To Dell or not to Dell
-
- Posts: 1741
- Joined: Wed Jul 23, 2003 7:00 am
To Dell or not to Dell
I hate Dell as much as everyone here, believe me. However, a deal from Dell popped up that got me thinking. First off, my mom is in the market for a computer and an LCD would be nice due to space constraits. Dell is offering a machine with a P4 630, HyperThreading and EMT64 3.0GHz 800MHz FSB, 512MB of DDR2 RAM at 533MHz (2x256), 80GB SATA 7,200 RPM HDD with "DataBurst Cache", 48x CD-RW/DVD-ROM and the best part, 20" Ultrasharp 2007FP LCD. The total system price is about $600. I know you guys are thinking, but its a Dell. My thought is that I could get that, then spend about $300 to get a case, PSU, mobo, HSF, and graphics card that would be all good parts. So I'd just take the good stuff from that Dell. Even at that price it is cheaper then anything I could build completely on my own, mainly due to the monitor. My questions are, do you think this would work for one. Also I've heard that Dell uses good RAM, is that true and would it work in any DDR2 mobo? Also the RAM is 533MHz, I haven't kept up on DDR2 so is that the speed I would want, or would that hender system performance? The "Databurst Cache" on the HDD, is that some Dell thing, or would it be a good HDD like a Maxtor, Western-Digital or Seagate?
[size=92][color=#0000FF]Hugh Hefner for President[/color][/size]
-
- Posts: 6926
- Joined: Thu Feb 10, 2000 8:00 am
-
- Posts: 4755
- Joined: Mon Oct 22, 2001 7:00 am
-
- Posts: 2237
- Joined: Sat Mar 12, 2005 10:49 pm
-
- Posts: 2237
- Joined: Sat Mar 12, 2005 10:49 pm
-
- Posts: 1741
- Joined: Wed Jul 23, 2003 7:00 am
-
- Posts: 22175
- Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2001 7:00 am
-
- Posts: 22175
- Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2001 7:00 am
not sure about your first question, but in regards to your second, i have 150 Dell workstations (the actually models come and go, but right now GX280's and GX620's) on our network and Remedy shows that we've only had one issue with ram in just over four years.Kills On Site wrote:Well are you guys fairly certain all the parts will work on another mobo and whatnot? And is the brand of RAM Dell uses good?
Same as my Dimension 4100.Silicone_Milk wrote:Holy crap... I have a whopping 384MB of RAM on this bad boy :icon28:. woot!
Kills On Site: Learn to use paragraphs please.
Sounds like a good deal. Dell's are not for gamers, I wouldn't even get one of their XPS systems. But if it's for your mom, just for normal office/home use, then it should be fine.
[size=85][url=http://gtkradiant.com]GtkRadiant[/url] | [url=http://q3map2.robotrenegade.com]Q3Map2[/url] | [url=http://q3map2.robotrenegade.com/docs/shader_manual/]Shader Manual[/url][/size]
-
- Posts: 1741
- Joined: Wed Jul 23, 2003 7:00 am
The reason I cannot stand Dell or any premade computer, is that if something needs replacing or an upgrade is wanted then something else must be replaced.
Example being the HP we have, I wanted to get a 5700 Ultra, but to do that I needed to get a new power supply, in order to do that I needed to get a new case.
I recall Dell did something with their power supplies and motherboards so that the wiring was specific to Dell machines. There is no reason, other then corporate gain, to do things like that. So I figure by replacing all the Dell specific parts I can have more upgrade room and less fear of a domino effect if something needs to be replaced.
Example being the HP we have, I wanted to get a 5700 Ultra, but to do that I needed to get a new power supply, in order to do that I needed to get a new case.
I recall Dell did something with their power supplies and motherboards so that the wiring was specific to Dell machines. There is no reason, other then corporate gain, to do things like that. So I figure by replacing all the Dell specific parts I can have more upgrade room and less fear of a domino effect if something needs to be replaced.
[size=92][color=#0000FF]Hugh Hefner for President[/color][/size]
You can't judge them all by that HP. I've had an Emachine or 2 and they are very easy to upgrade or change out parts. And they are actually now not really bad. Had one recently that lasted me 3 years with virtually no problems. Changed out vidcards, hard drives, ram, cd/dvd drives, etc.Kills On Site wrote:The reason I cannot stand Dell or any premade computer, is that if something needs replacing or an upgrade is wanted then something else must be replaced.
Example being the HP we have, I wanted to get a 5700 Ultra, but to do that I needed to get a new power supply, in order to do that I needed to get a new case.
I recall Dell did something with their power supplies and motherboards so that the wiring was specific to Dell machines. There is no reason, other then corporate gain, to do things like that. So I figure by replacing all the Dell specific parts I can have more upgrade room and less fear of a domino effect if something needs to be replaced.
-
- Posts: 4755
- Joined: Mon Oct 22, 2001 7:00 am
Lol. Tough old thing sounds like.Underpants? wrote:i've had an e-machine running a remote application at one of our harshest ops environments for over 5 years now. One hard drive later, it's survived a hepa environmental purification system, 2 cisco 2600 routers, 3 precision workstations and a gateway v80 :\. Go figure.
-
- Posts: 1741
- Joined: Wed Jul 23, 2003 7:00 am
The coupon for 5% won't work anymore. I entered it earlier and now it says it has already been used. Is this based on my computer or IP that it says that or was this a gobally one time coupon that somebody else used. Would it change if I were to purchase a system and thus set up an account with Dell and then try it?
[size=92][color=#0000FF]Hugh Hefner for President[/color][/size]