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05 July 2007

Tech help needed, Hoss! Bessie's goin' down. My desktop is dying. [More:]

Long time coming, really, as she's been limping along for a few years and I think I've finally milked her for just about all she's worth, that is, outside angst relieving demonstrations of the effects of gravity by way of two story drops. The drives appear in reasonable enough working order that I'm confident of being able to extract [or have extracted] the material, mostly music and photo work. However I still face replacing and hopefully upgrading to something newer.

It makes sense for me to stick with a PC as my laptops are as well. I'm not at all intimidated by the selection process, having been part of the IT team at my last job in Portland, but that was a few years ago and now with these 70 - 80 hour work weeks, I just don't have the time or energy to cast my net wide and do all of the compare and contrasting that I was once able to do. I'm hoping some of you can offer pointers and advice before I shell out a couple bucks for a new Bessie.

The deets:
Would love to get back to my photography, so that would mean running some piggy programs such as Adobe, but not overly so. I'd hardly be rendering images for six to eight hours daily. I will, however, likely use it on a near daily basis for music and audio. [ I realize that there are better arrangements, but apartment life in the Mission dictates this set up.] Of course, there is the usual word processing, internet and wireless capability and a flat screen monitor: I could rent out the space to a small family that my monitor currently occupies. Seriously.

Any useful suggestions, information or advice would be greatly appreciated!
Questions to help narrow things down: How quickly do you need to do this thing? How much money are you hoping to spend? How comfortable are you with simple hardware stuff (installing RAM, say, or an internal hard drive, that kind of thing)?
posted by box 05 July | 12:56
I'm not in a panic, but more than a few weeks is going to make me a tad bit bristly.

I don't want to say money isn't an issue, but it's relative. I'm in a position where I'd rather get something I really like and will use if that means a bit more as opposed to going low.

I'm completely comfortable with even not so basic hardware stuff.
posted by Frisbee Girl 05 July | 13:10
Check some of the offers at Dealcatcher for Dells. They have some good prices, especially through Dell Small Business, and LCD monitors are included in some of them. I've had a Dell desktop for a few years now with no problems. I hear Dell's customer service is total crap, but I haven't had to use their support, so I couldn't tell you.
posted by Otis 05 July | 13:13
Retailmenot?
posted by acro 05 July | 13:15
If I were in your place, I'd probably just spend a few minutes checking out Newegg and Directron and folks like that, then buy whatever barebones PC is on sale. You'd probably have to buy some RAM, maybe a hard drive or a video card or something, as well. Then again, I've got at least a teensy bit of free time, and I enjoy working on stuff. If that's not you, then it's not the best advice.
posted by box 05 July | 13:24
box is right on the money. from what it sounds like, barebones would be ideal for you, and it's the best way to get maximum bang for your buck in the PC world.

buying OEM (Dell) means you may be stuck with a Vista / crapware install. building a barebones means you have ultimate say over what gets put on there OS wise.

before i bought my macbook, i'd seriously considered getting a killer barebones desktop. i needed a laptop more tho (she says, posting from her fave coffeehouse...).

newegg has some great ideas on this front.
posted by lonefrontranger 05 July | 13:56
If you are happy with plugging hardware together, I would scour around and buy the components separately wherever you can get the best deals - that way yo get what you want instead of what is cheap for the shops to throw into a bare box. Spend the money you save on a bigger and/or better monitor - don't get sucked into those ultra-cheap LCD screens, because the monitor is what you have to look at all the time. A while ago, I bought two 19" LCDs from Dell for my home-built machine and, while I know they are not the greatest in terms of graphics ability, they are pretty good and the price was reasonable. Buy a nice keyboard and mouse too, for the same reason.
posted by dg 05 July | 16:10
Lou Rawls WTF? || OK, so I didn't get to see any fireworks this year,

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