No.MedNez said:*gripping chair just that little bit harder*
Please read the thread carefully before you reply 4 pages later with lots of big changes, casmira. Lainee as she has pointed out, is not an expert at computers, and justification of your hardware choices would greatly assist the decisions she has to make.
IN MY OPINION (hence not reality) SATA is not worth itMedNez said:A 200gb will suit her well? The original hard drive was 80gb, and that was seen as sufficient by a friend who quoted her for the specs. 200gb is a little overkill, for what it's going to be used for. SATA works with her hardware, and if for some reason it dies, which is fairly unlikely, mind you, it becomes the computer store's problem to retrieve the data, and I'm sure they know very well that they need to stock IDE and SATA complient motherboards to plug hard drives into.
9800 Pro's are essential too gamers (example), yet it took dell ages for it too come out on their 'gaming' computers ... Don't compare large companies stats with what people currently buy as whats seen as "good"MedNez said:Eh? 1gb is essential? If it's essential, why does almost every single computer shipped as an out-of-the-box setup come with 256 or 512mb ? If it was essential, all computers would ship with 1gb. It is by far essential. 512mb is fine for what she will be using the computer for.
An example, lets say at the time 256mb is seen as top notch for a computer, Dell goes makes 1,000,000 machines with that RAM, by the time thats made, distributed, priced, tested, installed software and any other processes Im not aware of, 256mb doubles too 512mb
They are always one small step behind
Now Im suggesting 1GB because each ram chip is ~$100 maybe less, and for that extra $100 (since she seemed so keen to spend $3.2k) can make the computer better in alot of circumstances, its just my opinion, i thrash out my computer so maybe its just not right for her
It was only a suggestion, stop providing retarded and immature responsesMedNez said:... I'm not sure if that was even worth saying? "Don't get a good video card because you may be tempted to run out and buy games for it". I don't like having to be blunt, but that's outright stupid. That's close enough to me saying, "I have a draw full of steak knives in my kitchen, therefore I might be tempted to go and murder people".
But when something drops in price, its an indication too go buy it, technology always drops in price, but recently LCD's have taken the dive, you can buy 17" LCDs for way under $500, Im saying that now LCD's have gone cheap to BUY one, why get CRT when you can get LCDMedNez said:Because something drops in price, doesn't mean you should run out and buy it. Lots of expensive things drop in price, that doesn't mean you run out and get one straight away just because it's lower in price. Do you have anything else to justify why she should get an LCD ? Or was it a baseless fact that didn't need to further complicate the post?
LCD is lighter
smaller
less energy
less "radiation"
Clearer
easier on the eyes
nicer looking
I hope I've done what you have askedMedNez said:PLEASE justify why you want to change all these components when we've finally started to narrow down the choices. Don't reinflate the balloon once we've started to let the air out without providing at least a reason why you should buy something, other than it has dropped in price. It works better for everyone that way.
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