Techno Intelligence
Techno Intelligence Overview
The generated data is based on reviews and questionnaires provided by PissedConsumer.com users.
Techno Intelligence has a 1.0 star rating from 1 review; consumers are mostly dissatisfied. Recent recommendation warns against sellers who ship used, defective, or counterfeit products. Reviews note poor customer service, limited product diversity, and a high price level.
Positive Feedback
The seller offered a $69 rebate and cited a two-year warranty, and acknowledged supplier error when a used drive was shipped.
Negative Feedback / Risk Areas
- Reports of used, defective, or counterfeit SSDs shipped instead of advertised new parts, a frequent Techno Intelligence review theme.
- Poor customer service response and stalled communication after refund requests and service issues.
- High prices relative to perceived product quality and support.
Key Takeaways for Future Customers
- Check Techno Intelligence reviews and ask for serial verification before purchase.
- Document issues immediately and insist on refunds for defective parts rather than store credit.
- Consider alternatives for upgrades rather than relying on seller-installed components.
The generated data is based on reviews and questionnaires provided by PissedConsumer.com users.
Techno Intelligence has a 1.0 star rating from 1 review; consumers are mostly dissatisfied. Recent recommendation warns against sellers who ship used, defective, or counterfeit products. Reviews note poor customer service, limited product diversity, and a high price level.
Positive Feedback
The seller offered a $69 rebate and cited a two-year warranty, and acknowledged supplier error when a used drive was shipped.
Negative Feedback / Risk Areas
- Reports of used, defective, or counterfeit SSDs shipped instead of advertised new parts, a frequent Techno Intelligence review theme.
- Poor customer service response and stalled communication after refund requests and service issues.
- High prices relative to perceived product quality and support.
Key Takeaways for Future Customers
- Check Techno Intelligence reviews and ask for serial verification before purchase.
- Document issues immediately and insist on refunds for defective parts rather than store credit.
- Consider alternatives for upgrades rather than relying on seller-installed components.
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Verified ReviewerCompany "upgraded" computer with used, defective SSD and replaced with fake SSD
- - Bought HP Laptop 17 from Techno Intelligence.
- - Arrived with a used 2TB SSD instead of new.
- - The drive was counterfeit; I replaced it with a Samsung SSD.
TL;DR I purchased an HP Laptop 17 computer from Techno Intelligence, who upgraded it to a 2TB boot drive and 2TB secondary drive. The computer I received came with a used, defective SSD and the drive they replaced it with after it died was a fake SSD.
My experience with Techno Intelligence is the worst I've had in 40 years of buying and using computers.
Details:
The computer was advertised by the seller as having a 2TB SSD + 2TB HDD configuration. Instead, they shipped it with two 2TB SSDs, which I assumed was due to an error in the listing.
A week after receiving the computer, I discovered that the substituted 2TB SSD had more than 1200 hours of prior use on it. I called the company. They apologized and claimed that their supplier must have inadvertently shipped them the used drive.
They offered either to exchange it for a new one or rebate me $69.00, which they said was their cost for the drive. I had no experience installing drives in laptops, so I accepted the rebate rather than risk harming the computer or violating the warranty. They said I could keep the SSD and assured me it would last far longer than the 1200 hours of prior use. I took this to be a good-will gesture for charging me for a new drive but selling me a used one.
Four months later, over the course of a week that included many hours of troubleshooting, the used SSD failed.
They replaced the failed SSD with another 2TB SSD, confirming my sense that the listing was in error. That drive also immediately failed, causing further issues and more wasted troubleshooting time. The AC adapter also failed to charge the computer during this time.
I sent them the computer and adapter. They replaced the adapter and said there was nothing wrong with the computer.
They wanted to wipe my boot drive because their technician figured the problem was with Windows, though he hadn't even looked in the Event log or written any files to the disk. I reminded them that the errors also occurred outside Windows, at boot time. They agreed to install the original drives, prior to their upgrade, so I could send it back to HP for warranty repair.
Before I did that, I tested the computer with the stock drives and found that the second drive they sent me was counterfeit -- a fake, no-name Chinese drive with a real capacity of only 111GB, modified to appear to be 2TB.
I requested, as a way to get my computer running again with a trustworthy drive and to restore my faith in their company (which offered a two-year warranty), that they refund me the cost of a new, name-brand 2TB SSD. Instead, after more discussion, they offered me a 2TB HDD.
I replied that I could not count on them to ship me a reliable, genuine, new drive after they had already sent me two bad ones. I reiterated my request for a refund to cover the cost of a name-brand 2TB SSD. At that point, they stopped communicating with me.
I've since ordered a Samsung SSD at my own expense and installed it.
The computer runs fine -- their defective and counterfeit drives were my entire problem. The whole experience has been stressful, has denied me the use of my computer, has cost me about 40 hours of wasted time troubleshooting, and I'm also out the cost of the new SSD drive.
- Sell used counterfeit and defective drives
- Did not correctly identify or fix technical problems
Preferred solution: A rebate for the $169 I spent on the Samsung drive and compensation for the 40 hours of time I spent troubleshooting problems that ultimately turned out to be caused by their used, fake, and defective SSD drives.
User's recommendation: Buy from companies who don't sell used, defective, or counterfeit products as if they were new.
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