So irritated, my Envy m6 1105 dx (as evidently many HP laptops still are)...is still using the same hinge situation and the same glue situation and the same cheap tiny lightweight plastic frame situation around the case that the altogether not coincidently to tight of hinges are screwed to, which is then glued to the aluminum cover, and that with HP's knowledge of this situation and lack of taking responsibility to reengineer away this catastrophic failure to the benefit of the end user, I was allowed, and everyone is allowed, to purchase a laptop that when the stress on the glue ultimately fails it pulls the plastic frame corner and hence the hinge off the cover which tweeks and cracks and breaks that plastic, pulls on electrical etc .. And when one side of the covers glue against the aluminum fails, this causes the other side of the cover and the hinge to be torqued and tweeked pulling the glue away from the opposite side of the cover and cracking the cheap tiny lightweight plastic frame the hinge is screwed into on this side too ... in a big snowballing mess ... so of course the bezel cracks where it is molded to cover the hinge on the side that busted loose first, as it gets compressed...and the screen connector pulls out of the screen and burns out the lovely, now black, screen and turns it into a large skipping stone... and hence planned obsolence and lack of corporate responsibility to the customer is apparently trumped by corporate responsibility to the quarterly earnings statement. I have waited for a reply from HP here, got none, so called HPINVENT and was effectively told to pound sand and as HP's engineered planned obsolence is not a manufacturing defect and has been going on for at lease eight years, is thus not a warrenty issue I missed out on, it is thus not my liability to bear. As it appears no responsibility is being taken to even contact, apologize for and replace or repair this mess I would at this point thus just love to be the poster child to reinitiate the 2008-2009 hinges class action or similar, as the design is for us consumers to be obviously as disposable as these HP laptops are designed to be... and no lessons were learned except that there was no price to pay last time HP was called on the carpet for this same catastrophic issue. (case # 3025288927)