- Dec 12, 2000
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In the last decade, the argument used to be building your own PC was cheaper. Not only did you have a lot more flexibility in choosing the components, but you could also undercut brand name prices by a healthy margin of 20% to 30%.
Does the value argument still hold up? I'm not so sure about that. For the past 5 years we've been able to buy stripped $400 machines from Dell and maybe steal it for $300 after rebates. But these days fully loaded machines can be had for $700 retail ($600 after rebate.) The Wall Street Journal just reviewed an eMachines system with AMD Athlon64 3400+, 1GB RAM, dual optical drives (one a dual-layer DVD writer), 200GB drive and Windows Media Center. Industry consolidation and the 'Dell effect' (manufacturers cutting costs and boosting margins wherever possible) has given the budget PC higher value than the comparable homebuilt system.
Seems like the legions of clone builders in the 90s have either a) given up and bought a Dell or b) moved upmarket into the 'enthusiast' market. I reckon enthusiasts today build machines for one objective alone: performance. Who cares about value anymore? Sure you can upgrade your CPU or choice components on your schedule rather than shell out for a whole new PC every time, but the new Dells and HPs are just as upgradeable. The value argument only holds up when you compare homebuilt vs. Dell XPS or Alienware, but that's about it.
I seriously think my next PC will be a Media Center bought retail.
Does the value argument still hold up? I'm not so sure about that. For the past 5 years we've been able to buy stripped $400 machines from Dell and maybe steal it for $300 after rebates. But these days fully loaded machines can be had for $700 retail ($600 after rebate.) The Wall Street Journal just reviewed an eMachines system with AMD Athlon64 3400+, 1GB RAM, dual optical drives (one a dual-layer DVD writer), 200GB drive and Windows Media Center. Industry consolidation and the 'Dell effect' (manufacturers cutting costs and boosting margins wherever possible) has given the budget PC higher value than the comparable homebuilt system.
Seems like the legions of clone builders in the 90s have either a) given up and bought a Dell or b) moved upmarket into the 'enthusiast' market. I reckon enthusiasts today build machines for one objective alone: performance. Who cares about value anymore? Sure you can upgrade your CPU or choice components on your schedule rather than shell out for a whole new PC every time, but the new Dells and HPs are just as upgradeable. The value argument only holds up when you compare homebuilt vs. Dell XPS or Alienware, but that's about it.
I seriously think my next PC will be a Media Center bought retail.