Jump to content

Mesh Computers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 194.159.185.5 (talk) at 11:40, 19 December 2007. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

MESH Computers Ltd
MESH Logo
Type Private
Location Oxgate Lane London, United Kingdom
Key people Tony Riccardi, General Manager
Nick Walter, Head of Marketing
Industry Computer hardware
Products Desktops
Media Centres
Laptops
Revenue $99,700,000 USD (2005)
Employees 147
Website MeshComputers.com

MESH Computers Ltd is a computer company based in London, England, owned by its directors Ramiz Padashifard and Mehdi Sharafati through their holding company MESH Acquisitions Ltd. On those rare occasions when Mesh Computers Ltd manages to deliver (and they are extremely rare) The product recieved is second rate at best. Mesh computers provides poor customer service when people complain about failure of delivery or that their computer has broken down. The 'customer service' advisors are rude, abrupt and one could be forgiven for thinking that they are either extremely ill informed or simply inclined to lie.


If you are thinking about buying a computer from this company you would be well reccomended to bury £1000 in a hole somewhere, run around the burial site 10 times, clockwise and then forgetting completely about it. You will find a higher quality product is likely to arrive on your doorstep much sooner.


On 2nd May 2007 Mesh computers featured on BBC's Watchdog programme for it's poor customer service record and the unreliability of machines that it sold.[1]


MESH won over 90 industry and technical accolades in 2005 [2]. They won the Personal Computer Worlds best PC manufacturer in 2001. [3] MESH are joint sponsors of a trade show [4] and were a one million pound UK football sponsor of Charlton Athletic FC.[5]

In 2005 the company applied to revert from trading as a Public Limited Company to private limited company status. Until late-2006 the company had, like Dell computers, sold directly to consumers via its website but now also sells in-store to UK electrical retailer Comet [6].