$298 Wal-Mart PC Has OO.org, No Crapware
cristarol writes "Wal-Mart has begun selling a $298 PC (Everex IMPACT GC3502). It comes with Windows Vista Home Basic and OpenOffice.org 2.2, as well as a complete lack of crapware: 'Users accustomed to being bombarded with trialware offers and seeing their would-be pristine Windows desktops littered with shortcuts to AOL and other applications will likely be pleased at their absence from the GC3502.' The machine is targeted at the back-to-school market. The hardware is nothing to write home about: a 1.5GHz Via C7 with 1GB of RAM and integrated graphics, but as Ars points out, it should be more than capable of performing basic tasks." Dell sells a low-end PC through Wal-Mart for $200 more, and one assumes it is loaded with crapware. Anybody know for sure?
With a 250 watt power supply, a gig of RAM and only 80 GB of hard drive it's probably going to leave a lot of students disappointed. I don't know why everyone figures that just because students don't do weather simulations they can get by with just any junk hardware. The OS needs bags of RAM just to run right and OpenOffice (just like MS Office) needs ram and cpu power to do its work. Looks like another case of Walmart putting the screws to a supplier to squeeze dollars out of a product. I'm just mostly anti-walmart, not completely. I don't like Dell much either, but I'd just as soon head over there for a back-to-school special then decrapify it. More likely than anything, I'll just keep building my own.
more of the same on Twitter.
Strange how the headline doesn't mention it comes with Windows Vista installed...
Burbage dies on pg. 12
Hedwig dies on pg. 56
Mad-Eye dies on pg. 78
Scrimgeour dies on pg. 159
Wormtail dies on pg. 471
Dobby dies on pg. 476
Snape dies on pg. 658
Fred Weasley dies on pg. 637
Harry gets fucked up by Voldemort on pg. 704 but comes back to life on pg. 724
Tonks, Lupin, and Colin Creevy have their deaths confirmed on pg. 743
19 years after the events in the book:
Ron has married Hermione, their two children are named Rose and Hugo
Harry has married Ginny, their three children are named Lily, James, and Albus Severus.
Draco Malfoy has a son named Scorpius
The epilogue shows all of the children boarding the train for Hogwarts together.
The final lines of the book are: "The scar had not pained Harry for 18 years. All was well."
Plot Spoilers
Part of Voldemort's soul was implanted into Harry whenever he used Ara Kadvara on him when he was a baby. Harry then sacrafices himself a la Lilly Potter style, which allows him to kill Voldemort without killing himself. He also has hacks (stone to bring him back to life, and an uber wand).
Snape went to the good side (Hogwarts, etc.) because he was all emo that Voldemort killed Lilly Potter.
Harry has three kids with Ginny. Ron and Hermoine fall in love.
"Ooooo, I wonder what Linux distro to put on it?!"
I prefer Flambe as apposed flamebait.
Hmm, that is my laptop in a big box.
Anyhoo, Dell also sells some PCs with a 'no trailware' option. It seems that manufacturers are seeing the light. I wonder how much the 'PC Decrapifier' project has to do with this change of heart.
Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
Why not buy used? Wouldn't a used computer be a better deal?
Religion for nerds. Stuff that really matters
I noticed that the manufacturer's product manager threw in the word "eco-friendly" to describe the computer. Did they really have efficiency in mind when they developed the computer, or is this just part of the recent trend (a la "no carbs/trans fats") to label anything and everything as being good for the environment?
I guess a computer that has little or nothing to it also doesn't use much power either. But then, my Game Boy is more eco-friendly.
No Crapware
Yeah...
The computer needs to do web browsing, email, and word processing. The occasional song or pic shared with friends is to be expected too. However, as long as the hardware is shitty enough to prevent the owner from becoming hooked on WOW, Eve, or any other time-vacuum, then it will probably be the best $500 the parents DIDNT spend to get their kid a better computer. And with all that free time, they just might do their homework! For the education market, this product gets an A+ from me.
Last time I checked, their CPUs were erratic, their chipsets flaky and their reputation mainly derived from making cash register and micro-PC machines that were for one-app use and no manic power user antics. Has VIA improved?
technical writing / development
- # Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium Edition
- # NVIDIA GeForce 6150 integrated graphics
- # Dell USB keyboard and USB 2-button mouse
- # Integrated 10/100 Ethernet
- # Integrated 7.1-channel audio
- # 56k PCI data/fax modem
- # Microsoft Works 8.5
- # Adobe Acrobat Reader 7.0
- # Roxio Creator Basic
- # McAfee Security 30-day trial
- # Earthlink application software
- # Windows Vista PC-Restore
- # 1-year limited warranty and at-home service
Having experienced all the above software (with the exception of Earthlink application software whatever that is), I'm going to say that yes, it is loaded with crapware. Scariest one on that list would probably be the earthlink application software because that's the most generic name for a product I can ever think of.The other differences between these two machines is they have comparable memory, DVD burner & GPU, the Dell's hard drive & CPU are a lot better. The ArsTechnica article mentions upgrades at a price, you could probably get the IMPACT up to the Dell range and get it close which is probably pretty important for the average consumer who doesn't want to deal with the ordeal of reinstalling Windows just to get a clean slate.
My work here is dung.
OO.org and no crapware? wtf? oo.org = crapware. therefore, oo.org AND no crapware return FALSE, you linux zealotz!
Slashdot Groupthink mandates that Microsoft is evil, yet Wal-Mart is hunky dory, especially if there's some cheap, imported junk that they have for a really great price. For all of the impact that the Slashdot Groupthink seems to think that Microsoft has, it's largely irrelevant if you were to compare them to a company like Wal-Mart.
Slashdot Groupthink:
Microsoft: always bad.
Wal-Mart: paying their employees next to nothing and being a blight on local communities is just fine, as long as they sell PC's that don't come with MS software.
I wish I lived in the fantasy world of most Slashdotters.
I don't respond to AC's.
It's not totally crapware free. From the Specs: Norton Internet Security(TM) 2007 (90-day subscription included)
They could have chosen a free AV package, like they chose a free office suite (or even a free operating system). But, they went with the try-now buy-later package.
It runs VISTA, no wonder there is no junkware; those programs don't run on Vista just like your hardware!
At $300, it's hard to beat.
The VIA C7 is a nice low-power CPU, with enough kick for most server tasks. At only 20 Watts power, it's well below any of the Intel/AMD options.
Too bad there isn't a version without the Windows tax.. this box at $250 would be even better.
just because students don't do weather simulations
My wife got her Masters in Meteorology and did this. I'm an Aerospace Engineer and basically consumed 100% of my computers' resources (dual core AMD x5200) for a month and a half doing runs for my thesis. (and yes, the simulation was multi-threaded)
I agree with your premise. While this machine will work for people just interested in social networking, anything beyond that will leave the user lacking.
Does it come with a hamster to run the power supply or are those extra?
What's up with the inflation of specs you need to have to write reports and do other school stuff ? When I was in high school ("Gymnasium" as we call it over here in Europe), I wrote all papers and reports the first year using Amstrad CPC 6128, Arnor Protext on ROM and a 9-pin printer. Later I used a 486 and WP 5.1 (Now with Graphics..). Today I have a 900 MhZ AMD K6, 512 Mb memory, and still I can use InDesign, Word 2003 and Excel to do 100s of pages of technical manuals, without any slowdown at all. Yes, I do not play games, but do you have to ? I would be happy to have a 1,5 GHz with 1G or RAM. So stop saying that it's "Nothing to write home about". My guess is, the people that don't play games never use even a fraction of it's powers.
....but will it run Linux?
Even with the MS tax, can you realistically buy or assemble a full PC with those specs for that kind of price? Sounds like a good entry-level Linux box to me!
"Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
I found this on the processor they're using:
"With a maximum power consumption of just 20 watts (2 watts average), the VIA C7®-D processor sets new standards..."
How much do 1.5GHz processors normally consume?
Four years ago, when I was just starting university, I bought a $200 bargain basement GNU/Linux PC from Wal-Mart (unfortunately they don't sell these anymore). I used it as a personal server in my dorm room. Yeah, it was severely underpowered compared to my desktop, but it was just fine for using to tinker around with GNU/Linux. I used it for a good three years until I had enough money to buy something better. But what an incredible value that was, three years of experience for only $200. This latest machine looks to be good for exactly the same thing. Buy it, strip off Windows, put on GNU/Linux, and it makes a good first server.
Cyde Weys Musings - Scrutinizing the inscrutable
...if it came with Windows XP.
Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
"email takes substantial amounts of ram and cpu power..."
The machine has 1Gb RAM. My laptop has a quarter of that and seems to browse the web and run Office perfectly well.
As for CPU... I'm pretty sure it will cope with the heaviest of messenger sessions.
I've actually convinced myself that this computer is worse for students than I thought in the first place.
You need to climb down back to the real world. Very few people need garanteed sub-millisecond response times (or even knows what they are).
No sig today...
I'm sure extra $300 that £300 will get you will cover S&H.
Ben Hocking
Need a professional organizer?
"Of course, the moving parts and the monitor will still use as much power as they do in any other system, but this machine could easily consume over 100 W less than is typical nowadays."
If they truly wanted to make it power efficient compared to other computers, it would as simple as forcing the monitor (which would be LCD of course) to go into standby if the computer hasn't been in use for 15 minutes. I shudder to think how much power was being wasted when I used to work at a national lab, where everyone left their computer running overnight with various ridiculous "screen savers" running on CRTs.
A few months ago I bought a Dell with an Athlon X2 3600, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, and XP Home off the Dell Outlet site for $260 shipped. It was "Previously Ordered New" which generally means the original owner never even opened the package. I'll take the crapware and an X2 over no crapware and the C7.
I'd just like to point out the absurdity of describing such a powerful computer with terms normally used to describe a 4-function calculator.
When I entered college, I paid for my own 8086 turbo, running DOS 3.something, and a 1200 baud modem. It had a 32MB RLL hard drive. It was also "more than capable of performing basic tasks."
This recalls Wirth's Law (from Nicklaus Wirth of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich): "Software gets slower faster than hardware gets faster." Stated another way, "Intel giveth and Microsoft taketh away."
I believe part of their point was that if they built their own, they wouldn't have to repartition/reformat the hard drive in order to remove Vista...
Ben Hocking
Need a professional organizer?
Religion for nerds. Stuff that really matters
What the hell is Vista?
Which is it? I'm confused. In one place the post says it comes with MS Vista and in another it says it comes without crapware?
Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
how?
wow, what a perverse economic system
hardware has no margin, code is all margin
People with more robust needs would obviously need a more robust computer. But you can do a lot with modest hardware. Complex/large documents can be accomplished with LaTeX, though Abiword would probably suffice for the gui-inclined. Firefox works fine even from a LiveCD. But I'm aware that some people need certain software packages that would require more computing power.
I've always disliked that colleges force students to use a certain software package. Programming classes should not require a certain IDE--when taking my C++ course I used text editors and the command line. For a web design course the prof mandated a particular FTP program, but the command line worked well enough for me. I'm aware that there are some courses that do dictate that software title X must be used, so no solution is good for everyone.
Which is why different mfg's appear from time to time. Dell gets millions of dollars from the a/v mfg's to install this "crapware".
"I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey
Is there any way to calculate how much of that $298 pays for its Windows OS?
Does MS just give them away "free" to companies like Everex/Wal-Mart, just to protect their platform marketshare for selling Windows apps (or reporting marketshare)? Isn't all of that anticompetitive, probably explicitly so under the various (though largely unenforced) monopoly verdict decrees?
Or can you get your MS tax refund if you delete it and send it back? Has anyone pulled that off lately? Or maybe, possibly, convince Wal-Mart to save the expense, and sell a cheaper PC with Linux installed - or nothing installed, but with a Linux LiveCD/netinstaller?
--
make install -not war
Last one should have been this.
I know a lot of people hate Wal-Mart. I personally don't, I guess I haven't watched the right documentaries yet, to tell me what to think, or something.
And yeah, Wal-Mart probably isn't doing this out of the goodness of their hearts, nor to boost open source, nor to satisfy the few Linux people. Their motivation is undoubtedly to make money, and they usually do that by giving consumers what they want (a cheap item, that does the job).
Well, we should be proud that OpenOffice is seen as a viable enough too in their delivery of such a product, especially one aimed at students. It really is a big step in the right direction, and validates Open Source to a very large degree.
-dale
Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
Deleted
I'd like to know if it's any good for reinstalling OSs, dropping in a video card or extra RAM and so on.
>> It comes with Windows Vista Home Basic as well as a complete lack of crapware
I think the crapware threshold was already exceeded by the OS.
You of course could get a better compaq for http://www.walmart.com/catalog/product.do?product_ id=5750873
If your trying to dodge crapware wasting money on an already out of date machine isn't the way to do it. I prefer the Dell as it has future expandibility I do not think the Everex has. You can pop 4gb on the Dell board. The Nvidia 6150LE chipset is very well known and good. The dual core processor will have more longevity.
Frankly, if one of us had the choice and had to buy one of these who would not go with the Dell and just wipe it? If my parents were looking I would make them get the Dell, at least I know the components and crapware isn't but a few minutes of work to ditch
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
What would the same box cost, running $FAVORITE-LINUX-DISTRO instead of Vista? $250?
Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
Students can buy an education version of MS Office at a ridiculously low price, and many of them can get it for free from their schools that have already bought district-wides licenses for it.
WalMart knows this, so rather than pay for an MS Office or Works license when they sell the computer, they sell it without an MS office suite thereby increasing their margin. They only put OO.o on it as a filler so it has a good feature set in the newspaper ads. But I'm sure they understand that a lot of students will put MS Office on it once they get it home.
how much is it without any OS installed, or after rebate from microsoft if I don't use Vista?
thanks for the link :)
Most of that extra ram is needed for the global warming inducing "Aero graphics". Take that away and 1Gb is enough.
No sig today...
OK... so Dell.ca has a very decently spec'ed computer for about $100 more... (I'm sure there are similar deals in USD... it's $399 CDN... just did a quick conversion on XE.com
l s/pop7days/#e26983
http://www.redflagdeals.com/deals/main.php/alldea
* AMD Athlon 64 X2 Dual-Core Processor 4000+
* Windows XP Professional
* 1GB Dual Channel DDR2 SDRAM at 533MHz - 2 DIMMs
* 160GB SATA Hard Drive (7200RPM)
* 16x DVD+/-RW Drive
* Microsoft Works 8
* Integrated 7.1 Audio, Video
* Dell USB Keyboard, Optical USB Mouse
* 1 Year Next Business Day Onsite/In Home Service and Tech Support
I think it's worth it for $100 more... even with possible crapware... XP Pro itself is worth like $150 OEM. (I'd still rather of XP than Vista at the moment)
... then it would have XP instead. That would have made it an even better deal.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
I think the GP is right, the kids will whine because they can't play games.
I think you mean, the can't play the latest 3D game releases.
Slip 'em a copy of DOOM. I bet even DOOM II will run great. You could probably even run Quake or Quake II on there without much trouble.
Duke Nuk'em might take forever though.
paintball
...is why their webserver is smoking right now.
The Wal-Mart PR machine likes to give the illusion that they have the cheapest prices but yet again, they don't. For the past year the Microcenter by me has been selling refurbished 2.4G P4 machines loaded with XP Professional for $249. I have no interests in Microcenter other than they have a store a few blocks from me that I shop at and I like reading their monthly sale ads while sitting on the toilet. Here's a link to that PC because it's on sale again this month. http://microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtm l?product_id=0259605
They also have a refurbished Compaq for $199 (P4 1.7G) that would be good for college students too.
Prices are plummeting again.
However I never trust those rebates.
One word: Kickbacks.
-50 DKP for lame post!
Here's a link to a page about these amazing old laptops. http://www.old-computers.com/museum/computer.asp?c =233
I still fire it up and poke around in Microsoft BASIC every so often. Unfortunately, I no longer have a printer that accepts a parallel connection, and I never bothered to pick up a tape drive for it, so it's no longer very useful to me any more, but it's still a lot of fun.
Never eat more than you can lift -- Miss Piggy
Regarding education, it might be OK for the basic stuff but innovative teachers are going far beyond the basic word processing/web browsing thin client type stuff nowadays. I'm training a group of new teachers right now on iLife. In a fifth grade class, students can write, cast, direct, film, edit, and publish a movie on a topic they're studying to their own website on a school web server using iLife. They can compose their own soundtrack using GarageBand. They can make a podcast about the movie and put it on their website. They can take pictures of the process and make it a slideshow and publish THAT on their site. All easily possible because of iLife and the fact that today's Intel Macs have the CPU power to do all this stuff. You're not doing any of that on a cheapo PC. When kids make stuff, they learn more than just reading dry old textbooks. It's called constructivist learning. At the secondary level, the projects can and do get more in depth.
So if I'm a fifth grade teacher, I don't want one of these crap boxes. You can buy three crap boxes for the price of one iMac, but I'd rather have the iMac.
Music - www.richardmac.com
Because I'd slap you with a big old "troll" and filter all your comments out of my view.
That's a good thing. My last computer was loaded with trailware. It was hard to get any work done, while juggling a band of unruly settlers across the country in wagons to the Pacific shore.
If it did have all that junk: AOL, Norton, etc.; they could probably sell it considerably cheaper. Companies *pay* to have you put that crap on your computer. They're buying advertising.
remove vista and it changes to middle of the road.
I've been trying to figure out a way to get a fanless computer for some time. But it always turned out to be $550+. This is actually a great way to have your own fanless computer. To make this computer silent, you'd have to replace the cpu fan with a large heatsink (like those Tunic towers) and take the fan out, and replace the PSU with either a low power fanless PSU or one of those 200W external brick PSUs. If the HD is too loud (and you don't need the HD space), replace that with a 4GB IDE flash drive. Also, I think this would make a great home server for most uses.
It's not on their website. So when does this happen? What you can get today is an Everex GC3500 with a monitor for $348 + tax&shipping.
Vista is awesomeware!
And it would make a nice Linux box, but $298 isn't really the price - you have to add on the price of the monitor you have to buy, which brings it up to around $450-500.
http://timcol6.freehostia.com/
Old motherboards can be stable now, if they were stable when they were new. Crap, however, does not improve with age.
My router is an Abit BX6.2 with an Celeron 300A (overclocked to 450MHz) that is and always has been rock solid. Once a year I put a drop of oil on the CPU fan, and it's good for another year. Intel's 440BX was a good chipset. Maxed out at 512KB of RAM, this system runs my personal domain, providing DNS, SMTP, IMAP, SSH, HTTP/TLS, NFS, SMB, and NTP services. It's only been down for kernel upgrades, new drives, or power outages.
This Everex Via c7 system looks like a reasonable replacement. Faster, more RAM, SATA drives, and all while using less power.
I would be cautious about old motherboards from the era of counterfeit capacitors, and even those may be worth using if you know how to solder.
...and get the student a used laptop off Craig's List for about $100 cheaper that has similar specs and such...
This computer is a great deal; an excellent deal for anyone with financial conservation in mind. However, there are so many used PCs (and laptops now) that will not only save you money getting, but will also be getting a computer that is more responsive and trusted (has anyone ever heard of Everex?)
Those are my two cents.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?item=N82 E16834280004
You get to buy a CD with all the crapware!
In case you miss them, or your friends have been annoying you by bragging about all the preloaded sh*t that they got 'in a bundled package'
And an additional $5 for a recovery CD, when you've regained your sanity.
WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
As a parent who will likely be paying for their college, I don't feel obliged to provide for their entertainment.
Yep. Condoms are cheap. Go get laid, kid. I ain't paying for you to get even geekier.
Social responsibility and environmental friendliness are important to many Americans these days. Companies don't actually care about being socially responsible or environmentally friendly though; they market their products that way because they can profit quite a lot by making customers think they're helping the world by buying the company's products (or some such rubbish). It's genuinely astounding how shallow the vast majority of the marketing is; it nearly competes with the shallowness of the people who buy into it.
"The crack here was simply copying the paper or card with the keys as well as the diskette(s), which was harder than you might imagine as photocopiers only existed at big companies and libraries."
Not only that... many were printed in black on purple paper so it wouldn't photocopy.
No sig today...
I know some folks have gotten their MS licensing fee back from other places, I am just wondering if anyone here has successfully gotten an MS license fee back from Walmart, when you say you don't agree to the terms and don't want it, but will keep the hardware? If so, would you outline the steps and what sort of check you received?
Perhaps this fee, if it could be gotten easy, might offset filling up that one open RAM slot. The machine should be perfectly fine then. Spec wise it's better than the one I am using right now for that matter, and this machine is fine with just half a gig of RAM running linux (FC6 right now).
trust me, students are cheap, and also often lazy. many will learn OOo simply because it's cheaper than buying word and works is an incompatible piece of shit
Snowden and Manning are heroes.
refurbished, inefficient and HALF the memory. i'll take the VIA
Snowden and Manning are heroes.
Imagine the same machine with Ubuntu instead. Twice as fast, even cheaper, and Twice as stable and reliable. I understand they need to market the platform that most of the PC games play on, but having a box right next to it for sale that runs twice as well, and costs $50 and says "NOT FOR GAMES" on the side would probably sell very well to 70% of the people out there who don't give a shit about games.
rhY
I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
I meant $50 LESS. *sigh*
I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
Two days ago I bought a computer for my mother. They'll deliver it tomorrow. It's an upgrade from her 486DX 80MHz, with 40MB of RAM, a 1MB video card and a CD-ROM drive. It's hard disk is less than 2GB for sure (I think it's a 540MB HDD). It runs Windows 95, Word 2000 and IE.
:-)))
With this equipment she browses, uses Gmail (before she used Outlook Express), and recently has begun working as a translator.
The new one comes with Linux preloaded (I'll probably install Ubuntu on it), is a Sempron 3000, has 512 MB of RAM, a 80GB HDD, a DVD-RW drive, and everything-else on-board.
Until three and a half years ago I had a 486DX4 100MHZ with 48MB of RAM, a 1MB video card and some 4GB of HD space. That took me through college, on Windows 95 and OS/2, and lately Linux (Debian then Gentoo).
Then my first upgrade was to an Athlon XP 2500+ Barton, with 512MB, a nVidia FX5200 with 128MB, 120GB HDD. That now runs Ubuntu.
How's that
Concur. I loaded OpenOffice.org on the PC's of two of my University student kids when they started (both with BSci type majors) because I didn't want to shell out extra money for MS Office, and refuse for ethical reasons to load copies of my legacy MS Office. My kids used OO with no problems or complaints over the course of their University careers. The only thing that annoys me, although they don't care one way or the other, is that when electronic submission is specified they are compelled to save out to either ".doc", ".xls," or ".ppt" proprietary MS formats. More recently (after I pointed the feature out to them), they started submitting trons in pdf format. Considering that they both attend state run schools, it bothers me that my tax dollars in effect promote Microsoft Corporation. Professors seem to now universally accept pdf, which is a good trend. I use OO almost exclusively myself now, under Gnu/Linux on my laptop, and only use MS on site at work. I do quite a bit of work from home and on travel, however, using my own laptop, and have only found an occasional need to reopen spreadsheets or presentations at work to resolve chart conversion or graphics rendering anomalies before submitting deliverable files in MS format.
From Spectrum-Computer here in San Francisco (and there are cheaper places down the peninsula - these guys are right in town):
Intel Basic Office Workstation $249:
INTEL CELERON 331 2.66GHz 256K LGA775
Mini Case
Asus Main Board
512MB DDR2 Memory
80GB SATA 7200RPM HDD
Onboard Intel Graphics Media
Onboard Audio
Onboard LAN
16x DVD-ROM
Keyboard + Mouse
Upgrades as:
Intel Pentium4 631 3.0Ghz 2M LGA775 $289
Intel Core 2 Duo E4300 1.8GHz 800MHz 2MB LGA775 $350
Want something a little more powerful - try an AMD solution:
AMD Value and Performance 64-bit Solutions $309
AMD Sempron 3000+ 1.6GHz AM2 128K L2 Cache
Asus M2NBP-VM nVidia Quadro NVS 210S & nForce 430B AM2 Motherboard
Mid-Tower ATX Case
1G DDR2 Memory
160GB SATA2 7200RPM HDD
Onboard AMD Graphic support DVI
Onboard High Definition Sound
Onboard Gigabit LAN
16x DVD-ROM
Upgrades as:
AMD Athlon64 3500+ 2.2GHz AM2 512K L2 Cache $350
AMD Athlon64x2 3800+ 2.0GHz AM2 512K L2 Cache $399
Granted you've got to pay extra for the OS - which adds another $100-150 to the price - unless of course you put Linux on it, or already have a Windows OS license you can use. And when you buy Windows from a white box dealer, you get a full OEM install CD - none of this "recovery partition" or "Recovery CD" crap you get from the big retailers.
And Spectrum will put a diskette drive in the box so you can flash your BIOS or flash a RAID BIOS or whatever.
PCs are commodities these days. Buy them that way. Screw the big retailers - whatever you save from their more massive purchasing power and reduced prices will end up costing you later in aggravation and problems when the system fails and you find it harder to recover because of the corners they cut and the customization they did over a white box to "differentiate" themselves.
Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
Yep it is loaded with crapware!
AOL trials, MS works 8, mcAfee internet security suite, and soem ridiculous games, with MS adware and Dell adware on the first screen that boots up then the home pages on IE are set to dell as well.
It uses a win modem that i can not seem to find fax software for, and it has issues with dial up.
The computer would frequently disconnect me from the net while trying to download open office 2.2 with out using a torrent. My ISP said it was losing the signal.
It was forgetting it is connected to the net thanks to windows Vista home premium.
This machine is locking up frequently while stepping away while doing something. I had to stop using the screen saver and turn off all the power saver options in order to us it with out having a conniption fit. It still has a stray process grabbing it and locking it. I am waiting to get my Linux distro disk in the mail to see if it can function better with the hardware. this machine is running AMD 64 dual core 1.9 Ghz and using a crappy 32 bit OS.
One saving grace is the chess game included.
Other than that i am warning my friends not to buy it!
TSMS
D~W
I'd rather spend twice as much on last year's hardware than buy a computer from Wal-Mart. I'm not big on the whole slavery thing. Do I know that these are made by workers in sweatshops? No, but I am convinced that abused labor in the U.S. and abroad is how Wal-Mart consistently undercuts its competitors. I wouldn't even buy something made legitimately from a store that was willing to abuse so many people to make money.
Jesus says "No one can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to one and despise the other You cannot serve God and wealth." (Matthew 6:24) (NASB).
I know which one Wal-Mart serves, and I'm not willing to take part in their evil dealing to save myself a few hundred dollars.
So, is his mom hot?
Per Everex where-2-buy at http://www.everex.com/where%20to%20buy/where%20to% 20buy.htm, Wal-Mart stores carry it but walmart.com doesn't.