Are you sure...? I'm certain the XPS uses a proprietary power supply and I'm almost certain that it was like five years ago that they changed from the industry standard to proprietary, and am not aware of them changing back.
Originally posted by: majewski9
Dell pc's while being quiet put out the heat since their fans are low spinning RPM and have heat duct. Dell is guilty of every crummy trick in building PC's ... their own form factors, crappy PSU's, and sub standard cases. At work we have close to 50 Dell Dimensions packing 2.8 ghz p IV's and 2.4 ghz p IVs as well. They all suffer from random resets, put out heat, and dont feel as fast they should be ( probaly crappy mem timings). I compared these to my current AMD rig @ 1.733 and SDRAM for god sakes .... Im proud to say that AMD rig feels just as fast if not faster especially in Visual Studio and Office Apps only two things in common with those systems. Also the Dells have very unreliable floppy drives and they are noisy as all hell .... they also seek periodically for no reason which is by far the weirdest pc problem ive seen in quite awhile.
Oh and yeah you can buy a " silent" fan for amd and intel rigs for pratically nothing. Even a SLK 900 with a powerful 92 mm fan and a speed control now would be nearly silent if you turned it way down. Who is that person that said you couldnt make your home built PC as quiet as a Dell? You sir are a fool ! I can get a silent fan and run overclocked easily.
Hmm industry satndard PSu's yeah what rated @ 100 watts.... gimme a break Dell!
Originally posted by: dexvx
I hope you're ready this today, but look on the Hot deals forum.
Dell 4600 (i865PE chipset with AGP)
256MB DDR PC3200 <-- would add more, but its enough to get by
ATI Radeon 9800 NP 128MB
2.4 Ghz Pentium 4, 800Mhz with HT
4x DVD+RW burner
Intel Pro/100 NIC
The rest you're familiar with, for less than $600 shipped + taxes.
And to the Dell bashers, no amount of computer firepower can save you from stupidity and human error.
The Dell is still a good deal, but I would only buy a Dell laptop.
Originally posted by: brettjrob
Custom built is the way to go, even if it lightens your wallet more in this particular case (usually it's the opposite). Even though the specs look impressive, it's because Dell sells computers through marketing hype... since most people look at the CPU speed before anything else, they can sell a 3GHz P4 system for $1500 regardless of the quality of the other components. So here you have a Dell 2.4GHz P4 with dual-channel DDR400... so great deal, the same performance as if you picked out an IS7, 2.4C, Corsair PC3200, and a Western Digital SE HDD, right? I think not. I highly doubt that memory is running at decent timings (CL3 perhaps?), I doubt the hard drive is high-performance, and I doubt that motherboard can touch any of the Springdales/Canterwoods out there from ABIT/ASUS/etc. These may all sounds like minor performance differences on their own, but when they all add up you're probably going to end up seeing overall system performance significantly lower than if you had assembled your own system. Just my opinion, though... I haven't actually seen benchmarks on Dell systems.
I think that anyone who builds his/her own can count on 24/7 tech support right here at the Forums. Heck, I even help people who have Dells, and I don't charge anything either.Originally posted by: Budmantom
Originally posted by: brettjrob
Custom built is the way to go, even if it lightens your wallet more in this particular case (usually it's the opposite). Even though the specs look impressive, it's because Dell sells computers through marketing hype... since most people look at the CPU speed before anything else, they can sell a 3GHz P4 system for $1500 regardless of the quality of the other components. So here you have a Dell 2.4GHz P4 with dual-channel DDR400... so great deal, the same performance as if you picked out an IS7, 2.4C, Corsair PC3200, and a Western Digital SE HDD, right? I think not. I highly doubt that memory is running at decent timings (CL3 perhaps?), I doubt the hard drive is high-performance, and I doubt that motherboard can touch any of the Springdales/Canterwoods out there from ABIT/ASUS/etc. These may all sounds like minor performance differences on their own, but when they all add up you're probably going to end up seeing overall system performance significantly lower than if you had assembled your own system. Just my opinion, though... I haven't actually seen benchmarks on Dell systems.
Don't forget to mention a$110 dvd burner, and a $130 9800 how about the OS. I also like having 24/7 tech support what price do you put on that? I have seen plenty of people here build computers without a hitch, I have also seen people going crazy over little bugs that they were having a hard time working out.
If you like to build your own then go for it, its a nice hobby. I like a new computer every year, it's a lot easier selling a Dell to the "comon folk" then a home built(even with the latest and greatest parts).
Originally posted by: arameth
For those of you who actually care:
Dude, I got the dell (I should be shot for using that line...).
I added on the 19" 1901FP monitor that has been discussed in other threads, as it was 25% offf (20% plus 5% coupon). All said and done, I think I got a good system, that will do a good job with gaming (Radeon 9800) and burn some DVD's too.
I'm curious, but maybe this belongs in another thread: From what I understand, Dell machines use Interl motherboards, which are not very over-clockable? How much truth to this is there? I'm not so worried about overclocking...and more worried about stability, as I've had some real POS systems in my time.
Thanks again to everyone for their input, which helped me make up my mind![]()