- Oct 28, 1999
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This is psuedo related to the Home Built Pride(subscriber),
Home Built Pride(non-subscriber) topic posted a while back.
5 years ago, a top of the line computer would run you nearly 3-4 grand or more if you wanted all the bells and whistles and gadgets and gizmos. I remember interning at a John Deere Plant during a huge upgrade rollout. We were dropping in 32 meg sticks of EDO ram, valued at well over $150 a piece. I had nearly 150 sticks of ram in a box that I carried around from workstation to workstation as I upgraded each machine. I was entrusted with nearly $23,000 worth of memory sticks, in a box that I could easily have just walked out of the building with.
I remember the days of $1000 CPU's and $700 19" monitors. Modems would run you $100 for a decent one. Hard drives were $150 for a 4 gig drive. A 2x2x6 CD-RW drive was $350, and that's because you were "cheap", and went with an IDE drive.
I won't even go into 10-15 years ago when an IBM PC was rivaling the price of a quality used car! :Q
Anywhoo...my point is this - Relatively speaking, computers, and their parts, are getting cheap, dirt cheap. You can buy a *nearly* top of the line machine for a fraction of what a *nearly* top of the line machine used to cost. People can go out to Best buy and get a modem for $25. They can get half a gig of RAM for $60. A nice CD Burner can be found for $50 bucks after rebates.
It's to the point where the skills of a PC Tech are becoming endangered. If you wanted to upgrade your CPU in the past, you were dancing with the danger of killing a $500+ piece of hardware if you installed it properly. Now somebody can buy a really good CPU for $110 and roll their chances on the install. If they mess it up, their out $110, but it's not like toasting the equivilent of a mortgage payment like it used to be. Same thing goes for Memory and other parts. Why pay somebody $50 an hour to put in a $30 part that you could put in yourself with a couple minutes of instruction reading?
The parts keep dropping in prices, but the prices we charge have to go up to keep with the increasing prices that we have to pay for everything else(Food, cars, houses, clothes, gas, ect). At what point will our market be seriously in danger? Yes, I know that there will always be people out there who will never have the confidence, or initiative, to do it theirselves, so those opportunities will still exist. But, those people are going to slowly be dwindling in numbers. As prices keep dropping, entire systems keep getting cheaper and cheaper. It's almost to the point where computers are disposable. What used to pay for an upgrade 3-4 years ago, will buy a whole new machine now.
In college, I paid for my pizza and beer by doing upgrades and tech work for home users in my area. That market has really dried up. I have since made the move to service and support to small business and have found a much better market. Many small business are taking advantage of the cheap prices and are doing upgrades that they have have put off for several years because of high prices. They get more bang for their buck now. But, the number of small business clients is no where near as high as the home user market that I had 2 or 3 years ago.
Any takes on this?
Home Built Pride(non-subscriber) topic posted a while back.
5 years ago, a top of the line computer would run you nearly 3-4 grand or more if you wanted all the bells and whistles and gadgets and gizmos. I remember interning at a John Deere Plant during a huge upgrade rollout. We were dropping in 32 meg sticks of EDO ram, valued at well over $150 a piece. I had nearly 150 sticks of ram in a box that I carried around from workstation to workstation as I upgraded each machine. I was entrusted with nearly $23,000 worth of memory sticks, in a box that I could easily have just walked out of the building with.
I remember the days of $1000 CPU's and $700 19" monitors. Modems would run you $100 for a decent one. Hard drives were $150 for a 4 gig drive. A 2x2x6 CD-RW drive was $350, and that's because you were "cheap", and went with an IDE drive.
I won't even go into 10-15 years ago when an IBM PC was rivaling the price of a quality used car! :Q
Anywhoo...my point is this - Relatively speaking, computers, and their parts, are getting cheap, dirt cheap. You can buy a *nearly* top of the line machine for a fraction of what a *nearly* top of the line machine used to cost. People can go out to Best buy and get a modem for $25. They can get half a gig of RAM for $60. A nice CD Burner can be found for $50 bucks after rebates.
It's to the point where the skills of a PC Tech are becoming endangered. If you wanted to upgrade your CPU in the past, you were dancing with the danger of killing a $500+ piece of hardware if you installed it properly. Now somebody can buy a really good CPU for $110 and roll their chances on the install. If they mess it up, their out $110, but it's not like toasting the equivilent of a mortgage payment like it used to be. Same thing goes for Memory and other parts. Why pay somebody $50 an hour to put in a $30 part that you could put in yourself with a couple minutes of instruction reading?
The parts keep dropping in prices, but the prices we charge have to go up to keep with the increasing prices that we have to pay for everything else(Food, cars, houses, clothes, gas, ect). At what point will our market be seriously in danger? Yes, I know that there will always be people out there who will never have the confidence, or initiative, to do it theirselves, so those opportunities will still exist. But, those people are going to slowly be dwindling in numbers. As prices keep dropping, entire systems keep getting cheaper and cheaper. It's almost to the point where computers are disposable. What used to pay for an upgrade 3-4 years ago, will buy a whole new machine now.
In college, I paid for my pizza and beer by doing upgrades and tech work for home users in my area. That market has really dried up. I have since made the move to service and support to small business and have found a much better market. Many small business are taking advantage of the cheap prices and are doing upgrades that they have have put off for several years because of high prices. They get more bang for their buck now. But, the number of small business clients is no where near as high as the home user market that I had 2 or 3 years ago.
Any takes on this?
