Never been dropped, and also I've never opened it (neither let someone else) to clean it on the inside. It's used only by two people (my wife an I), we've never spilled any kind of liquid onto it. The machine is used 99% of the time at home, so I am not normally carrying it away or traveling. Unfortunately this last one was the only that did not meet my expectations. I chose the machine based on its outer construction, portability, ease of use, speed, Mac OSX and durability. I'm also aware that manufacturing processes have natural variations and that defective items can escape from quality control regimes, so this can be that I was lucky enough to end up with a defective unit.Īlthough a powerful machine, I use it mostly to light work like web browsing, music, photo and video library storage, sync an iPhone, and some video/music editing. I know that a diagnosis can only be made by examining the faulty board, however what I'd like to do is understand if there are practices which may seem “normal” during use, but instead are a time-bomb for the machine. While I'm in the decision making process of whether having it repaired or replaced, I just want to get some advice as what could have gone wrong. Yesterday my 23-month-old MacBook Pro was diagnosed with a dead logic board.
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