Something I found out the other day about AppleCare warranties which I guess everyone else already knows but I was just to stupid to realise: it turns out that the product you're trying to protect must still be within its original one-year warranty. Yeah, I know, seems obvious. So obvious in fact that Apple doesn't see the need to post this information anywhere on the Apple Store or in the copy of the Terms and Conditions which they make available on-line. It is, however, written on the side of the AppleCare box. In small grey letters.
They're in the process of refunding my money, but it still leaves me with a first-gen, one-year-and-thirteen-days-old MacBook Pro which could find itself in need of expensive warranty work at any moment.
Friday, October 26, 2007
Downloads from the Apple Store
I bought iWork `08 the other day, in serial key rather than cardboard box form, and when the e-mail invoice arrived a few days later I noticed one rather interesting thing. Rather than the UK's 17.5% VAT (sales tax) rate, it was taxed at the 21% operating in Ireland, home of Apple's European HQ. The other -- physical -- goods which I ordered at the same time appeared on a separate invoice and were taxed at the UK's standard rate. Checking back through some old invoices, the same was true of the copy of QuickTime Pro I bought last year.
The moral of the story is that those of you who are able to reclaim their VAT would be wise to consider taking the download option where available: in this case, you would be paying £45.45 + £9.55 rather than ~£46.80 + £8.20. Across large orders the savings could really add up.
I wonder if the same is true for downloads purchased in other EU countries, and also whether it applies to purchases from iTunes (although you'd probably have a job convincing the Taxman that that Led Zeppelin box set you just bought is a valid deduction).
The moral of the story is that those of you who are able to reclaim their VAT would be wise to consider taking the download option where available: in this case, you would be paying £45.45 + £9.55 rather than ~£46.80 + £8.20. Across large orders the savings could really add up.
I wonder if the same is true for downloads purchased in other EU countries, and also whether it applies to purchases from iTunes (although you'd probably have a job convincing the Taxman that that Led Zeppelin box set you just bought is a valid deduction).
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