Do the newer macbooks also suffer random shutdowns?

Hi there, I'm considering buying a Mac, and I'm stumped for choice. I'm choosing between an iMac 17 inch to replace my PC, or a Macbook for portability. If I am going to be buying a Macbook, I want to know if Apple tested them for random shutdowns first, just so I know that I won't be buying a machine that I'll have to send out within the first week of recieving it. If the new macbooks (as in the ones with Core 2 Duo processors) still suffer random shutdowns I'll probably go for an iMac instead.

You're claim that everyone who owns 1 (22 out of 25 people) has a problem is total hogwash. Geez, why would you say such a thing? I recently sold my Core Duo BlackBook, one of the first 500 off the assembly line), and never once had a problem with it - ever! I really didn't want to sell it because it was such a fine workhorse but I wanted 801.n on my home network and needed a C2D to get that. I carried it around on all my hospital rounds and it contained every one of my patient's health records. If MacBooks were as you claimed then Jobs must of personally touched my BlackBook with the luck of the Gods!
Before it was even sold I bought another C2D BlackBook, loaded it with 3Gig of RAM (yes, you CAN upgrade to 3Gig) and the thing is a most excellent machine. Faster, sleeker, and works like a champ. I transferred all my patient's records within 20 minutes.
My advice: don't believe the naysayers. Especially here. These forums were established to assist MacBook users with all issues, including problems. But the number of problems is miniscule and those you read here come from less than 1% of the MacBook owners.
The Core Duo BlackBook sold for just $200 less then what I paid for it and it was fully loaded with everything I could put on it when I originally purchased it. I used it a full year (May to May) and figured the $200 was a year's worth of cheap rental.
BTW, I got a better BlackBook for less money this time around. Faster CPU, larger hard drive, more RAM and a superior laptop to those of my colleagues - what more could a geek physician ask for?
Tim...

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