I think not.
Reality check:
That's why you completely drop the entire idea that brand names mean anything useful nowadays and take a little time (no PhD in EE required) and learn to turn screwdrivers and shove plugs into predesigned slots. High-Tech does not exist any longer. All that hype is sales people trying to take you for a ride. Today, excluding propriatary stuff like your motherboard, it's just run of the mill off the shelf canned components and prefabricated cables, not machine code and phase lock loops and nand gates like it was way back when. Upgrade $50 at a time over a year and put in what you want, not what someone thinks you want for roughly the same price. Every once in a while you run into a snag on slowly upgrading but it's seldom a show stopper.
No offense intended, I'm just get to hear nearly that same exact story from the lady next to me at work about twice a week. She is convinced the HP whateveritiscalled is god of all computers past present future, nevermind the insignificant fact she's on her 3rd $800+ computer in two years and my mutt computer does what I want it to for less than any one of her junkers.
$1000? Hint: Stay away from retail except for the rare moment where their sale brings a part you need down to reasonable...
Now, if they'd just start selling laptop components like they do desktop components and for a sensible price...
IMO anyway...