Welcome to AspAdvice Sign in | Join | Help

Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

I own an Alienware m7700 17” beast of a notebook computer.  I bought it in December of 2004 as my big splurge after returning from a tour in Iraq (my buddies were all buying cars and Harleys, so I figured a laptop for work and games was pretty conservative in comparison).  It worked as advertised, and was fabulous for playing Counterstrike and other games throughout 2005 and as a development machine (2GB of RAM helped here).  I figured when I bought it that, being top of the line, it should serve for 2–3 years as a primary machine and then could live out its days as a secondary machine to use if a friend came over to game or I needed a machine to use as a test box or whatever.

In November 2006, itching to install Vista and tired of the weight of the Alienware, I bought a Dell Latitude D820, with which I’m quite pleased.  My plan was to carry that to and from work every day, but keep the m7700 as my home machine for dev work and gaming (and minimal carrying around, as it’s quite heavy).  However, in mid-December the Alienware started getting a bit flaky.  It would lock up periodically.  Sometimes it would stay locked up for a while and reboot, other times it would just stay locked up.  Sometimes this happened in Windows.  Sometimes it happened while booting, before the Windows splash screen even appeared.  December being a busy month (I was on the road two weeks of it) and since I had my new Latitude, I didn’t sweat it too much.  Eventually I pulled out the hard drives and the battery (I have a Dell Inspiron 6000 that once had weird issues that were linked to a particular, old, battery) and ran ERDCommander to see if I could reproduce the behavior.  It didn’t take long before it locked up, even in this scenario, so clearly the issue was not a software or hard drive issue.

I emailed Alienware with the details and was told:

Dear Mr. Smith,

We thank you for contacting Alienware.

In this case, you may call our Customer Service department and arrange to have your system sent to our Repair Center. Our agents will need to charge you in advanced for 2 hours labor and the cost of sending the computer back to you. Once the computer is diagnosed, we will contact you back in order to inform you about the replacement parts required. Our phone representatives will inform you about the costs associated with this repair service, since we are unable to provide prices by email. Our staff is available at 1-866-287-6727 (option 4) from 10:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M. EST.

Once again, we thank you for choosing Alienware and invite you to visit our Knowledge Base at
http://support.alienware.com. There you will find an array of easy to use troubleshooting articles.

Fair enough.  I was pretty happy to pay for the out-of-warranty cost to diagnose the issue and put things aright.  I figured the total expense would probably be a few hundred dollars once they diagnosed and repaired the machine.  It cost several thousand new, two years ago, and is still a decent machine (when working).

So, yesterday I called Alienware support.  The representative I got was very courteous and tried to be helpful – I’m not saying anything negative about that part of the experience.  However, I think she was set up for failure.  For one thing, I have an Incident number on my support email which I offered to help her look up my issue.  Unfortunately they can’t look up customer accounts that way.  Funny, that.  So I located my Alienware Account Number at her request and she asked me to please hold so she could do some “research.”  This took several minutes, which to me means either their systems are really slow, she reads really slow, or Alienware knows way too much about me.  Eventually she came back, having found my account.  I recounted my experience briefly and explained I just wanted to know what it would cost to repair my laptop.  She asked me, politely, to please hold so she could do more “research.”

Another few minutes later, she returned to inform me that this unit was End Of Life.  I wasn’t sure exactly of what that meant (though I suspected), so I asked in no undertain terms if that meant it was not serviceable, even for a fee, by Alienware.  She confirmed to me that this was so.  A little bit shocked, I asked her when, exactly, it had entered into this End Of Life status. She asked me to hold so she could, you guessed it, research the question (to be fair, she always came back with useful information, so I can’t fault her research capabilities).  A few minutes later she returned to inform me that it had reached End Of Life 3 months ago (so, 8 January - 3 months = 8 October 2006 or so).  Apparently, my laptop has been leading an undead existence since early October!  Unfortunately, it’s not very animated at this time.  She did explain that the reason this was so is because Alienware is constantly updating its systems ensure they have the latest capabilities.

The part that just floors me is that Alienware (or any other computer manufacturer) would declare a system complete unsupported and unserviceable 22 months after it was purchased as a brand new top-of-the-line item.  I asked around to see if anybody else thought it was strange, and I got all kinds of responses about people with computers from the 90s that are still working fine and, in many cases, still supported.  I personally have that same Dell Inspiron 6000 that I mentioned above, and it’s still working fine.  It’s from 2000, and I’m pretty sure I could get it serviced by Dell if I needed to (though I haven’t had anything done to it in a couple of years — I know I did have stuff fixed when it was more than 2 years old, though).

I’m hoping that since Dell now owns Alienware, their support philosophy will carry over there.  This wasn’t the first issue I’d had with Alienware Support.  It’s hardly a good customer experience to sell high-end machines, as Alienware does, and then not support them beyond 22 months’ time.  What do you think?  Leave me a comment – I’ll be sure to point this post out to Dell so it’ll get read.

Published Tuesday, January 09, 2007 4:19 PM by ssmith
Filed under:

Comment Notification

If you would like to receive an email when updates are made to this post, please register here

Subscribe to this post's comments using RSS

Comments

# re: Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

I'm really curious what they say if you call them up asking about buying a new machine. Would they actually tell you what the End of Life for whatever you are buying is?

I've been considering buying a new desktop machine. I looked at alienware's stuff the other day. But i have to say after hearing this, there's no way i'd spend a few thousand dollars on a system to have it become completely unsupported in less then 2 years.

Tuesday, January 09, 2007 4:35 PM by Merk

# Alienware computers "officially dead" after 22 months

Steve Smith documents a strange admission by Alienware that his top-of-the-line laptop is "End-Of-Life"

Tuesday, January 09, 2007 5:03 PM by British Inside

# re: Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

Steven, it looks like you bumped into one of the hidden costs of the smaller brands and white-box retailers out there.  They don't have the resources to support systems for very long and the profit is in the new stuff.  More than likely your tech's "research" time was spent waiting in line and discussing your symptoms to a veteran support tech.

Even Dell has tiered brands.  The really low cost notebook computers are price leaders, not customizable, and won't have a long support life.  Inspiron is a home user brand and will not be supported very long.  Latitude, however, is the business-class brand and is purchased by the thousands by large corporations.

I would always recommend Latitude over Inspiron even though they share motherboards, drivers, and BIOS.  The added up-front cost pays off later when new peripherals and operating systems appear.  Latitude will get new drivers and updates but not Inspiron.  This is because the big companies demand drivers for the new Zune, Treo or the new Blackberry and Dell needs to maintain good relations with those accounts.

Inspiron? Well, the stock price won't be affected if Joe Home User doesn't get his Vista Drivers for his three year old machine.  More than likely he'll give it to his kids and purchase another.

I know that sounds callous (it is) but it's how PC companies (Dell is no different in this respect to others -- perhaps better in many respects) need to behave to stay competitive.

Tuesday, January 09, 2007 5:12 PM by carlcamera

# Thinking of buying an Alienware?

I have Alienware hardware and I love it. Heavy but I love it. I was surprised to find out today ( according

Tuesday, January 09, 2007 6:28 PM by Scott Cate's WebLog

# re: Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

Get a MacBook Pro for your next laptop. Seriously, best computer I've ever owned, hands down. I run XP in Parallels, and if I've experimented with Vista in Bootcamp for all of the pretty 3D. Works like a champ!

Wednesday, January 10, 2007 10:22 AM by Jeff

# re: Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

Yeah, that's the kind of crap you get going with the smaller guy, even when they're the 'cool' smaller guy.  I've had similar issues with desktop systems in the past when I was too lazy to put them together myself.  I basically don't count on support at all for those, but it is certainly worse for laptops, since changing out parts is usually less of an option.  Sucks, dude.  Confirms my resolve to only by notebooks from the big dogs.

Thursday, January 11, 2007 4:23 PM by J. Ambrose Little

# re: Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

I had the same problem. They refused to support me. I was not allowed to even pay for the support. They just said screw me. I am done with this company. I spent a lot of money on the faulty laptop. Their laptops suck. Even Computer World wrote about how faulty the system and how horrible the support is.

They are lucky they sold the company because that kind of customer service would have put them out of business.

Thursday, February 01, 2007 3:01 PM by kwells

# re: Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

Well, you at least had 22 months. I was told that they no longer had replacement parts for my 13-month old Area-51 m7700 which was top of the line and fully loaded when I ordered it.

No more Alienware machines for me and definitely no Alienware recommendations from me.

This is after they have been bought by Dell, so that purchase seems to have little effect on the ALienware policies.

Also, their support centers are located somewhere in South America, possibly Brazil? The staff down there seem to have difficulty understanding English or responding with any worthwhile information.

Now left with finding replacemnet parts on the web and doing my own repairs. Not something I bargained for when I spent all that money.

Friday, March 16, 2007 7:29 PM by rdcosta

# re: Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

I purchased two PCs from Alienware the day before yesterday for approx. $10,000. and read this column yesterday.  Today I canceled the order.  Thanks,  I appreciate this heads up, if I didn't have support for these systems they are no good for me.  

Thursday, April 05, 2007 11:16 PM by Noel

# re: Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

Noel,

 Glad to offer my experience.  For the record I do still like Dell and get good support from them - I just don't understand why Alienware, now owned by Dell, doesn't share their quality of service.  I took my case up with Dell, too, after this happened, but I never got anything resembling interest from them, either (much less a satisfactory resolution), so I guess Alienware is still very much separate from Dell...

Friday, April 06, 2007 11:07 AM by ssmith

# re: Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

I feel for you. I recently purchased a used Alienware M7700 off ebay and the guy I purchased it off of gave me ALL the account information and I called and asked them what i had to do to get a new hard drive installed and asked me all the account crap and still were useless I had to find out that the model i had took a special driver during windows install or it wouldnt recognize the Hard drive. Long story short I am happy with my machine that I paid barely 500 for but there is no way in Hades that I would pay more then that for it..... and the parts are expensive to boot.. still cant get the front control buttons to work....

Thursday, September 27, 2007 12:44 PM by Michael D.

# re: Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

The only other trick is Dell just bought out Alienware. My system is about 8 months old. It's a m5790. Guess what? It must be End of Life because it is like pulling teeth to try to find anything for this sytem on their website. I am writing from it, after 3 lock ups combined from shutdown, boot & system restore. This company is HYPE and a lottery. Good luck trying to get a system that is stable. STAY AWAY!!!

Tuesday, November 27, 2007 11:57 AM by Frank Rizzo

# re: Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

Alienware co. are crooks! Thats just unacceptable, I can't believe it!

Though I can't recommend Dell at all. I bought a laptop from them less than 2 yrs ago and had the worst experience o my life from those thieves! When I returned it they said they would repay me for shipping. I am still waiting! They eventually had me fill out this bogus And all the people on dell support can't speak english. We should worry that Dell keeps getting bigger!

Wednesday, January 23, 2008 6:59 PM by Jeremy

# re: Alienware End Of Life - What? So Soon?

I have just bought a new Hangar 18 , about 2 months ago from Alienware. I am still waiting for it... :-??  *&^# these mother*&^#ers.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008 11:33 AM by pizzy

# Func Mousepads

I bought an Alienware laptop a few years ago as sort of a gift to myself after coming back home from

Friday, December 05, 2008 1:04 PM by Community Blogs

Leave a Comment

(required) 
required 
(required) 
Enter the code you see below