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Failure Rate of PC Manufacturers?

The ever-popular Anonymous Coward asks: "Hello. We are conducting a write-up for our clients, however we cannot seem to locate any published failure rate of PC manufacturers. Google does bring up past PC Magazine articles - but nothing recent. Does Slashdot know of a way to find this information, as this strikes me as valuable information for the computer buyer. We sell many PC's (B3 VAR) and have done for the last 5 years. We can and will produce our failure rate info - why aren't the big companies doing so?"

11 of 75 comments (clear)

  1. Pardon me for stating the obvious... by Monte · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...but at these prices, who cares about failure rates?

    For personal use the PC will most likely become obsolete (at least in the eyes of the user) before it becomes broken. On slashdot we've seen stories (over and over again :) about people buying whole new systems just because their current PC is loaded with spyware.

    If it's for business use, and you've got to have 100% uptime, failure rate sill doesn't matter, since at these prices you buy multiple redundant systems and then sleep well at night.

    Besides, how do you collect your data? It seems to me that by the time you've got good long-haul use data on your systems you won't be selling them anymore in favor of new models. And I don't see how extropolating data for new models based on old model performance is terribly useful.

    By way of analogy - if new cars only cost a grand, you'd replace your car long before anything serious went wrong with it. About the time the ashtrays were full, a flat tire would be just the excuse you'd need to go shopping for the Latest Greatest Leetest Carxen.

    1. Re:Pardon me for stating the obvious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You're environment seems to be the extreme side of the spectrum. Most companys is this country don't even have 10,000 employees. Your figure of $4000 again is limited to your environment, and like most things everyone is different. We have almost exclusively Dell, and IBM equipment in the corporate offices. The only problem we see on workstations mostly is the hard drive failing. This goes for both brands. Whats funny is we have grown a lot, and the company used to be very cheap. All the old PC's were hand built! We are talking over a 1000 machines here, probably close to 2000 in the end. For all the advocates I see on here of white boxing machines, those things were horrible. The Dell's and IBM's are absolute rocks compared to those older machines. Btw...the older machines were Athlons anywhere from the 800mhz range all the way up to 2500+ and MP units. The Intel chips are simply better in the business environment because we never have the weird issues we had with the Athlons. I like AMD, and use them at home, but they seem to fall short in the business world for some odd reason. Also, I want to note the boards and memory in the white boxes were top quality. Mostly ASUS or MSI boards, and Kingston memory(Not the ValueRAM).

    2. Re:Pardon me for stating the obvious... by hackstraw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      but at these prices, who cares about failure rates?

      I do.

      I'm not saving any money by paying less for something, bringing it home/work or waiting for it to be shipped, plugging it in, having it either be DOA or worse dying soon after deployment, then ship the broken thing back, wait again for the replacement, reconfigure the box again (if it works) ... you get my point.

      I have recently gotten so pissed off at the lack of QA in electronics that I vent on whoever is in my way on the return process. I went off so hard on Seagate, that they gave me a "free" disk after they admitted that none of the last 2 revisions of their drives worked.

      In fact, I resent the "but at these prices, who cares about failure rates?" attitude. That is precisely why we have so many failures. The consumers simply want what's cheap, and cheap is what we are getting.

  2. This one is obvious... by Fortunato_NC · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's a "gentleman's agreement" among the top-tier PC makers. I won't make you show yours if you don't make me show mine. There is very little to gain, and a lot to lose, especially if you consider how malleable the definition of "failure" is in the PC market. User deletes system files and renders PC unbootable? Chalk it up as another failure!

    --
    Blogging Weight Loss, Distance Education, and more at verlin.com
  3. why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    the failure rate of a machine is more dependent on the environment. if it's extremely dusty, fans clog and processors overheat. if you restart the machine a lot, it will probably fail sooner than if you leave it on all the time (or so they say). if you expose it to children (or noobs) it will fail sooner.

    how do you compare an [insert high quality mfgr] box located in a kintergarten library (dusty + children) to a no name box used by post docs in a climate controlled research lab?

    all the major manufacturers will use similar components. it's like lego!

    1. Re:why not? by anon+mouse-cow-aard · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I get the idea but... post-docs are usually worse than children.
      They download anything, don't give a darn about security, and are knowledgeable and proud enough to do real damage. :-)

  4. Time-span? by azrane2005 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I wonder, if this information were to become public, how long after it's out of the box are we talking about? First boot? 1 year? And how long until it's obsolete?

    Personally, I've found that Compaq/HP systems more often than not have problems right out of the box (or right after the system restore, as it were), while Dells have a pretty good run, until the end user mucks it up with malware. I haven't had too much experience with Gateway systems to get an idea about their outcome.

  5. There's a lot to be said about old PC reviews by vasqzr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Those were the days. PC Magazine would review 50 PC's, from ATR to Dell, Polywell to Gateway. Big names, small names. They ran application benchmarks and you could see which systems were the fastest. They also included information such as failure rate and wait times for calling tech support.

    These days, with 'web magazines', a PC comparison has 5 PC's and a paragraph or two about each one.

    Of course, magazines weren't perfect. The top rated PC's were often the most advertised. Manufacturers probably got smart and decided to pressure magazines into not publishing those numbers by witholding advertising dollars.

  6. Well, they're cheap, but.... by Knara · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The generic answer seems to be, from my experience, that the chance that some computer will fail to the point of not POSTing during their warranty period is upwards of 60-70% with corporate desktop machines (think Dell Optiplexes and the like). The Gartner reports could be helpful if you can afford them, but what might also be useful is if the articles you find from the past show a downward trend in reliability from the big boys (which seems be the case from my experience, at least), and a steadily higher or improving trend in reliability from your comp.

  7. Google for "success rates"... by bscott · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Nobody wants to publish failure rates - even if they're low, it still sounds bad. Try looking for "success" or "satisfaction" rates instead! Remember, marketing people just don't think like we do...

    (back when I worked in the repair depot, I remember Packard Bells were approaching a 50% failure rate. Then they merged with NEC - still not sure who got the worst of that deal, given the crap PCs NEC used to ship...)

    --
    Perfectly Normal Industries
  8. White Box by tengu1sd · · Score: 2, Insightful
    As a general rule any of channel market-teers will ship failed systems, dodge service agreements and force you to support the systems with service agreements. With a Titanium support contract you'll have to play phone menu checklist with a an in country phone tree. Same day service means you can call us today. Next day shipping isn't.

    For the general desk top including small office servers, find a local white box builder who can churn out systems. Specify motherboard and CPU. No the shop won't have 7x24 coverage, but then neither does Dell, HP or Gateway. If you can drive down the block and get a system serviced or swapped out you'll beat the hold time before your problem is addressed with any of the major vendors.

    For a server class you need build enough redundancy into your equipment to have a box down and still provide services. Until you get into the major application white box is still the way to go.