Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware (
More info?)
Thanks, Leythos, for making that distinction. That's the part I was confused
about originally. OEM CPUs, like OEM RAM and probably other parts, are
functionally and quality-wise identical with retail parts. OTOH, OEM sounds
cards, video cards, NICs and many other parts are different from otherwise
identical models sold at retail.
Modem Ani
"Leythos" <void@nowhere.lan> wrote in message
news:bzrce.1345$Eg.945@tornado.ohiordc.rr.com...
> On Fri, 29 Apr 2005 09:24:01 -0500, Jim Macklin wrote:
> >
> > Correct, and for home builders who want to save a few dollars and take
> > the risks while they select all the parts they want.
>
> Actually, the OEM vendor provides the warranty first, then Intel if you
> can get them to direct support it. In most cases you have to go through
> the OEM vendor to get service.
>
> As with OEM products, they should be cheaper than retail, which is one of
> the benefits of using OEM parts. The actual quality of OEM CPU's is the
> same as the retail.
>
> When it comes to video cards, there are differences - many OEM Video cards
> are clocked lower than their retail counterpart.
>
>
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