Albuquerque said:Since when was ignorance a permitted reason for anything? I guess it is america though
Oddly enough, my house has none of this cabling mess you speak of, and yet I have multiple places I could put my Xbox360 that would A: not be prone to falling or knocking off and B: has MORE than enough ventilation all the way around it.
Actually, that is exactly the point. You CAN dictate that your DVD player requires (x) amount of space surrounding it and must be operated only within this strict room temperate tolerance. And exactly to your point, if a manufacturer is dumb enough to make such requirements go so far overboard as to be unuseable, then they DO deserve to have all their units returned and their sales plummet into the abyss never to return.
The manufacturer should not be held liable for their device failing to operate when you are using it outside of their specifications. If they say it needs six inches of clear venitlation room at the back of the unit and you encase it in glass, how is it their fault? If they say it needs four feet of ventilation in a 65F room and you put it in an entertainment center in your attic in the middle of July in your Florida summer home, how is it their fault? If they say it needs 120 amps at 10,000vdc, needs a room temperature of absolute zero and sustained airflow in excess of three billion cubic feet per minute and you simply throw it in your freezer with a 80mm 4000RPM fan and hope for the best, how is it their fault?
In all three of those ridiculous hypothetical cases I just mentioned, it ISN'T the manufacturer's fault. They told you what you need to operate their equipment. If you can't provide those requirements, you either shouldn't buy it, or should return it. And if those requirements are utterly ridiculous (as some of my hypothetical ones obviously are) then they certainly deserve to get no more business from you, or me, or anyone else in a free market.
Nobody made you buy it. You aren't required to have it. You lose nothing by NOT having it. There are other options available to you. Nothing about this device has any real bearing on your life; hell you might be better off NOT sitting in front of the TV for all those hours mindlessly blowing things away online.
There is zero reason for this lawsuit to claim damages of any sort, period. In fact, there is pretty much zero reason for this lawsuit entirely.
I don't think its too unreasonable to ask for a consumer product that is marketed as a multimedia center to be placed IN your entertainment center without worrying about it overheating. If any of my components heated up like that, I would toss it out the window rather than go back for another.
You do not build a car that is dangerously unstable above 70 mph and then put in disclaimers to never exceed the speed limit and believe that you are off the hook with the consumer. There must be a level of tolerance built in which you expect consumers to push the product they buy. You may take care of your things, but you cannot predict how the other billions of people will use any particular product that they buy.
BTW .. I'm not suggesting that the lawsuit is legit. This applies to ANY consumer device in general.
Last edited by a moderator: