Talk:Repair centers: Difference between revisions

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There have been reports of alternative charger tips, etc. working with XOs in lieu of the "original" parts produced by Quanta. If you know of any alternative parts that can be used for repairs, and sources and prices for such, please post them here! [[User:Mchua|Mchua]] 10:41, 13 February 2008 (EST)
There have been reports of alternative charger tips, etc. working with XOs in lieu of the "original" parts produced by Quanta. If you know of any alternative parts that can be used for repairs, and sources and prices for such, please post them here! [[User:Mchua|Mchua]] 10:41, 13 February 2008 (EST)

== Added a title/some thoughts from KayTi ==

The one idea listed near the end of the wiki page sounds an awful lot like a "repair jam" where people and computers would come together for a day to repair a bunch of laptops. Am I getting that right? I added that title tot he wiki page as an idea. If so, then this might be a business model for repair dates. It would requiring queing of "needs repairs" laptops, and would probably work best on a periodic model (e.g., quarterly repair jams in xyz location in xyz city.) This way people could plan in advance (example: I have a sticky key laptop. I would consider shipping or bringing mine to a repair jam and either working on the repair myself or expecting someone from the repair jam to do the repair for me and then shipping it back. but to do so I'd want it back on some kind of schedule.)

Some further thoughts - who is the primary customer for a repair center? OLPC? Individual users? Schools? Organizations? Is it global or local? How local? Or, local only in the sense of being close to a shipping facility?

If OLPC is the primary customer - e.g., providing broken machines currently located at Brighstar to get repaired to re-enter the product stream, well, that's one kind of operation. But if individual G1G1 donors are the primary audience, that's something else entirely.

I like the idea of the repair centers being able to charge for services, that might make it a really fascinating school project. I would like to talk to the IMSA folks about this some more, but things like setting prices, setting up governing documents, arranging shipping logistics, managing workflow through the repair center, tracking units, doing the actual repairs. This is cool stuff. I'm interested in getting my son's pre-k through 8th grade school involved too, probably in partnership with IMSA if they are interested.

More on this later, but I'm intrigued by this idea. [[User:KayTi|KayTi]] 15:46, 19 February 2008 (EST) aka Karen Smith

Revision as of 20:46, 19 February 2008

Leave your comments and thoughts on repair centers below.

Wiki headers needed

This and many other pages unrelated to the support FAQ are being tagged with that header. We need separate headers and navigation for repairs and local SIGs. --Sj leave me a message 10:41, 21 January 2008 (EST)

Alternative parts

There have been reports of alternative charger tips, etc. working with XOs in lieu of the "original" parts produced by Quanta. If you know of any alternative parts that can be used for repairs, and sources and prices for such, please post them here! Mchua 10:41, 13 February 2008 (EST)

Added a title/some thoughts from KayTi

The one idea listed near the end of the wiki page sounds an awful lot like a "repair jam" where people and computers would come together for a day to repair a bunch of laptops. Am I getting that right? I added that title tot he wiki page as an idea. If so, then this might be a business model for repair dates. It would requiring queing of "needs repairs" laptops, and would probably work best on a periodic model (e.g., quarterly repair jams in xyz location in xyz city.) This way people could plan in advance (example: I have a sticky key laptop. I would consider shipping or bringing mine to a repair jam and either working on the repair myself or expecting someone from the repair jam to do the repair for me and then shipping it back. but to do so I'd want it back on some kind of schedule.)

Some further thoughts - who is the primary customer for a repair center? OLPC? Individual users? Schools? Organizations? Is it global or local? How local? Or, local only in the sense of being close to a shipping facility?

If OLPC is the primary customer - e.g., providing broken machines currently located at Brighstar to get repaired to re-enter the product stream, well, that's one kind of operation. But if individual G1G1 donors are the primary audience, that's something else entirely.

I like the idea of the repair centers being able to charge for services, that might make it a really fascinating school project. I would like to talk to the IMSA folks about this some more, but things like setting prices, setting up governing documents, arranging shipping logistics, managing workflow through the repair center, tracking units, doing the actual repairs. This is cool stuff. I'm interested in getting my son's pre-k through 8th grade school involved too, probably in partnership with IMSA if they are interested.

More on this later, but I'm intrigued by this idea. KayTi 15:46, 19 February 2008 (EST) aka Karen Smith