Barnes & Noble contacted us to let us know that the discrepancy wasnât false advertising: the problem was on Scottâs end. Swapping in a new MicroSD card solved the problem. Try that with an iPad!
He wrote to us:
Thanks to some insight from a friend, I am now able to download/rent movies on my Nook HD+. The issue was the MicroSD card I was attempting to store the movies on. My friend suggested I try a different card & voila, problem solved. While this doesnât explain what I was told in my call to B&Nâs Nook support number (I think the rep was having a very bad day for some reason), it resolves my problem.
[A representative] from B&N had very nicely reached out to me & scheduled a call with a couple of Nook techs for this afternoon to attempt to resolve the problem. Iâve notified him that the call is no longer necessary.
Great news all around! Advanced techs at Barnes & Noble reached out to help a customer solve an unusual problem that might have affected other users, but that was really due to a third-party accessory.
Scottâs interaction with the customer service rep shows why sometimes it can pay off to call back, brave the customer service queue again, and get someone who knows what the hell theyâre doing.
PREVIOUSLY:
Nook Website Says You Can Download The Movies You Rent To Watch Later? Too Bad
Source Article from http://consumerist.com/2013/03/12/nook-customers-can-download-rentals-you-just-need-a-working-sd-card/
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