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Poll: New Computer Vs Coin
Strait forward... I have a five year old computer... total jaloppy. It's slow. It crashes. The keyboard locks up right in the middle of what I'm typing and the only way I can fix it is to get down and pull the plug out of the back of the computer, then plug it back in. My monitor is the standard 250 lb type of the era five years ago... well, ok, 15 lbs... big box. I just went to dell.com and to hook myself up with a sweet one complete with a nice new LCD monitor, it'd run about $1600. I could get a couple of really nice coins for my cent set for that. I know the pros and cons of the finances of the issues. The coins are a much better financial investment. The computer isnt an investment at all... total depriciation. However, it would be a "quality of life" upgrade. So... I'm gonna poll and will probably do what the majority rules... give it your best vote!
David
David
0
Comments
Tom
42/92
I would scale back by 40% on the PC and buy a coin with whats left.
42/92
Unless new computer hardware is fun for you, or unless you need to run newer games and CAD applications, why not let your PC run as intended, until it develops hardware failures? Making a new computer meaningful to you (with your favorite applications) will consume almost as much time as making your old one faster and more stable after wiping out years of accumulated installations.
42/92
Jeremy
p.s. I don't even have my own computer (there just happens to be one that I can use where I live).
I build, sell and integrate computers for a living, and I have to advise you to get a new computer, but stay away from the Dell's and Gateways.
Their customer service has fallen off to near nonexistance, and I have picked up a lot of ex-Dell, and ex-Gateway customers.
I can sell you a system custom tailored to your needs, for less money, or you could look for someone in your local area to do the same.
Either way, you will be better off.
JMHO.
Ernie
Changing out to the Basic MSOffice and to a cheap regular monitor, I dropped the price down to $874 plus shipping.
42/92
As far as the computer geek thing goes. I concider myself a computer geek, but know very little about putting internal hardware together. I dont know anyone that I'd trust to do it. I have a computer programer buddy that tried building his own computer. It was clear that hardware was not his strong point. It ended up costing him more than a factory built one would cost.... and it didnt even work. Not a scenario I want to risk. I'd rather pay the few hundred bucks extra for a factory built one. I know I'm not getting an HP. The last one I bought worked for a year, crashed a bunch of times. I took it in for work four times. Forget that, they lost my buisness forever. I havent delt with gateway, but know several people that have. None have been pleased with the product. Dell and Sony have the best consumer report ratings. Sony is more, so I figured I'd go with dell.
If I were going the cheap route, I'd probably just go get a cheap eMachine and hook it to my current monitor.... $400. Heck, even if it broke at the end of the year, I could go buy another one.... and then another one a year later.... and still be cheaper than the Dell with Monitor.
David
42/92
<< <i>I have a computer programer buddy that tried building his own computer. It was clear that hardware was not his strong point. It ended up costing him more than a factory built one would cost.... and it didnt even work.
If I were going the cheap route, I'd probably just go get a cheap eMachine and hook it to my current monitor.... $400. Heck, even if it broke at the end of the year, I could go buy another one.... and then another one a year later.... and still be cheaper than the Dell with Monitor.
David >>
Lol, a computer programmer building their own computer. I have yet to see a computer programmer build a computer that worked...
As for a eMachine, good luck with that. You would be better off with the one that you already have.
Do this,
Buy an ATX Case(comes with power supply in most cases), buy a Motherboard with built in: video, sound, ethernet, buy memory, buy a processor(comes with fan in most cases) and you are good to go. Thta's only 4 items you need to buy. CDRW/DVD drive and hard drive can be used from your old computer, assuming you have a CDRW/DVD drive and a decent size hard drive.
First, go here, monitor the deal discussions, and wait for a firesale on a Dell desktop system -- you can really clean up for $500 bucks, if not less (excluding monitor). And make sure you get one of the Dell online coupons -- I get them emailed to me all the damn time and would be happy to email you the code; they get traded around on the site I just linked every day. You can save 5, 10, even 15 percent right off the top.
Unless Dell has a great package deal, purchase the monitor separately, again waiting for a spectacular flat panel deal -- it probably will cost more than the computer, but a nice monitor is worth it. Good flatpanel deals come along from time to time, and you've got to pounce when one is available. Same thing with RAM -- Staples or Best Buy, several times a year, will have great memory deals -- just max out your motherboard on RAM when one comes along. (If you don't know how to install it, well then buy it from Dell, but you will be paying an unnecessary premium.)
<< <i>Do this,
Buy an ATX Case(comes with power supply in most cases), buy a Motherboard with built in: video, sound, ethernet, buy memory, buy a processor(comes with fan in most cases) and you are good to go. Thta's only 4 items you need to buy. >>
Not quite...
42/92
I have built computers for myself, and others, for over 12+ years now (back when RAM cost more than a new PC these days). Go this route IF you have someone you can trust for quality parts, are willing to pay a little more, and can get quick/quality help when needed.
Don't go this way if you think it will save you money. If you don't know what you are doing, you will likely not save money doing this. You could get a crappy motherboard or ram and be troubleshooting it more than it is worth.
If you don't go around upgrading parts of your PC and you just "use" it...then a dell is fine. Out of the OEMs (and, I have worked with a lot of them in the last 8+ years), dell does make better quality parts (well, they don't exactly make them....very few OEMs actually make their own, but that is a different story).
For my uncle, I recommended a dell because I didn't want to support him....still had to help a bit but he was able to call dell and get help when needed.
When my mother's monitor (bought from dell) went out (so we though...long distance troubleshooting with a computer neophyte of a 57 year old woman), I called dell, conferenced in mom, and even though it was a little out of warranty, they gave $200+ credit for a new monitor (we made it a 15" LCD going for $415 those days). Later found out that it was the PS acting up (was a home built system so dell couldn't have helped) and the 19" monitor is still good.
Local places wanted to charge her an arm and a leg to troubleshoot it (little town 60+ miles out of Las Vegas.....where Binion hoard was). That's how they make money....they really don't make much off the PCs they build/sell....those are super low margins or loss leaders...they make it off the service.
Also, I wouldn't spend that much on a dell......unless I had to have those stats/components. They have deals offered all the time, so much so that they sell PCs for under $400->$1000 for really good ones (again, depends on the specs you need....HDD space, CPU, etc).
If you are interested, PM me for links to deal sites that have links/breakdowns on dell deals.....some out there every week.
Good luck with whatever you do, but only go for the homebuilt type if you are competent at troubleshooting, don't mind it that often, and/or can get assistance easily (phone or taking your PC in to someone else for help and being without it).
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
<< <i>Don't go about purchasing your computer in this way.
First, go here, monitor the deal discussions, and wait for a firesale on a Dell desktop system -- you can really clean up for $500 bucks, if not less (excluding monitor). And make sure you get one of the Dell online coupons -- I get them emailed to me all the damn time and would be happy to email you the code; they get traded around on the site I just linked every day. You can save 5, 10, even 15 percent right off the top.
Unless Dell has a great package deal, purchase the monitor separately, again waiting for a spectacular flat panel deal -- it probably will cost more than the computer, but a nice monitor is worth it. Good flatpanel deals come along from time to time, and you've got to pounce when one is available. Same thing with RAM -- Staples or Best Buy, several times a year, will have great memory deals -- just max out your motherboard on RAM when one comes along. (If you don't know how to install it, well then buy it from Dell, but you will be paying an unnecessary premium.) >>
No offense to some of the other guys, but Sequitor is one of the few making sense. IMHO (and, PCs software/hardware is something I do know about
First off, on the monitor....do what Sequitor suggests...I got my 20" Dell LCD for $850 1 1/2 years ago (that included tax...there was no shipping charge). My friend just got one last month, newer model, better, around the same price. I have 2 of the 17" Dell LCDs as well. Very nice. They are even cheaper now than when I got a screaming deal on them.
I believe that if you buy a dell anyway, you will get a $100 gift check, or something to that effect, in the box and can use that on the monitor.
Fatwallet is good, but has a lot of misc junk as well. try www.gotapex.com as well. They always have dell deals mentioned...every week.
Currently (and, depending on the person, this may not be good enough...for my mother, it would be if I added a little more RAM):
2.8Ghz P4, 256MB DDR SDRAM, 40GB HD, CD-Rom and CD-RW for $474 with FREE Shipping, plus FREE PDA, Digicam, or Printer!
(add in the monitor you want.....you can always switch out the HDD later, or add DVD burner or more ram...etc)
I know I can't build one that meets those specs for under $500 but I also know that I want/need more from my PC...so it wouldn't work for me anyway. But, for my mother or my uncle who use the browser, email, and MSOffice functionality as well as some others things (no game playing), it would work better than fine.
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
I have a 5 year old Mac and a 9 year old Mac and they both run flawlessly.
Bochiman, exactly. Just buy that box with decent components as cheaply as you can, and this is the type of deal that is available with minimal legwork. Get a very good monitor separately when there's a sale/rebate, and then upgrade the RAM to 1 gig when another deal is available.
Yeah...buy a mac and say goodbye to a wider choice of software/harder and you will pay more $$$.
The benefits to it are that since Apple makes everyone do it their way or no way, the items do work very well out of the box. You just pay for the privilege. (they can do it since their marketshare is so low it isn't close to monopoly).
There are viruses out there though, don't kid yourself.....just not many virus writers want to write them for an audience of 3
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
If you have a deep desk, or don't part of it hanging off the back, you can
get a much bigger, better quality monitor for your money.
I purchased an NEC FE2111SB about six months ago and love it! It has
a 22" inch completely flat screen (20" viewable) for about the same price
as a 17" LCD.
I run mine in 1600x1200 resolution, which means less scrolling of web
pages, documents, spreadsheets, etc. It works out to something like
2.5 times more information on your screen than 1024x768 resolution.
Ken
<< <i>Not quite...
Buying software? Sorry that's new to me...
Oh yeah, best place to buy stuff is at MWAVE.com
Gloating here,,,,,,,, I'm helping build a 64 bit sys for a graffic artist. It took 4 days to render a BIG picture on a brand new Dell 4600. He needed something faster. $1400 later we did it in 27hrs. We haven't even started to over clock it. After he picked his jaw up off the floor he admited he should of come to me first.
You will have tech support though and if your not into computers that alone will make it worth it.
Congratulations on the new rig.
<< <i>
<< <i>Not quite...
Buying software? Sorry that's new to me...
Oh yeah, best place to buy stuff is at MWAVE.com >>
Yeah...
42/92
<< <i>
<< <i>Not quite...
Buying software? Sorry that's new to me...
>>
Well Noobieee, that is one way to publicly state that you are all about pirating software.
Hope no one does that to the business you are in...kind of uncool if you do it for anything more than just eval (and even that is illegal). I am sure you justify it to yourself somehow.
For most people, there are legal ways to save money on software...depending on what you get. Usually doesn't save you to buy it from Compusa or bestbuy though.
The Dell (and other OEM) machines come with the operating system built-in to the price. Possibly other software as well.
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
i have a 3yr old Emachine pentium 550
its a little cranky but i can live with it
no big problems
Gateway just bought E machines
My local Staples just had a nice E Machine w/ a flat panel for 400 bucks after rebates.
looked like a great deal to me.
I would go with the E-Machine or the local computer geek
Proof
That's Ted Waitt's story. Truth is the guppy swallowed the whale in this "merger" -- that's why Gateway abandoned its current headquarters to move to Irvine, which just happens to be E-machines' corporate campus.
Dude, I just got another new Dell laptop last week as a credit card reward. I transfered some higher interest credit cards over to a new lower interest rate credit card. I have it hooked up to wireless and was actually able to take it all the way over to my neighbors house (two houses away) and surf the net ........ looking at coins of course
New computers made my coin collecting hobby much better.
What do you plan on doing with the Computer? If you are going to just surf the net and do basic word documents and such, you don't need a power house machine. If you are going to do a lot of gaming or heavy-duty graphics programs, then you will need a heavier system. Plus, don't be fooled into buying the top-of-the-line computer at Dell if you don't need everything. Remember that you can always go to Best Buy or somewhere and upgrade your system with larger harddrives or memory.
My 2 Cents.
-Henri Turenne
And I'm one of those people who people ask "Would you build me a PC?" and I won't do it any more. The last two I built brought me a constant stream of phone calls asking for help with things that were self-inflicted problems. I cheerfully refer everyone to Dell because none of the people I dealt with could understand that I was not their support desk.
I only mention that in case you are thinking of asking someone to build you one. You might be proactive and mention that you won't be using them for support.
New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.
The best of BOTH worlds.
Joe.
I have had my Dell for 5 years and have never had a problem with it whatsoever, and as is obvious I know doodlysquat about puters!
<< <i>Get a computer but DO NOT GET A DELL!!! JRG is correct, get someone that knows how to build a computer and have them put it together for you. I built a bunch for $500-$600 that Dell or any other major retailer would sell for $1,800-$2,500. >>
BTW, most of us don't want to do that for free for people anymore.
I'll weigh in....I think you've got to get a new CPU. I was in your shoes in January....my cpu was slow, outdated, and crashed all the time, very frustrating. If you use your cpu like I do, you've got to have a machine that meets your needs. I use mine for investing, banking, communicating with family far away and my favorite hobby....coins. Since I bought my new cpu, I am a very happy guy. Now...some here say its better to buy a made machine. Although you might save money, I prefer the tech support and warranty that comes with a new cpu. Dude, I did buy a Dell :-).....yes, perhaps I could have saved some money but a few years from now, when I need tech support to help with the inevitable problems that cpu's have....I am covered (lifetime tech support for free). If you have one built, without tech support and a warranty....it could get costly. I have been happy with my Dell and I think I got a fair deal. I am not endorsing Dell....find your best deal, but consider the warranty, tech support, etc. Good luck. Art
Edited to say, I just replaced my Dell laptop and PC with Sony and am very happy............