in particular, font restoration bugs in the Xfree86
|
||||
support made it impossible to use virtual consoles while using X,
|
||||
and made font restoration when shutting down X fail occasionally.
|
||||
These problems were not mentioned to me before I purchased the
|
||||
system, although SWT was aware of them.
|
||||
|
||||
* There were a number of minor errors in the installation of software
|
||||
on the system. For example, a number of X programs were installed
|
||||
without app-defaults files, and there were several errors in the
|
||||
default user dotfiles.
|
||||
|
||||
* The mouse I was sold came with drivers on a 5.25" floppy, despite
|
||||
the fact that I purchased only a 3.5" floppy drive with the system.
|
||||
The documentation that came with the mouse claimed that it was
|
||||
possible to purchase it with a 3.5" floppy too, so I obviously
|
||||
should have received the 3.5" floppy rather than the 5.25" one.
|
||||
|
||||
*** The CPU fan installed with the system could not adequately cool a
|
||||
66MHz Pentium processor. As a result, the system regularly
|
||||
overheated and behaved erratically or hung. For example, the first
|
||||
attempt to compile a source file with gcc would fail with a weird
|
||||
assembler error, but the second attempt to compile the same file
|
||||
with the same command would succeed.
|
||||
|
||||
Wu told me before I agreed to purchase from SWT that my system would
|
||||
undergo "a thorough test for at least 72 hours" before being shipped
|
||||
to me. However, I find it impossible to believe that any sort of
|
||||
"thorough test" was done and did not detect this problem; until I
|
||||
installed early in April a new fan sent to me by SWT (more
|
||||
accurately, I used the heat sink compound that came with the new fan
|
||||
to improve the heat conductivity between the CPU and the *old* fan,
|
||||
which rested much more snugly against the CPU than the new one), the
|
||||
system never went through more than a couple hours of active use
|
||||
without behaving in some obviously erratic way or hanging
|
||||
completely.
|
||||
|
||||
*** Even after the new CPU fan was installed, the machine continued to
|
||||
hang regularly. It turns out that the power supply installed in the
|
||||
system by SWT was not sufficient for all of the components in it,
|
||||
and SWT had to send me a new power supply (which arrived April 16,
|
||||
and which I had to install myself).
|
||||
|
||||
Again, I can't imagine how my system could have undergone "a
|
||||
thorough test for at least 72 hours" and never failed because of the
|
||||
inadequate power supply.
|
||||
|
||||
Furthermore, I can't imagine how, short of incompetence, a company
|
||||
could sell a system without bothering to add up the wattages of all
|
||||
its components and making sure to include a power supply capable of
|
||||
driving all of them.
|
||||
|
||||
*** Even after the CPU fan had heat sink compound added to it and the
|
||||
power supply was replaced, the machine continued to hang for no
|
||||
determinable reason. The hanging happened less frequently for a
|
||||
short time after the power supply was replaced, and then came back
|
||||
with a vengeance.
|
||||
|
||||
* My purchase agreement explicitly stated that the source code for all
|
||||
programs installed on the system would come pre-installed on the
|
||||
hard drive. It did not. SWT eventually sent me a CD-ROM containing
|
||||
source code, but that wasn't until over a month after the system
|
||||
arrived.
|
||||
|
||||
*** When I opened up the CPU box to check that all the boards were
|
||||
seated properly, I found what looked like a piece of a cable
|
||||
connector of some sort sitting on the bottom of my CPU case. I
|
||||
asked SWT what it was, and they told me to mail it to them in an
|
||||
envelope so they could figure it out. It turns out that it was a
|
||||
piece of the SCSI terminator for my tape drive, which broke off when
|
||||
they were assembling the system and which they didn't bother to fix
|
||||
because the tape drive was in the middle of the SCSI chain rather
|
||||
than on the end.
|
||||
|
||||
*** The keyboard (or perhaps the keyboard hardware on the motherboard)
|
||||
of my system was incapable of generating the key sequence
|
||||
Alt-Shift-> and a number of other key sequences. When any of those
|
||||
sequences was pressed, the LEDs on the keyboard would all blink and
|
||||
the computer wouldn't think any keys had been pressed. This
|
||||
occurred both in console and X modes, and even under a DOS hardware
|
||||
diagnostics program that SWT sent me to test the system with.
|
||||
|
||||
I made clear to Wu repeatedly that this problem was not specific to
|
||||
one particular application (he kept on insisting that it was an X
|
||||
program or an X Emacs problem or a curses problem). He apparently
|
||||
never attempted to duplicate the problem on a machine with the same
|
||||
configuration in SWT's shop.
|
||||
|
||||
His solution to this was to ship me a "new keyboard," by which I
|
||||
thought he meant a different kind of keyboard that wouldn't have
|
||||
this problem. In fact, all he did was ship me another instance of
|
||||
the same model keyboard I already had, and it had the same problem
|
||||
(which I fully expected).
|
||||
|
||||
In the end, he said that the new motherboard he wanted me to install
|
||||
to replace mine might solve this problem, but we'll never know,
|
||||
because I returned the system before then.
|
||||
|
||||
*** When the system was shipped to me, Wu told me that the 16Mb of RAM
|
||||
I asked for would be in the form of two 8Mb SIMMs instead of one
|
||||
16Mb SIMM, because they didn't have any 16Mb SIMMs in stock. I
|
||||
asked if he would be willing to exchange the 8Mb SIMMs for one 16Mb
|
||||
system when he got them in stock, so that I'd have more room for
|
||||
future expansion, and he said OK.
|
||||
|
||||
However, later investigation revealed that the motherboard required
|
||||
SIMMs to be installed two at a time, which meant that a single 16Mb
|
||||
SIMM would never have worked in my system.
|
||||
|
||||
Wu should not have told me that such an exchange would be possible
|
||||
if a single 16Mb SIMM would never have worked in my system.
|
||||
|
||||
*** The PCI chipset on the motherboard included with my machine was
|
||||
outdated and had known bugs. I asked before agreeing to purchase
|
||||
the system, "Does your PCI chipset avoid the problems with early
|
||||
chipsets I've been hearing about?" Wu responded, "Yes, this [sic]
|
||||
the newest Intel Saturn chip." What he did *not* bother to tell me
|
||||
was that all the Saturn chipsets had known cache bugs, and that the
|
||||
newest available chipset at that time was the Mercury II, not the
|
||||
Saturn.
|
||||
|
||||
From the day I received the machine until the day I returned it, it
|
||||
was never in proper working order. It should never have been shipped
|
||||
to me in the state in which it was shipped. I wasted hours and hours
|
||||
trying to diagnose problems, recovering from hardware failures, and
|
||||
installing new hardware sent to me by SWT, and I still never ended up
|
||||
with a fully working machine.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
RESPONSE FROM SWT TO MY COMPLAINTS
|
||||
|
||||
I E-mailed to SWT a preliminary revision of this review on July 17,
|
||||
1994 and offered them a chance to respond to the claims made in it.
|
||||
They never responded.
|
||||
|
||||
Others who were interested in purchasing hardware from SWT and who
|
||||
have seen this review asked SWT to respond to the complaints raised in
|
||||
it. One such response from Marvin Wu, which was forwarded to me by
|
||||
its recipient, contained what I consider to be lies. Here's what he
|
||||
wrote, with my comments interspersed in it:
|
||||
|
||||
> We have two unsatisfied customers so far, Jonathan Kamens being
|
||||
> one. He had the machine for three months, without paying anything
|
||||
> except part of the shipping.
|
||||
|
||||
That's sort of true, with the exceptions that (a) "part of the
|
||||
shipping" came to over $100, (b) he mentioned nothing about the
|
||||
bounced refund check, (c) he mentioned nothing about the $4
|
||||
check-bouncing charge which SWT never paid me back for (they never
|
||||
even acknowledged my mail about it), and (d) the system didn't work
|
||||
properly, and I spent much time trying to get it to work properly, for
|
||||
the entire time I had it.
|
||||
|
||||
> The probelm of the machine was
|
||||
> mostly due to the Seagate scsi driver, as we've sold many
|
||||
> identical systems with other SCSI adaptors doesn't have any
|
||||
> problem at all. This is solved now by the NCR53C810 driver.
|
||||
|
||||
I think that's a lie.
|
||||
|
||||
Many people are using the Seagate SCSI driver. I simply don't believe
|
||||
that it caused significant problems with my system. None of the
|
||||
problems I experienced seem to me to be directly or indirectly
|
||||
attributable to problems with a SCSI driver.
|
||||
|
||||
If the problem with my machine was "mostly due to the Seagate scsi
|
||||
driver," then why did SWT send me replacements for the CPU cooling fan
|
||||
and power supply on my system, and why did most of the problems I was
|
||||
experiencing go away after making those replacements?
|
||||
|
||||
During the entire time I was working with SWT to get the machine
|
||||
working, Mr. Wu never said a word to me about the Seagate SCSI driver
|
||||
causing most of my problems. Once, shortly after the machine arrived,
|
||||
he mentioned in passing that the Seagate card might be causing
|
||||
problems, but he never mentioned it again, and nothing that happened
|
||||
subsequently supported that possibility. He also didn't mention
|
||||
anything about the Seagate driver when I sent him my review of SWT and
|
||||
asked him for comments before posting it.
|
||||
|
||||
Why did he never say anything about the Seagate SCSI card being a
|
||||
problem before I returned the machine? And if they discovered *after*
|
||||
I returned the machine that it's what was causing the problem, why
|
||||
didn't they tell me so and offer to send back the machine with another
|
||||
controller?
|
||||
|
||||
Incidentally, I didn't ask for the Seagate SCSI controller; they
|
||||
offered it to me; that particular controller was their choice, not
|
||||
mine. Presumably, if they were going to pick a controller to sell me
|
||||
without any preference on my part, they would have picked one that
|
||||
they sell regularly. And if that's the case, then how come none of
|
||||
their other systems with that controller had any trouble?
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU COMPLAINT AGAINST SWT
|
||||
|
||||
On July 25, 1994, I filed a complaint about SWT with the Better
|
||||
Business Bureau for the greater Dallas area, asking for reimbursement
|
||||
for all my shipping costs, reimbursement for my bank's bad-check
|
||||
charge, and an admission of fault from SWT.
|
||||
|
||||
The BBB forwarded my complaint to SWT on July 29, 1994 and asked for a
|
||||
response. As of August 22, they had received no response, so they
|
||||
sent a followup letter with another copy of the complaint. They again
|
||||
received no response, so on September 8, they closed the complaint
|
||||
without resolution.
|
||||
|
||||
As of September 26, their automated complaint information system had
|
||||
no information about the company. I spoke to a representative and
|
||||
asked why, and she said that they don't actually tell anyone that
|
||||
there are complaints against a company until "enough" people complain.
|
||||
I asked what "enough" means, and she said that it varies.
|
||||
|
||||
Therefore, if you've had trouble with SWT, and they did not resolve
|
||||
your complaint to your satisfaction, I encourage you to file a
|
||||
complaint with the Better Business Bureau. You can get a complaint
|
||||
form by calling 214-220-2000 or by writing to Better Business Bureau
|
||||
of Metropolitan Dallas, Inc., 2001 Bryan Street, Suite 850, Dallas, TX
|
||||
75201.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
IN CLOSING
|
||||
|
||||
I intend to post this review regularly in relevant newsgroups until
|
||||
someone gives me reason to believe that SWT has either improved
|
||||
considerably or gone out of business.
|
||||
|
||||
I have retained all E-mail correspondence between SWT and me. If
|
||||
you'd like to know more about my encounter with them, I'd be glad to
|
||||
answer questions or to forward you copies of our correspondence.
|
||||
Please contact me by E-mail.
|
||||
|
||||
--
|
||||
Jonathan Kamens | OpenVision Technologies, Inc. | jik@cam.ov.com
|
||||
|
||||
*************************
|
||||
|
||||
APPENDIX A: SWT PURCHASE AGREEMENT
|
||||
|
||||
SW Technology, as represented and guaranteed by Marvin Y. Wu, agrees
|
||||
to sell a computer system to Jonathan I. Kamens, 175 Freeman Street,
|
||||
Apartment 123, Brookline, MA 02146-3510, that is subject to the following
|
||||
configuration, price and warranty policy.
|
||||
|
||||
The system consists of the following hardware and software components:
|
||||
|
||||
- Intel Pentium 66Mhz CPU
|
||||
|
||||
- Asus I-P5MP3 PCI motherboard, 3 PCI bus slots
|
||||
|
||||
- 256k cache upgradeable to 512k
|
||||
|
||||
- AWARD BIOS
|
||||
|
||||
- Intel Saturn PCI chipset
|
||||
|
||||
- 16 mb ram, upgradeable to 192 mb on board
|
||||
|
||||
- PCI bus S3 805 video card with 2mb ram, 1280x1024 256 colors
|
||||
Supported by Linux/XFree86-2.0
|
||||
|
||||
- Viewsonic 15" monitor, .28mm, 1024x768NI@76Hz, flat, full screen
|
||||
|
||||
- Asus PCI bus SCSI II controller with NCR53C810 chip (supported
|
||||
by Linux soon)
|
||||
|
||||
- Seagate ST02 SCSI card (supported by Linux).
|
||||
|
||||
- Fujitsu M2694ESA SCSI II drive, 1080mb, 10ms, 5400RPM, 246k buffer
|
||||
|
||||
- Conner Python 2GB 4MM SCSI DAT, 11mb/m
|
||||
|
||||
- Teac 1.44 floppy drive [note We now use Teac, which is the
|
||||
best in the industry]
|
||||
|
||||
- Mitsumi FX001D double speed CD-ROM drive with driver,
|
||||
software, 250ms, MPC II, multi-session PhotoCD (supported by Linux)
|
||||
|
||||
- Kouwell high speed IO card, 2 serial w/ 16550A uart, 1 bi-directional
|
||||
parallel with buffer and 1 game port
|
||||
|
||||
- Large case with 230 WATT power supply, and three half height
|
||||
drive bays that are free to add more drives.
|
||||
|
||||
- 3 button mouse with switch, X Window Systems compatible, Microsoft
|
||||
mouse compatible
|
||||
|
||||
- 101 keyboard
|
||||
|
||||
- Linux, X and LILO installed and configured
|
||||
properly. Latest public released Linux kernel, full distribution
|
||||
of Linux utilities. DOSemulator and X windows configured to fit the
|
||||
hardware for optimal performance
|
||||
|
||||
- The linux distribution contains the Slackware 1.1.2 distribution,
|
||||
plus Xfig and Fig suite, Pbmplus suite, Gnuplot, Xpaint, Calentool,
|
||||
Ingres the relational database system, and
|
||||
a user home directory that contains extensive dot files.
|
||||
|
||||
- The hard drive will be partitioned in the following way:
|
||||
one swap partition of 10mb, and four other partition that are
|
||||
of equal sizes. Two of these partitions will be used for the
|
||||
root filesystem and sources files, while the other two will
|
||||
remain empty.[ Note: the actual partition table will have
|
||||
six partitions, one of which is an extended partition that
|
||||
will hold one or more useable partitions. This is because
|
||||
Linux can have up to four primary partitions, and if we
|
||||
want more than four partitions we have to use extended
|
||||
partition. Please let me whether you'd like to do this
|
||||
way. Or three filesystem partition is ok to you? I do
|
||||
think you still need a swap partion of at least 8mb].
|
||||
|
||||
- Manuals for the system, the system components and "Linux,
|
||||
Installation and Getting Started Guide"
|
||||
|
||||
- Two year parts and labor warranty (including monitor).
|
||||
Please refer to the SW Technology Limited Warranty for details
|
||||
of the terms of warranty.
|
||||
|
||||
30 day money back guarantee. If the buyer is not satisfied
|
||||
with the system, he can return the system for refund, credit
|
||||
and exchange within 30 days of the original delivery date.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Life time expert technical support, through telephone,
|
||||
email or mail.
|
||||
|
||||
Price US $4949 + $95 shipping and insurance. Price reflects
|
||||
a discount of 2.5% for check/money oder/cash.
|
||||
|
||||
Check payable to: SW Technology
|
||||
251 West Renner Suite 229
|
||||
Richardson, TX 75080
|
||||
|
||||
The buyer has the option to return the Seagate ST01 SCSI card
|
||||
for a refund of US $29.00 when Linux supports the NCR SCSI II
|
||||
card in the system.
|
||||
|
||||
The terms of warranty follows:
|
||||
|
||||
SW Technology Limited Warranty
|
||||
|
||||
SW Technology (SWT) warrants that SWT computer system
|
||||
will be free from defects in workmanship and materials for a period of
|
||||
two years from the date of original purchase.
|
||||
|
||||
Should your SWT computer system, or certain parts of the system,
|
||||
prove defective during this period, please ship the product securely
|
||||
packaged along with proof of the date of
|
||||
original purchase, to SWT. SWT will, at its option, repair or replace
|
||||
on an exchange basis the defective unit, without charge for parts, labor
|
||||
or the return shipment.
|
||||
|
||||
This warranty covers only normal consumer use. SWT is
|
||||
not responsible for warranty service should the SWT label or rating label
|
||||
or serial number be removed or should the product fail to be properly
|
||||
maintained or fail to function properly as a result of misuse, abuse,
|
||||
improper installation, neglect, improper shipping, damage caused by disasters
|
||||
such as fire, flood, and lightning, improper electrical current, or service
|
||||
other than by SWT. Postage, insurance, or shipping costs incurred in
|
||||
presenting your SWT computer system for warranty service are your
|
||||
responsibility. If a claimed defect cannot be identified or reproduced in
|
||||
service, you will be held responsible for costs incurred.\\
|
||||
|
||||
The warranty and remedy provided above are exclusive and in lieu of all
|
||||
other express warranties and unless stated herein, any statements or
|
||||
representations made by any other person or firm are void. The duration
|
||||
of any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular
|
||||
purpose on your SWT computer system shall be limited to the duration
|
||||
of the express warranty set forth above. Except as provided in this
|
||||
written warranty, SWT shall not be liable for any loss, inconvenience, or
|
||||
damages, including direct, special, incidental, or consequential damages,
|
||||
resulting from the use or inability to use the SWT computer system, whether
|
||||
resulting from breach of warranty or any other legal theory.
|
||||
|
||||
------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
** FOR YOUR REFERENCE **
|
||||
|
||||
The service address, to which questions about the list itself and requests
|
||||
to be added to or deleted from it should be directed, is:
|
||||
|
||||
Internet: Linux-Misc-Request@NEWS-DIGESTS.MIT.EDU
|
||||
|
||||
You can send mail to the entire list (and comp.os.linux.misc) via:
|
||||
|
||||
Internet: Linux-Misc@NEWS-DIGESTS.MIT.EDU
|
||||
|
||||
Linux may be obtained via one of these FTP sites:
|
||||
nic.funet.fi pub/OS/Linux
|
||||
tsx-11.mit.edu pub/linux
|
||||
sunsite.unc.edu pub/Linux
|
||||
|
||||
End of Linux-Misc Digest
|
||||
******************************
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user