11 ways tech companies try to pull the wool over your eyes

7. Space for your stuff

When you buy a tablet with 64GB of storage space, you don't expect more than half of it to be unavailable - but that's exactly what happened with the Surface Pro thanks to Windows 8, pre-installed apps and a recovery partition taking up stacks of space.

The Surface was unusually hungry, but the issue applies to all devices with storage - so for example a 16GB iPad, which is offering a fairly small amount of storage to begin with, ships with around 13GB of available storage.

Surface - storage was for Windows not for the likes of you

Surface - storage was for Windows not for the likes of you

8. Phone coverage maps

It seems that mobile phone networks' coverage checkers should be called coverage guessers: some maps don't make it clear that you might not get a signal indoors, they don't reflect key factors such as building density and tree coverage, and because different operators measure signal in different ways you can't really use the maps to compare providers.

Our tip? Always make sure there's a cooling-off period if you're signing up for a network you haven't previously used in your area.

9. Real-life results

Tech advertising uses all kinds of tricks to mislead, from carefully shot photos to speeded-up footage that makes devices look faster than they actually are.

Nokia got into a bit of trouble with its Lumia 920: it's alleged that the footage and photos supposedly shot using the device were nothing of the sort.

Lumia - a good camera, but is it THAT good?

Lumia - a good camera, but is it THAT good?

10. The price is right

The Advertising Standards Authority banned Sky's Bruce Willis advert over misleading price claims: the ad promised unlimited broadband for £7.50 a month but if you squinted at the small print you'd see that you also needed £14.50 monthly line rental and £21.50 TV subscription - bringing the total monthly cost to £43.50.

We can't be the only ones whose broadband, TV and phone package prices bear no resemblance to the prices you see in the ads.

11. We've got the power

This one is our favourite, and yet again it involves the ASA: in its pre-Google days, Motorola got an ASA ruler over the knuckles for claiming that its Atrix phone was "the world's most powerful smartphone".

When it was pointed out that it clearly wasn't - Samsung's Galaxy S II had a 1.2GHz processor compared to the 1GHz one in the Atrix - Moto essentially said "well yeah but our one has a keyboard and stuff". It turns out that there's power, and then there's ACCESSORY POWER!

Carrie Marshall
Contributor

Writer, broadcaster, musician and kitchen gadget obsessive Carrie Marshall (Twitter) has been writing about tech since 1998, contributing sage advice and odd opinions to all kinds of magazines and websites as well as writing more than a dozen books. Her memoir, Carrie Kills A Man, is on sale now. She is the singer in Glaswegian rock band HAVR.