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deal info
Created:Thursday, September 13, 2007
Members: Thursday, September 13, 2007 at 15:55 eastern (1163 days ago)
Public: Thursday, September 13, 2007 at 16:00 eastern
Expiration:unknown
Location:Newegg.com (click this link)
Heat level:this is a good deal
Countries:available in USA
Details:1GB DDR2 Laptop Computer Memory $33 after rebate
Corsair Valueselect 1GB DDR2 667MHz Memory Module for Notebook Computers for $38 plus $5 shipping, and a $10 mail-in rebate is available. Most other stores sell 1GB laptop computer memory for around $50, and this memory has pretty good reviews.

You must have an available DDR2-compatible memory slot available in your laptop. The easiest way to see if your laptop computer is compatible with this memory is to run Crucial's Memory Scanner and see if you have an empty slot, and confirm your existing memory is listed as "DDR2", or says "DDR PC2-####" where the #### is 5300 or less (because this Corsair memory is PC2-5300). If no empty slots are available, you would need to replace an existing module to use this 1GB module.

Update: Last week's rebate has expired, and same deal available with a new rebate this week.
Companies:NewEgg.com, Corsair
Categories:computer hardware
Advisory: This deal requires the customer to mail in at least one rebate. Make sure that you save a copy of the rebate form immediately, just in case they take the rebate form offline. It is also recommended that you mail in the rebate immediately after receipt of the item, otherwise you might forget to do so. And you should mark the maximum date that your check is expected to arrive, so that you follow up with the company if you do not receive the check in time. Rebates can be annoying, time consuming, and require a responsible person to follow the tedious rebate instructions. And, this involves the possible risk of the customer fulfilling the rebate requirements but the company choosing not to send the customer a rebate check for any reason. The more well-known or reputable the company is (the company itself, not the company's products), the more likely it is that you will get your rebate. If the rebate is from a company that you've never heard of, of if you question the company's business practices, chances are high that you will never see a rebate check. Understand that dealing with rebates are risky, so ask yourself if the product is worth full price in case you never receive a rebate check.

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