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OCZ Vertex Plus vs Agility 3 vs Mushkin Callisto

Corsair Force Series, $120 after MIR:
http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product...82E16820233161

Unfortunately I really had to "trim the fat" in this build, and once I realized that an 80GB drive would be enough for the boot drive, I figured I could save $20-$25 by going with a Corsair.

Coup: Solid advice. If I wasn't already over-budget I would go for that in a heartbeat.
 
Completely off topic, but could an American explain to a Brit what the fuck is the point of a MIR?

We do not have them here at all and all of our sales are 'x% off' which just comes off the listed price before we pay. Thats it. I can't understand MIR for the life of me.
 
I see it as the manufacturer giving a discount for anyone that's willing to put the time & effort in... Retailers still make the full sale $$$.

I see your point, why don't the retailers just take that $$$ off and the manufacturer give the retailer the rebate, but hey, its a messed up world we live in 🙂

I'm using it to pay myself for building other people's computers... Instead of charging $X to build it, I find parts with MIR's attached to them and that money goes in my pocket...eventually...

-edit-

Canadian
 
But surely this creates paperwork for all of the manufacturers who offer the scheme? All the consumers have to fill them in, post them off, and then someone at the other end has to do something and then send some money back. Seems a massive job creator.
 
But surely this creates paperwork for all of the manufacturers who offer the scheme? All the consumers have to fill them in, post them off, and then someone at the other end has to do something and then send some money back. Seems a massive job creator.

they're expecting X% of people to forget about the rebate, miss the deadline or screw up one of the steps (eg forget to include the UPC sticker or fillout the forms properly)

X% of people * rebate amount > processing fees = profitable

It's a form of price discrimination too.... You might balk at an SSD @ $200, but fine with it at $200 - $50 rebate = $150. Someone else is willing to buy it at $200 (or $200 - $50 rebate but think rebates are fussy, and don't do the rebate). If you offer it at $150 without rebates, you lose the potential $50 from the second person
 
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If consumers do not fill them out, or do them late, or improperly, they make $. PLus the company makes money off the interest for the 6-8 weeks they hold onto the money would would have been rebated.
 
yep.. the law of averages applies to ultimately mean much lower amounts of rebates being honored for the actual volume of product sold.

Then the last poster nailed it as well. Time is money when it comes to interest earned too.
 
Thanks everyone for the input, it really is appreciated.

I ended up buying the Corsair Force SSD, partly because I *LOVE* Corsair, and partly due to it being different than I've tried in the past... And I really don't want to use an OCZ drive on a friends computer, I'll save that for my own 🙂 I ultimately would have liked to use an intel drive in a friends build, knowing that they are the most reliable SSD's available.

Intel FTW. I'm just a corsair fanboy 🙂
 
Thanks everyone for the input, it really is appreciated.

I ended up buying the Corsair Force SSD, partly because I *LOVE* Corsair, and partly due to it being different than I've tried in the past...
I'm just a corsair fanboy 🙂

Then why not have Corsair on the list of SSDs you were inquiring about?
I feel cheated.
 
Hahahaa, I honestly have no idea. Some of my research is done in the morning before I drink coffee, some is done while at work without much time to dally around, and, like now, some is done after a half dozen beers 🙂

Time-wise, I posted this thread hours before I realized that a 120gb HDD really is overkill, I included the one 90GB drive since I started thinking that, and after realizing that a 90GB drive would work I figured what the hell, if a 90GB drive would work then a 80GB should be good enough!

Then I looked for the best deal on a 80GB drive 🙂

Really, it's surprising that a 120GB drive isn't that much more $$$ than a 80GB model!

Okthanksbye.
 
could an American explain to a Brit what the fuck is the point of a MIR?

Not a American, but I can answer it in part. There are present in my country as well but to a far far lesser extent I am glad to say.

In terms of purchases, MIR is "Mail In Rebate". It has other terms depending on what you are talking about.

On the top, it is as you say. Extra paperwork for nothing. In fact though, it is bearly better than a con in my opinion personally.

Why it is not done at the check out is it is expected the retailer will not pass the money on to the customer. Experence shows a large enough number of people at the check out counter will pocket the refund themselves (if not the business). Customer never sees it.

If it was done at the wholesale level, their could be issues going forward as retailers will not buy unless the price is dropped again. Forcing a always discounted price which a manufacture does not want long term.

Now, but offering the rebait this way, the customer is more likly to get the money. To process these occational rebaits, the manufacture outsources the job of checking and paying claims to a third party business. It is about here things go pair shaped. Between working out the terms of the MIR (ie: dates between <x> and <y>) and processing time (some upto 8 weeks) and little things not completed correctly (processing agent does not think you filled in the paperwork correctly) or meeting processing times (ie: need to have a claim in the agents hand within 1 month of MIR offer ending) and meeting the required method of applying for the MIR (ie: generally need to post it, registered if you want to track it) and assuming the form is not "lost" (agent too lazy or did actually get lost), it can result in a lot of people just giving up.

At which point, the MIR feels like a con to those customers so they ignore future ones, espically if the offering is only a few dollars.

Given the businesses that sprung up to process the MIR on behalf of manufactures, I am surprised there are not more businesses springing up to help the customers through this process. But IIRC, someone mentioned it is against the terms of a MIR offering for that to happen (conditions in place to stop people getting help to claim? that sounds fair).

The MIR agents are proberly working hard to process claims, but I suspect it is in the interest of the businesses for most claims not to be completed correctly, so they can get the manufacture to pay them, but they do not need to pass it on to the customer (but that is my conspiracy theory of the system anyway).
 
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