Depends. Why don't you tell us what the issue is (or was)? On Friday, May 23, 2003, at 10:04 PM, Chuck Pelto wrote: > Hi David, > > "I'm sure there are more economical ways to get OS X server support." > -- > David > > Yeah? Tell me about them.... > > Regards, > > Chuck(le) > > David Livesay wrote: > >> I doubt they would support server issues on OS X at all. I was told >> that they don't support Unix stuff or even logging in to OS X as root. >> >> I'm sure there are more economical ways to get OS X server support. >> >> On Friday, May 23, 2003, at 07:10 PM, Walter Ian Kaye wrote: >> >>> At 04:38p -0600 05/23/2003, Chuck Pelto didst inscribe upon an >>> electronic papyrus: >>> >>>> I just got off the phone with Apple Tech Support for OS X Server. >>>> >>>> According to them, if you have technical questions about the OS X >>>> Server >>>> software after 90 days of your purchase, you have to pay $200 per >>>> incident. >>>> >>>> Is this correct? >>>> >>>> If so, this is the last Apple product I will buy. >>> >>> >>> Server isn't meant for individual folks; it's meant for businesses >>> that can write off the expenses. Plenty of people use the non-server >>> version of OS X for running server software. Vendors (whether Apple >>> or third party) should really raise a red flag if an individual wants >>> to buy Server; perhaps you can guilt-trip your vendor into a refund >>> or credit for the price of Server (perhaps give you AppleCare >>> protection in its place), and revert your machine to the non-server >>> version of OS X? AppleCare for a G4 itself is $249, and would cover >>> whatever OS came with it, for three years. Or maybe the $49 plan >>> would cover it? There are many options cheaper than the $200/incident >>> plan, so call Apple back and get them to tell you what they all are >>> and what they cover. >>> <http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=14724> >>> >>> >>> -boo >>> >> -- >> Dave >> ==== >> "This is not a novel to be tossed aside lightly. It should be thrown >> with great force." >> -- Dorothy Parker >> >> >> -- Dave ==== First draw the curve, then plot the data.