"Last Christmas my siblings and I pooled together $200 to buy
It is also very unlikely one will find about the 90-day warranty by perusing on Palm's website. "Nothing is said about the warranty on the main product page for the Tungsten E2 on the Palm website," the reader wrote. Neither is it mentioned in any of the subcategory pages linked from there like 'details,' 'gallery,' or the glossy PDF product brochure. An obvious spot for it would be the 'spec' page, but no, it's not there either. To actually discover which products have a 90-day warranty and which ones have a full year, you have to navigate through their support section to the 'find your warranty' link, then pick out the product name again from a list by country, which then finally takes you to the warranty matrix that actually shows the E2 has only 90 days from purchase date. It's almost as if they are trying to hide the fact that it is so short."
Indeed, if you follow in the reader's footsteps on Palm's website (which as I write this on Oct. 29th remains exactly as he described), it is obvious Palm is trying to hide its warranty. The logical places where Palm should tell a potential customer about the 90-day warranty are silent on the subject. Perhaps the most absurd example is the "compare" page which shows more than 40 comparative features for the E2 and two other Palm handhelds but fails to mention the fact that one (the Palm TX) has a one-year warranty while the E2 and the Palm Z22 have the 90-day warranty.
And any prospective Tungsten E2 customer who goes looking for the warranty on the Palm Legal Notices page will likely be misled. Clicking on the "Terms and Conditions of Purchase" leads to a page of legal terms above which is a "Warranty" link. But that Palm Limited Warranty says new hardware products are warranted for one year from date of purchase. So why doesn't that apply to the Tungsten device? I was puzzled by that, but the reader had already spotted what was going on. Deep in those "Terms & Conditions" below the link to the warranty are the following weasel words:
"The standard limited warranty applicable to each of the products you purchase under this agreement is described on the site. The actual limited warranty statement that applies is included in the documentation packaged with the product. Palm disclaims all other warranties, express or implied..."
So apparently the warranty document linked on that same page doesn't really count. Instead, the customer has to guess that the real warranty information is hidden many clicks away in the support section of Palm's website. Or you can find it inside, after you've been tricked into buying the product.
There is one little piece of good news - the reader was able to fix his mother's Tungsten E2 after purchasing a replacement digitizer on the web for $45. But he won't be buying any more Palm products as gifts for anyone. "How low has Palm quality dropped such that they can only provide a 90-day warranty on a $200 retail piece of electronics?" he write. "How come there is no warranty printed externally on the box, or on the main product webpage, or anywhere else you're likely to look? More than anything, I hope bringing this out might convince Palm that their new gear deserves a full year warranty, and perhaps it might also convince them to get off of this EULA-like path they have started to tread."
Read and post comments about this story on my website or
write me at Foster@gripe2ed.com.
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