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You close the screen to your laptop and hear that dreaded sound of glass cracking. Your heart sinks and you get a lump in your throat as you slowly open the laptop back up. Upon opening the laptop, you see on the keyboard the cap to a USB thumb drive. As you open the top further you can see the cracked glass, and start wondering how long and how much the repair will be. Does the time for repair outweigh the cost of just buying a new laptop?
So how many of you have experienced this nightmare of breaking your laptop screen? After looking into getting it replaced by the manufacturer and learning how outrageous it costs to do so, the majority of us pretty much end up biting the bullet and purchasing a new notebook. It really hurts when the notebook is still new. We end up forking out dough now for a second laptop, not to mention the downtime while purchasing and setting up the new one. It probably won't make you feel much better to know that an estimated 3 million notebook users end up breaking their screens every year. But what if you had a cost-effective alternative to this problem? Instead of replacing the whole notebook, you could just replace the screen.
Who on earth, might you ask, provides this?
Voree Inc, a Philadelphia based company, offers customers replacement notebook screens at an affordable price that makes repairing your system much more cost effective than buying a new notebook. In addition, screen replacement is less time consuming than having to transfer all your data files, applications and personal settings to a new notebook. By replacing the screen, a notebook user can save an average of $700 per breakage incident based on the 2006 average cost of a new notebook computer. This cost savings when extended to the more than 3 million notebook users per year that break their screens can represent a $2 billon industry-wide savings opportunity.
Most notebook makers carry a limited supply of replacement screens for any particular model due to their cost and uncertainty with respect to future screen replacement demand. ScreenTek claims they carry screens for more than 90% of notebooks that are less than 3 years old including both Apple and PC. Furthermore, these screens are the exact same screens you would buy if you purchased a replacement screen direct from the notebook maker, but for significantly less.
A typical 14.0� wide screen for example direct from one of the large notebook brands could cost between $600 and $900, but @ Voree the exact same brand new screen would only cost $295.
So how do we provide prices lower than the notebook makers? Well, it is a combination of volume purchasing from the screen manufacturers and high pricing maintained by the notebook makers.
Call us now for your free estimate (877) 558-6733
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