About buying new macbook

I am in the process of buying a new macbook and was wondering if it is posible to buy 2 macbooks under the student discount if one is referbished and one is new

Hi there,
I am also a student and looking to buy a macbook soon. From what I understand, purchases are limited per school year. I looked through the terms and could only find this:
PURCHASE QUANTITY
Faculty, Staff and Students purchasing from the Apple Store for Education Individuals will be allowed to purchase the following quantities of product per academic school year:
1. Desktop: One (1) may be purchased per academic year
2. Mac mini: One (1) may be purchased per academic year
3. Notebook: One (1) may be purchased per academic year
4. Display: A maximum of two (2) may be purchased per academic year
5. Software: A maximum of two (2) per software title may be purchased per academic year
6. Apple TV: There is no limit on the quantity of Apple TV purchases per academic year
7. iPod: There is no limit on the quantity of iPod purchases per academic year
I believe refurbished items do not get further discounts, as they are already marked down. Hope this helps.

Similar Messages

  • Questions about buying new Macbook

    I have a 2001 iBook, still going and going. It was my first computer. I want to replace it by buying a Macbook. I make webpages, blog, no videogaming, no heavy graphics apps (like PS), only a couple of third-party apps.
    I'm very short of breath so, even though there is an Apple Store in town, it's much better for me to order the Macbook, printer, and any accessories at the online Apple Store, if possible.
    1) The 2001 iBook out-of-box had 128mb RAM. I had to install more RAM (upped it to 384mb RAM) because 128mb was really not sufficient, even with my lightweight use. It had seemed slow and clunky performance-wise. I would rather just buy a Macbook with enough RAM to begin with. Is 1GB going to be the same problem - not quite enough? Should I buy the $1299 2GB model?
    2) The HD was replaced through AppleCare a year after I got the iBook. I wondered if it was my fault in a way because I was new to computers (I had a lot of Kernel Panics at first and once, without thinking I unplugged the computer at the wall socket once during an electrical storm, not realizing that wasn't a good way to shut down). Since then there have been no problems. Now that I have a even touch, work speed, and a sense of how the computer files are organized, I'm not a raw novice. I don't plan to experiment with the Macbook or make myself a rootuser, just work within the GUI. Do I really need AppleCare on the new Macbook? Are those AppleCare repairs largely brought on by user damage? I don't want to buy AppleCare unless it's suicide not to.
    3) I have the iBook on my desk on a piece of cardboard. It never overheats. It has never left my desk, and I don't ever use it on my lap. I like the iBook because it's compact, not because I want to carry it around to coffee shops. However, does a Macbook need some sort of special support like Rain Design iLap to raise it off the desk so it doesn't overheat?
    4) Can I buy the $29 Apple iPod Earphones to plug into the Macbook?
    5) Is iKlear really safe to use on screens? (I've always used water on my iBook, not very effective.)

    You'll see a big difference switching from iBook to MacBook.
    Unless you need the Superdrive, get the cheapest MB with a CD drive or for more money saving buy a refurbished from the online store. Adding RAM and changing the hard drive is easy to do in the MB if you need to do it later.
    Applecare is only two years added to the original one year. You seemed to do fine without it for a number of years on the iBook so why worry about it. Applecare does not cover user inflicted damage, just manufacturing faults.
    I have a new Penryn MB which does not seem to have any heat problem but I still use an incline base under it for the typing angle. I sometimes pressure the MB with PS, video, burning and such but no problems.
    With the world aflame with iPods and other MP3 players, you can get a wide selection of earphones at most computer/electronic stores. I like the in-ear type which makes the music sound like it is in the middle of my brain instead of coming from the outside.
    iKlear is recommended by Apple but I find it streaky. I use a moist cloth, don't touch the screen and keep my hands clean when using the computer.

  • Advice about buying new Macbook

    Hi all,
    I'm trying to decide between the Macbook Air and the Macbook Pro with Retina display, and I'd like to see if people have advice about which one would better serve my needs.
    This is my only computer, and while it needs to be portable, it doesn't need to necessarily be the lightest possible (Macbook Air).
    What I do want is at least 256GB of storage. Right now I have 156GB, and I'm almost maxing it out. I've had to take things off my hard drive to make more room. I have a large iTunes library and a large iPhoto library, and I want all those things on my hard drive.
    I also want good performance because that's where my 2008 Macbook is not doing so well - gets very slow, esp when iPhoto and similar apps are open.
    I need to be able to work with several apps open - Word, Excel, Adobe Reader, Chrome, etc. I don't need to do a lot of gaming or sophisticated video editing or anything like that - I work mostly with MS Office programs.
    So is the Macbook Air good enough or should I get the Macbook Pro?
    Thanks!

    The Air should be ample for your described needs.  If weight is not a consideration, the Air has by far the best battery run time, so if a lot of work is done without an AC outlet available, that is some thing to take into account.
    The Pro has a superior display and is a more powerful machine, but the extra power is not needed for what you have described.
    Personally I would urge you to consider installing as much storage as you can afford.  Using external HDDs in the field gets very old quickly.  Over time data has a habit of increasing.
    One important point to keep in mind, with both the Air and the Pro, no future upgrades are available at this time so configure the unit accordingly.  I would spend my money for upgrades in this order, storage, RAM, CPU.
    Ciao.

  • Have old MacBook Pro running tiger 10.4 want to save date to external hard drive and buy newer MacBook and still use same drive. Any suggestions, most  WD drives say nothing about os tiger 10.4.

    Have old MacBook Pro running tiger 10.4 want to save date to external hard drive and buy newer MacBook and still use same drive. Any suggestions, most  WD drives say nothing about os tiger 10.4. The OS compatibility  is much newer on the data.  Totally confused. Not a computer person.

    I haven't checked reviews recently but there's a difference between bare drives and drives with enclosures.  Western Digital made some of the most reliable drives last time I checked, though the enclosures weren't all that great.  It is convenient to get both in one package but I usually buy a highly rated enclosure and then put a highly rated drive in it myself.  OWC sells some good enclosures but if they put a so-so drive inside of it then the package is only as good as its weakest component.  If you get a package from them, ask them what drive is inside (some vendors have no idea what's inside  -  went to an Apple Store recently and they couldn't tell me what was inside some of their Apple brand enclosures).  My first thought if buying a new drive would be to buy a OWC enclosure with a WD drive, but chek around because I may be out of date.
    10 years ago Seagate was one of the best drives. Now they rate poorly in reviews.

  • Buy new MacBook in Paris (with English keyboard layout)

    I want to buy new Macbook in Paris with US keyboard layout not French one. Since there are no official Mac Store in France how can I do that ?
    Oh one more thing. I also want to laser Russian alphabet on buttons in Paris. Is it possible to do that ?

    http://store.apple.com/fr - this is a reseller.
    No, it's not, not if you mean an independently-owned company apart from Apple. It's the official Apple Store, owned by Apple. When you order from that Apple Store, you're ordering directly from Apple.
    why don't they writу full number with France code - as far as I know it is 33. so it is 33 0800 046 046
    Probably because they assume that anyone ordering from the French Apple Store is in France and so doesn't need the country code. Why you can't get through to that number from another country, as I presume you're attempting, I can't say.
    Well the information I have from Russian reseller is that they order them from US or UK they do not laser buttons in Russia.
    Again, what Apple can and will do for a distributor/dealer is different from what they can do for an individual purchaser. Apple computers sold in a given country are usually only sold with a keyboard applicable to that country. Getting a different keyboard is often just not possible as may well be the case for you.
    A workaround might be to get a MacBook with a keyboard from another language and get a set of Russian keyboard overlay stickers. Another possibility would be to purchase an external USB keyboard with Russian keys. Neither option would be an elegant solution but it might be worth it if you can save as much as you say by buying in France. Again, though, note that Apple France will not ship a system to you in Russia (or any other country); you'd have to go to France to get it.

  • About the new macbook pro connectivity .. help!!

    I was wondering about the new macbook pro 13". If i use a mini displayport to hdmi cable, could i use the macbook pro as a display for ps3?

    Hi and welcome to Discussions,
    sorry, but no.
    The MBP has only a Video-Out port, not a Video-In port.
    Regards
    Stefan
    Message was edited by: Fortuny

  • So I'm thinking about buying a Macbook pro with 512 gb harddrive and 8gb of ram. But I don't know whether to get a 2.4 ghz or 2.7 ghz processor? I mainly use my computer for a lot of music, internet, and other teenage things

    So I'm thinking about buying a Macbook pro with 512 gb harddrive and 8gb of ram. But I don't know whether to get a 2.4 ghz or 2.7 ghz processor? I mainly use my computer for a lot of music, internet, and other teenage things

    2.4ghz is plenty of processing, if it means you'll save money over the 2.7ghz. I'd have suggested 2.7 if you also do heavy video editing/rendering using FCP, etc... but the spec you have is plenty

  • Looking to buy new MacBook Pro for editing with Premiere/After Effects, but wondering about trade-off between Processor Speed and Graphics Card

    I'm a professional video editor (using Premiere and After Effects) looking to buy a new MacBook Pro and am deciding between two models. The slightly older model has a 2.8GHZ i7 (3rd generation) Quad Core processor with a 1GB SDRAM of NVIDIA GE FORCE GT 650M Graphics Card. Then newer model has a 2.3GHZ i7 (4th generation) Quad Core preocessor with 2GB SDRAM of NVIDIA GE FORCE 750M/Intel Iris Pro Graphics Card.
    Which makes the most difference (processor speed vs. graphics card) with editing with Premiere and After Effects?
    Any help/guidance would be greatly appreciated.
    Thanks!
    mike

    Poikkeus wrote:
    1. Your MBP will be somewhat slower than your iMac, as reflected in the general speed; desktop Macs have more RAM and storage.
    You recon? If he get's the 17", he would have up to 8x more RAM, 4 x more GPU,, and  a bit faster CPU;.
    2. Be aware of the advantages and disadvantages of extra RAM. Loading up the slot will make juggling multiple applications easier, like Photoshop, VLC, and Safari. However, more than 4gigs of RAM will make loading your MBP on startup twice as slow - at least a minute, probably longer. That's why a MBP user with extra RAM should sleep their machine nearly always when not in use, rather than powering off. 
    I did not know this, I just upgraded from 4gb to 8gb the other day. Have not noticed it being slower, but I don't often shut it down. It's nice to not even have to bother with ifreemem.
    3. Additional storage and RAM will maximize the basic capabilities of your MBP, but you won't be able to make a 2.3ghz machine any faster than it already is.
    SSD
    4. I still feel that your iMac will be faster than your prospective MBP. The only way to dramatically increase the speed would be the installation of a SSD drive (like the lauded OWC series). But they're not cheap.
    I don't want to rain on your parade, but want you to get a more realistic idea of your performance.
    I chose a macbook pro, 17" of cause. I use it for gaming. Yes a iMac is better for gaming. But, it's nice to be able to move around. Set up a man cave in the lounge 1 week, or in the bedroom, the next. But you fork out a lot more dosh for that luxury. And yes, not as much power as Poikkeus has said.

  • Buy new Macbook Pro now or wait until 2015

    Hi!
    I'm currently trying to decide between buying a new Macbook Pro 15" right now, or waiting for any possible releases next year.
    I'm totally dependent upon my laptop for both school and work. I heavily use programs such as Photoshop, Xcode, and others on an everyday basis. My current laptop is a summer '09 unibody Macbook Pro 13" (the cheapest version), with upgraded aftermarket storage and ram (two years ago). It works surprisingly well, and I could probably go on living perfectly fine with it. However, I find myself every day swearing over how annoyed I am by it. I often resort to turning it off and back on due to it freezing or lagging. But by all means, I can live with it.
    I was planning on buying a new Mac last winter, but I decided to wait for a possible upgrade this summer (2014). But when that was released I couldn't buy it until September because I was abroad. When I finally got back, I reluctantly decided to wait for a larger upgrade this October (heard something about Broadwell processors), but that didn't come.
    I figured since I waited that long, I might as well just wait a bit longer (until January). However yesterday my charger stopped working (Apple gave me a new one free of charge), and I realized how fragile and old my laptop is. I better trade it in before anything serious goes wrong.
    So now I'm trying to decided whether I should wait for a possible upgrade or buy a new one now. I don't think whatever upgrade is coming will be large enough for it to be worth it, but I just don't wanna splurge $2500 on a new mcbp if it's gonna be outdated soon. When I'm buying something I like it to be just after it was released, to avoid situations where I'm left with a brand new outdated product.
    I'm scared that if I buy it now I will regret it if a new version comes out soon. However, I'm scared that if I don't buy it now I'll end up waiting indefinitely (or just until next summer).
    It'd be stupid of me to waste time now using my old Mac when I'm clearly in need of a new one. But again, I wouldn't be able to live with myself if they release a new major update in early 2015.
    So hopefully someone understands my problem. My question is: what do you guys think is the right thing to do? What updates can we expect to see to the Macbook Pro line, and when can we expect to see them? Are we talking about minor upgrades like this past summer, or are we talking massive design changes, lighter and thinner body, better screen and performance? And would we see this in early (Q1, Q2) 2015 or as late as 2016? I know you can't give any definite answers, but at least you can make better assumptions than me haha.
    Thanks!

    We don't know. We have no more insight into Apple's plans for 2015 than you do. Making your decisions for you is not the purpose of these forums, so please do your own research and make your own decisions. If you have a technical problem with an Apple product then that is a proper use of these forums.
    Apple Support Communities - Terms of Use

  • Buying New Macbook

    I would like to Buy a New Macbook, is anyone help me to choose which one is good to buy, white one or the new that recently came to market

    Unless you really have to have the shiny Black glass model (which does look pretty awesome and has the light-up keys in the dark!), I see no reason to spend more on it instead of getting the classic White MacBook. There just doesn't seem to be that big of a difference to me in functionality for most users, except for looks and a big bad difference in price!
    I do wonder if anyone has an opinion on whether the glass screen of the new model is easier to clean than the White MacBooks? I would be a little nervous touting glass around with me in my bag, but that may be false alarm.
    Here is my experience with the early 2009 White MacBook and a refurbished early 2008 White MacBook:
    I just picked out a new early 2009 White MacBook for my sister, and we are very happy with its performance. My sis runs Photoshop Elements on it to do graphics, loads graphic heavy websites and flash sites, watches and downloads tons of video and images, and she hasn't had any issues yet. The computer is fast and hasn't had any bugs or errors. Just the other day she was editing a movie she and classmates made in iMovie. The white MacBook has plenty of room and capability for everything she needs (and she is a downloader!), and the decision should be about what you need.
    I use a refurbished early 2008 White MacBook, and it is great! I use it for all the same things as my sis on her newer model, with no complaints except that the fan annoys me a bit on some game websites (but I installed a fan controller that helps). It is indistinguishable from the 2009 White MacBook, except for these three details:
    • It runs a tad bit slower and the fan kicks on more often, but not a big deal. This is because the 2008 model has only 1 GB of memory vs. 2009's 2 GB.
    • Soon after I got my refurbished MacBook, I did have to send it to Apple once for repair (on AppleCare's dime) when the display went haywire, I think likely a result of the computer being refurbished. They returned it quickly and it's been perfect ever since.
    • My computer, like many others, did get the mysterious "freeze-on-sleep" bug after upgrading to 10.5.7 -- easily fixed by adding the Ethernet option in Networks -- while the 2009 White MacBook did not.
    I hope this is helpful!
    Message was edited by: Jae B

  • Stay by my LiquidMix or buy new MacBook??

    Hi
    maybe some people can help me in my suggestion.
    My Powerbook is now something about 5 years old. i like it because it is an 12". I would love to switch to the new MacBook, but it has no FireWire. So i´m strugeling. Should I sell my LM and buy a Plugin so that I can switch to the MAcBook? Or what would you do? I will not switch to the Pro Series because I want a small inch machine.
    So, what would you do?

    While the loss of FW is a heartbreak, the LM vs 2.4ghz on MacBook is a tough call.
    The 2.4 Macbook with 4gb of ram will surely trump the LM, but what you sacrifice always is horsepower that can be allocated to other things.
    Were it me? I would go for the MacBook and box the LM until such a time a Mac Pro or iMac become a reality for you. As much as we would all like to have it all, Apple has made it difficult for us.
    The white MacBook is a bit of a sleeper. And maxed out, that 2.0 processor won't see the same headroom the 2.4 can.
    Just my 2.

  • Repair or buy new macbook?

    I spilled a cup of tea on my 2009 aluminum macbook. They say it'll cost 775 to repair it. I could buy 1,000 for a new one. I'm leaning toward repair since I like my computer but is there a reason to buy a new one? Has it improved much since 2009?

    Hi Judy,
    Sorry to hear about your coffee spill. One thing to consider if you go the route of a new machine is that you'd get a one year limited warranty with the option to buy the AppleCare Protection Plan for the machine. If you go the $775 route you'd only get a 90-day limited warranty and you're out of AppleCare Protection range unless the machine already has it.
    Let's talk differences:
    If you have the 2.4GHz model, there's no improvement with the newer MacBook. It uses the same CPU, Cache and System Bus speed.
    It does not have an illuminated keyboard, again if you have the 2.4GHz model
    The new MacBook would come with Snow Leopard and iLife '11, your machine came with Leopard and most likely iLife '08.
    Both can run up to 8GB of RAM (Apple only officially supports up to 4GB)
    The new MacBook has a newer GPU (320M vs 9400M) and while the newer one does benchmark higher (and thus on paper is better) unless you're gaming or rendering a lot of 3D images you won't see a difference.
    The new MacBook does not have an IR port if you wanted to use the remote
    The new MacBook has a much stronger battery (63.5 watt hour vs. 45 watt hour). As such Apple is saying you should be able to get double the run time off a full charge with the newer MacBook than your currently battery. But obviously, your mileage will vary.
    So much improved? Not really. But it's important to consider what I mentioned earlier about the warranty/AppleCare Protection situation.

  • Looking to buy new Macbook Pro...

    I'm a grad student with only so much money to spend on a laptop, so I'd like to know whether I can add the upgrade graphics card and more RAMM memory later... oh, and how about GHz speed? Can I upgrade for the GHz speed as well later. The more important thing to me is the graphics card though. Thanks for the help. The only reason I'd want the upgrade graphics card is if I'd like to play some of the newest games at some point.
    I will be buying the Macbook Pro 15.4" laptop with 2.53 GHz, 4 GB SDRAM DDR3, 250 GB serial hard drive and anti-glare screen.

    Thanks for the answer. I do have a couple more. I currently have a Dell Inspirion 9100 with 3.20 GHz and what I think is a 9700 radon graphics card. Will my Macbook Pro 2.53 GHz dual 2 be faster? Oh, and will the 9400 graphics card in the Macbook Pro support games such as Diablo, Macgees Alice and Wonderland, various Myst games and Stronghold 2 (yes, it will be in PC mode because it's only available for PC and I will be buying the VMware 3)? Thanks again. I am really new to Mac, however, when I started college many years back, I had bought and loved the Mac Classic (which I still have and use from time to time .

  • Buy new MacBook Pro 15 inch

    Hi, I intend to buy a new MacBook Pro 15 inch soon. Is it recommanded to buy one now? What if Snow Leopard comes out in a few weeks/months? How do these things work when a complete new OS comes out? I mean will there be problems or high costs to run it on the recent hardware?
    I am new in this. I hope someone can give me a little information.
    Thanks!!

    Since apple over-hauled the MBP line last October and gave it a small speed bump, I do not think you'll see any updates to the line anytime soon. Maybe a small speed bump in June or October but that's about it. The biggest change will occur when intel released the mobile version(s) of the Nehalem processor. That won't occur until late 2009 or early 2010.
    As for Snow Leopard no official release date has been given by apple which could mean that you won't see it for a little while. Apple does provide release dates but they are typically a couple of months in advance. If you did buy a MBP now and apple just so happened to release Snow Leopard a couple of weeks later they typically give you a coupon for a free upgrade.
    We really comment on how well things run on the new OS because many of us don't have it and those that do are bound by Apple's non-disclosure agreement. If you look at Apple's prior OS upgrades, you can see that unlike windows there's been very little compatibility or stability issues. Apple does an excellent job of providing a stable and well rounded OS.

  • When to buy new macbook?

    My son is heading off to college in September, soooo it's time to pick up a new macbook-whats the current thought on timing? Educators discount? Referb by then??? I'm thinking maybe a newer version could be out by July?
    Thanks

    If the mind is made up with regards to what model to buy I would take the exact oppoasite position. Given the recent release of the MacBook a revision isn't going to appear before the start of college in September so there's no reason to be waiting for something.
    Then by buying now there is an opportunity to use the system, get used to, plenty of time to trash the OS a few times, install Boot Camp etc and get it wrong until September. During the next two month you also get an opportunity to resolve any hardware issues which you don't get when buying at the last minute.
    There's a good offer with the iPod on the table so why wait?

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