On 22/09/17 14:26, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2017-09-22 15:24, Wols Lists wrote:
On 22/09/17 13:22, Carlos E. R. wrote:
Intel SSD M.2 Optane 16GB 52,54€ Intel SSD M.2 Optane 32GB 86,54€ Intel SSD M.2 Optane 32GB 80,54€, reconditioned.
This means that the Intel ones fail often enough. The other two suitable items are:
To my mind, recon just means "removed from a 2nd-hand system for use as spares".
Intel in particular, I think if it's failed it's bin fodder - they commit suicide and are totally dead. Not worth salvaging.
I'm guessing at bad solder or connector issue. Not chip failure.
Is that really seriously economic??? I see a lot of recon gear at Morgan Computers (their IJT Direct subsidiary gets pretty much all my printer business), and recon appears to mean "we buy lots of redundant, surplus and ex-lease gear, QA it, and sell it on". If a computer fails QA they may well strip it for parts, QA those and sell them on. But seriously, if a part fails QA, is it really worth repairing? Collecting dead parts in the printer industry (ink cartridges etc) makes sense because of the sheer volume. But does it really make sense anywhere else? Cheers, Wol -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org