www.dell.com
I work for H.P., but I wouldn't buy a pc from them, or any other manufacturer. No matter the price you pay, you could do FAR better buying the components yourself, and slapping it together. Why? Every pc manufacturer (except the bleeding edge ones- you know who they are) pawn off obsolete hardware on their preconfigured systems. You might get the latest processor, and maybe a current chipset, but something, somewhere, will be compromised. Guaranteed.
And if I told you what HP pays per unit on that hardware, you would defecate your Dockers.
When you price a custom build, and check the same rig on a big vendor's site, you see a savings of a few hundred dollars. What you don't see is what they paid for said parts. 15% comes to mind. But hey, that's business. Can't knock 'em for that.
So, if you have the knowledge to put it together yourself, and do a LOT of research first, you'll come out way ahead.
Some may argue about warranties. Truth is, if your pc craps out, the manufacturer will undoubtedly refer you to the component provider anyways, and that will be covered under THEIR warranty.
Regardless of brand, if you choose to buy a prebuilt, I would do asone of the above posters mentioned:
FDisk, Format, Reinstall, Do-Dah, Do-Dah...
3) This is absolutely true.
A64 3500+ - $201
Motherboard - $70 max (doubt it was that much)
HDD - $83
Memory - $82
Case & PS - $70 max (again doubt it was that much)
Mouse & Keyboard - $30
That totals to $536; did I miss anything, maybe $10 for a FDD or CD. So that puts you a little under $550. Sounds like you may have gotten about what you paid for, but I seriously doubt the mobo or case/ps cost $70. Case in point though, I'm still not sure how you're pricing it higher than $550 on Newegg unless I'm missing something.
OS +$200 😀
www.dell.com
For pre-built systems from Compaq and other places that are cheap ($400-600), they will always hit you with a micro-ATX mobo. This means very little upgradability. However, I speced out a pre-built from ABS, through NewEgg, and then upgraded that. I got a ASUS A8N-VM CSM, which is definatley not a POS motherboard. The only reason I went that way, though, is because it was for someone else and I didn't have time to make one myself.
I believe that Tom's did an article on the $500 gaming machine awhile ago, so even though the information is out-of-date, the basic idea was that it's basically impossible to make anything good out of that kind of money when you have to but an OS and other software for it. At least that's the way I see it. There is just too much hedging on parts and you end up with something not worth it.
For anyone looking to spend more than $800, though, building it yourself is the way to go. The difference between homebuilt and prebuilt only gets higher as you up the budget. The parts I'm buying for my own PC come out to $1450, whereas a similar Dell (with an Intel dual-core) would cost $2300.