ibda12u
03-01-2007, 10:20 AM
After answering a recent post, I figured I'd write an interesting post on something I've thought about for so long.
I've worked retail in computers, in places like bestbuy, before, and we've sold pc's for $99 and great deals for sub $200. I've heard that old terminology "you get what you pay for". And most of the time it's used once you've bought something and it broke a week later. but with computers it's not always so.
You get what you pay for.
Most users use their pc's for, surfing the net. Checking/writing email, sending some pics, and writing some letters. Pretty much what we'd call basic computing.
Honestly forgive for saying so, but all most people need is some type of advanced typewriter :) with internet access. And for these users, I'd guess to say 60% of pc users. A $200 pc with a big and cheap hard drive, moderate ram, cheap integrated video card, sound, motherboard, NIC, etc.. slap in a cdrw and you're good. Is perfect for them. Most of the cost they will usually incur is licensing from XP Home edition or whichever O/S they use.
What happens though is these users eventually start wanting to do more with their pc. such as Photo Editing, or playing with Home Movies, or maybe even some heavy Graphics Entensive Gaming, (Halo, Doom, C&C, Advanced War Fighter etc..)
All of a sudden they have to get all these upgrades, such as a $100 Video Card, more ram, etc.. Sometimes these upgrades can cost more than their PC originally did.
If you try to do these things without upgrading your machine, you'll wind up with poor performance, and oftentimes will end up cursing the machine, or just getting another one. But honestly, it's not often the pc's fault :)
Anyone with experience with Photoshop, and graphics, know's that Photoshop, eats as much memory as you will let it. And everytime you add a new layer, or a new filter, or a more colors, your 5MB images of your grandkids can quickly eat up 100MB ram or more. leaving a machine that originally has 256mb ram with 156mb to run the rest of your machine (hopefully you're not surfing myspace, and playing quake at the same time). Not to mention that PS likes scratch disk space, and prefers to not share the same HD as it's install on.
Ever wander why people still pay $1200 for a pc, when you have a similar in speed machine for $500? Oftentimes it's performance. SCSI is faster than Serial, which is faster than IDE. Dual Core is faster than Single Core, 256MB of Video Ram, is much faster than 64mb of Shared ram etc..
So there's absolutely nothing wrong with catching a great deal, and getting your brand new pc with all in one printer, lcd screen, for $100 after your rebate if you're going to be doing normal, everyday internet, pc things.
But remember if you're wanting to really get advanced you may wanna put some money into savings for upgrades that cost more than your pc. Or save for a higher end PC in the future.
I've worked retail in computers, in places like bestbuy, before, and we've sold pc's for $99 and great deals for sub $200. I've heard that old terminology "you get what you pay for". And most of the time it's used once you've bought something and it broke a week later. but with computers it's not always so.
You get what you pay for.
Most users use their pc's for, surfing the net. Checking/writing email, sending some pics, and writing some letters. Pretty much what we'd call basic computing.
Honestly forgive for saying so, but all most people need is some type of advanced typewriter :) with internet access. And for these users, I'd guess to say 60% of pc users. A $200 pc with a big and cheap hard drive, moderate ram, cheap integrated video card, sound, motherboard, NIC, etc.. slap in a cdrw and you're good. Is perfect for them. Most of the cost they will usually incur is licensing from XP Home edition or whichever O/S they use.
What happens though is these users eventually start wanting to do more with their pc. such as Photo Editing, or playing with Home Movies, or maybe even some heavy Graphics Entensive Gaming, (Halo, Doom, C&C, Advanced War Fighter etc..)
All of a sudden they have to get all these upgrades, such as a $100 Video Card, more ram, etc.. Sometimes these upgrades can cost more than their PC originally did.
If you try to do these things without upgrading your machine, you'll wind up with poor performance, and oftentimes will end up cursing the machine, or just getting another one. But honestly, it's not often the pc's fault :)
Anyone with experience with Photoshop, and graphics, know's that Photoshop, eats as much memory as you will let it. And everytime you add a new layer, or a new filter, or a more colors, your 5MB images of your grandkids can quickly eat up 100MB ram or more. leaving a machine that originally has 256mb ram with 156mb to run the rest of your machine (hopefully you're not surfing myspace, and playing quake at the same time). Not to mention that PS likes scratch disk space, and prefers to not share the same HD as it's install on.
Ever wander why people still pay $1200 for a pc, when you have a similar in speed machine for $500? Oftentimes it's performance. SCSI is faster than Serial, which is faster than IDE. Dual Core is faster than Single Core, 256MB of Video Ram, is much faster than 64mb of Shared ram etc..
So there's absolutely nothing wrong with catching a great deal, and getting your brand new pc with all in one printer, lcd screen, for $100 after your rebate if you're going to be doing normal, everyday internet, pc things.
But remember if you're wanting to really get advanced you may wanna put some money into savings for upgrades that cost more than your pc. Or save for a higher end PC in the future.