SkyHog
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2005
- Messages
- 18,431
- Location
- Castle Rock, CO
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Everything Offends Me
Nick...
I'm not going to sell you a Mac. Yeah, you heard me. We haven't heard anything about what you want to do with this computer, just a very specific set of fairly meaningless performance criteria that seem to be tailored towards the computer you want.
If you want the Dell XPS, then buy the Dell XPS. If you want to feel "superior" because you have a WinAMD box, go ahead. Enjoy. Hell, go for the free red bezel, it looks pretty cool. But you don't need to have us tell you to do that.
Now... If you want to get into the Mac OS cheap, just get a Mac Mini and plug it into existing DKM. If you like it, maybe you'll decide to get an iMac or something with a bit more horsepower.
If you really are interested in a Mac with more horsepower, I'd suggest a Refurb iMac. They have the full warranty and all that, and there's a lot of people who have said very good things about the refurbs. Plus it'll even save ya a couple hundred bucks.
As far as that particular model - What it does NOT have from your list is 2.7 GHz (it's 2.66), 500GB HD (320) and 512MB VRAM (256). Do you really need 512MB of VRAM? It doesn't sound like this is gonna be a gaming system, so what's the point? Were you to spend the extra $200 to get a non-refurbished model, you could upgrade the hard drive to 500GB for $50.
What it DOES have that's not on your list: A beautiful 20-inch LCD display, a stylish design, Mac OS X 10.5 "Leopard", and the ability to run any operating system you want.
And yes, this is about the software. Mac OS X is the gold standard for ease of use *and* functionality. That doesn't mean "ooh, look at the pretty stuff on the screen." What it means is that you have a backup system included for FREE that's so dirt simple to set up - You plug in a drive, computer will ask if you want to use it for backups, you click "Yes" and you're done. What it means is that you'll never again have to go looking for drivers for that new digital camera or other peripheral you just bought, you just simply plug it in and it just plain works. What it means is that everything just plain works, without any hassle, the vast majority of the time (99.9% - I cannot claim that they work 100% of the time, because nothing does).
So again - If you want to try Mac OS X, buy a Mac. If you don't, just buy the damn PC already and be happy with it.
This wasn't really a loaded question, I really was considering a Mac....
The video ram is important because I do a fair bit of gaming, enough to warrant a better video card.
After pricing the computer, I found it had a 500GB hard drive at 7200 RPM,
and a video card with 512MB of VRAM. I think we may have been looking at different PCs.
Perhaps a Mac is just not for me at this time then, I really wasn't trying to find the one hole in the Mac lineup.
Thanks everyone.