Quantcast
PC World: Technology Advice You Can Trust
Find a Review
Free Newsletters
Receive the latest reviews, how-to's, news, and more.
Desktop Essentials
Tech-Savvy Business
Weekly Brief
WiFi Finder
Locate wireless services by a specific address, city, state, country, airport, or zip code.
RSS Feeds
Get our latest content via convenient RSS feeds.
Latest News
Today @ PC World
Become a PCW Member
Join the community and start enjoying the benefits:
  • Get tech advice from thousands of PC World Members
  • Rate and recommend the latest tech products
  • Share your thoughts in blog and article comments
  • Get free excerpts and exclusive discounts on Super Guides

Technology's Most (and Least) Reliable Brands

Which companies can you trust? We asked 60,000 PC World readers--and they told us about their experiences with PCs, printers, cameras, routers, and more.

Jeff Bertolucci

Thursday, November 29, 2007 10:00 PM PST
Recommend this story?

What the Measures Mean

We asked PC World readers to rate vendors in six product categories: laptops, desktops, printers, digital cameras, routers, and MP3 players. Each category contained nine subsections for rating a vendor in specific areas of customer service or product reliability. Each company was judged relative to its competitors.

In each subsection, we distributed every vendor's score into one of three rating categories: significantly better than average, not significantly different from average, or significantly worse than average. If a vendor drew fewer than 50 responses in a subsection, we discarded the results as statistically unstable. Some smaller vendors received too few votes for us to accurately rate their reliability and service.

Reliability Measures

  • Problems on arrival (all devices): Based on the percentage of survey respondents who reported one or more problems with the device right out of the box.
  • Any hardware or software problem (all devices): Based on the percentage of survey respondents who reported any problem at all during the product's lifetime.
  • Satisfaction with reliability (all devices): Based on the owner's overall satisfaction with the reliablity of the device.
  • Failed component (laptops and desktop PCs): Based on the percentage of survey respondents who reported replacing one or more original components because they failed.
  • Core component problem (laptops and desktop PCs): Based on the percentage of survey respondents who reported problems with the CPU, motherboard, power supply, hard drive, system memory, or graphics board/chip at any time during the life of their laptop or desktop PC.
  • Severe problems (printers, cameras, routers, and MP3 players): Based on the percentage of survey respondents who reported a problem that rendered their device impossible to use.
  • Ease of use (printers, cameras, routers, and MP3 players): Based on the percentage of survey respondents who rated their device as extremely or very easy to use.

Service Measures

  • Phone hold time: Based on the average time a product's owners waited on hold to speak to a phone support rep.
  • Phone rating: Based on a cumulative score derived from product owners' ratings of several aspects of their experience in phoning the company's technical support service. Among the factors considered were whether the information was easy to understand, and whether the support rep spoke clearly and knowledgeably.
  • Failure to resolve problem: Based on the percentage of survey respondents who said the problem was never resolved after contacting the company's support service.
  • Service experience: Based on a cumulative score derived from product owners' responses to a series of questions focusing on 11 particular aspects of their experience with the company's service department.

We polled more than 60,000 PC World and PCWorld.com readers who responded to print advertisements and e-mail messages. We used methods of statistical analysis to determine which companies were significantly better or worse than the average, based on all responses about a certain product type.

Because our survey sample consists entirely of PC World's generally tech-savvy readers, it may not be representative of the general population, which may have different expectations and experiences with technology products.


Recommend this story?

Comments
Latest News
Microsoft is aiming to capture 40 percent of the smartphone market with Windows Mobile by the year 2012, an executive said... 13-May-2008
Microsoft's reluctance to make its Office suite interoperable with competing products has prompted a British government agency... 13-May-2008
Japan's Pioneer plans to end production of plasma display panels as part of a restructuring program to return its operations... 13-May-2008
There is a lot of good news in Africa, especially in the mobile space, but regulatory and technical challenges remain for both... 13-May-2008
More and more Internet service providers are blocking traffic to the peer-to-peer file-sharing service. Find out whether you've been targeted, and learn how get around the restrictions. 12-May-2008
Advanced Micro Devices announced a series of executive changes Monday, including the creation of a Central Engineering... 12-May-2008
Intel's test and assembly plant in Chengdu remained offline on Tuesday, as the region in southwestern China reeled from the... 12-May-2008
Nokia is extending its mobile navigation system to the Web via its Ovi.com site, where people will be able to save map... 12-May-2008
An anonymous hacker has posted personal data about 6 million Chilean residents on the Internet, highlighting wider privacy... 12-May-2008
GameTrailers has a musical little tribute up today detailing some of the more glaring--and hilarious--Grand Theft Auto IV... 12-May-2008

PC World's Marketplace

PC World's Free Whitepapers

Name City
Address 1 State Zip
Address 2 E-mail (optional)