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They are fixing the battery issue...TRUST ME, it will be resolved when they announce the new Note 7s are available for the trade in. They wont mess up again.Preach, that photo is pure gold!
I want the Note 7, but I want a straight swap for it. And I want to know that the NEW one is less subject to recall than the old one. I haven't read what the fix is for this... so how will we know that our new Note 7s are indeed fixed?
Just went to the T-Mobile store and got a refund. Took a while, the reps didn't know what the hell to do, made a tone of phone calls, but finally got resolved. I'll just wait a few months so Samsung can get it straight then probably get a hold of a good offer in the holidays then buy it again.
I am keeping mine as well until I can exchange for a new Note 7. I have to say I love mine and have no desire to go without a phone right now or change to another phone.Is it prudent to hold on to our devices against the recall of all units sold?
I am keeping mine as well until I can exchange for a new Note 7. I have to say I love mine and have no desire to go without a phone right now or change to another phone.
What makes you think that you will get an refurbished phone? By the way all refurbished phone has to be labeled refurbished! The letter I got from Samsung and Verizon does not say refurbished. They must tell you that it is refurbished!I'm really tempted to return it, go back to my Note 4 and see what the V20 and the iPhone 7 look like. The biggest reason I'm contemplating a return is I don't think I want to get a refurbed phone and there's a very good chance that Samsung will just crack open the returns and swap out the batteries, which IMO is like paying full retail for a refurbed phone.
What makes you think that you will get an refurbished phone? By the way all refurbished phone has to be labeled refurbished! The letter I got from Samsung and Verizon does not say refurbished. They must tell you that it is refurbished!
Once Samsung realizeed which companies made had the bad batteries. The company that had to good batteries Never stopped making the Note 7. You will not get an refurbished phone. If you do you do not have to accept it.If they pull all the stock that they haven't sold, have to crack it open (which IMO degrades the integrity of the original product in the first place) and replace the battery, then it's a refurb (IMO). I can't imagine that they'll have enough supply to replace every single phone with their current supply. You can't tell me that they won't consider going into their 1 million+ returned phones and start sourcing from that supply. I can't imagine them just trashing all those devices. So the chance that you'll get a used component is very high.
Once Samsung realizeed which companies made had the bad batteries. The company that had to good batteries Never stopped making the Note 7. You will not get an refurbished phone. If you do you do not have to accept it.
So if what you are saying is true then a person can be a new customer to Note 7 and get a refurbished phone. Don't think so.
Any new phone that was still new in the box and was sent back to Samsung but then was opened and the battery replaced, would you consider that to be a refurbed? Even if you don't (which I do), you can't expect Samsung to sit on the 1 million+ returns, or just trash them. They're going to be re-allocated for some purpose, whether it's to replace a replacement phone for someone, or as a new unit. 1,000,000+ units returned at $800+ USD, that's what $800,000,000 in revenue? I can't imagine Samsung would take such a hit.