By Andy WorthPosted Thursday 7th February 2008 08:06 GMT
I can really have a Macbook Air for only just under £1600? Well, that's the real price when you take into account the almost useless subscription you have to pay.
Nah
If I was going to buy one (which I won't because they are extortionate) then there's no incentive to take this "deal".
By Anonymous CowardPosted Thursday 7th February 2008 09:00 GMT
So the 'Carrier 3', charges 630 quid for 18 months of use at 3GB per month? Which works out at 35 quid a month to transfer up to 3GB / month. Or if you take the 250 as being off the 'Carrier 3' it is (630 - 250) / 18 = 20 quid a month for a transfer of up to 3GB, but the laptop is full price.
So yeah, I suppose 20 Quid is a bit high. Not much of a deal, and made more confusing by adding in a company with a number as their name :)
By Richard KilpatrickPosted Thursday 7th February 2008 10:05 GMT
I think it's a good move pn PC World's part, however...
I'd have expected that Mr Smith would have been smarter than to fall into the old iPhone-bleating trick of saying "it's really another £630".
Like an O2 contract with an iPhone, it's a service. It's a service you'd presumably be planning on using, and paying for, regardless. It does not (as Andy says above) make a MacBook Air cost £1600.
It porbably is a useless service - my own experiences with Three mean they'd have to do some serious bribery to get me to use their service again - but cost of service does not equal cost of product. I know several people who do use Three's current services and actually have very little to complain about - on paper they seem to be trying to compete with T-Mobile on data which can only be a good thing.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Thursday 7th February 2008 10:42 GMT
On the 3 website this mobile broadband package costs £15 a month. PC World want £35 a month but will knock £250 off the price of an Airbook. So this is basically a loan for £250 that costs you £20 a month over 18 months... that means they're charging you a massive 43.83% yearly interest on the 'loan'.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Thursday 7th February 2008 11:08 GMT
Very strange. If you buy direct from 3, you get 3GB per month for £15 with a free modem on an 18 month contract. I wonder which tariff PC World is actually selling. It claims to have 200 SMS included too (well worth the £20 per month alone?). Perhaps you actually get voice minutes too (which you can't use without putting the SIM in a voice handset?)
Assuming we don't care about SMS or voice minutes, then, .....
..... Retail Macbook Air direct from Apple £1199.01 + standard 18 month 3GB contract (modem is free) £270 = £1469.01.
PC World Macbook Air £949 + Modem + contract £630 = £1579.
By Bruno GirinPosted Thursday 7th February 2008 11:23 GMT
So let me get this right, you can get the £250 discount if you take up 3 mobile Broadband Plus for £35 per month? Er... the official price from 3's website (http://www.three.co.uk/personal/products_services_/mobile_broadband_/detail.omp) is £15 a month for Mobile Broadband Plus so they charge you a £20 premium, which amounts to £360 over 18 months. Or in other words, you get shafted to the tune of £110 compared to buying both products separately. Well done PC World!
For the record, I have 3's mobile broadband lite (the 1GB cap version) and it has proved excellent at letting me get online from trains or hotel rooms. Indeed it's not always very speedy but it's just what I need when I'm on the go and is much cheaper than using some hotels' broadband facilities at £10 per 24 hours.
By PaulPosted Thursday 7th February 2008 15:19 GMT
...is you have to deal with Pissy World.
Wonder how much they want for the extended warranty on that "deal"? (Are they still trying to force-feed those warranties to everyone who buys even the cheapest piece of hardware these days?)
By Danny ThompsonPosted Thursday 7th February 2008 20:55 GMT
Jeepers! That is a tad expensive in terms of a loan of £250. It is an interesting bit of marketing spin by PC World. 3 aren't going to say no. But when looking at DSGi these days, whats in it for the customer? Not very much it seems. A company in terminal decline - anyone remember Rumbelows? They went the same way, the same way. I digress.
Well good luck to PC World if they can sell very many of these.
Comments on: PC World cuts £250 off the price of Apple's MacBook Air
Wow...... #
By Andy Worth Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 08:06 GMT
Advertising? #
By Rik Hemsley Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 08:31 GMT
3 3G? Ugh #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 08:46 GMT
Ahh I get it #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 09:00 GMT
Re: Advertising? #
By Dan Herd Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 09:17 GMT
'Advertising?' #
By Keith T Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 09:42 GMT
@ Rick Hemsley #
By Peter Endean Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 09:43 GMT
Smart Move #
By Richard Kilpatrick Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 10:05 GMT
More and more advertisements from el reg! #
By James Dodd Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 10:14 GMT
You what?! #
By Bill Fresher Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 10:28 GMT
£250 loan #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 10:42 GMT
XS20 for £50?? #
By chris jones Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 10:54 GMT
Which tariff? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 11:08 GMT
£35 per month? #
By Bruno Girin Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 11:23 GMT
But it's only £15 a month directly #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 11:50 GMT
re: keith t #
By Jan Hargreaves Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 12:22 GMT
@Chris Jones #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 13:05 GMT
*shock* another anti DSGi article #
By marc Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 13:18 GMT
The real catch... #
By Paul Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 15:19 GMT
Cost of funding #
By Danny Thompson Posted Thursday 7th February 2008 20:55 GMT