1. true, he should just learn to build the computer.* Any shop will charge a premium price if you bring in your own components.
* Why would your friend choose to have a pile of parts assembled, rather than simply buy a Dell, Lenovo, Asus, etc?
* As easy performance solution for a pre-built box is to add an upgraded video card or more memory.
1. true, she should just learn to build the computer.
2. those PCs have bad memory and cases (things no one notices, noobs usually look at the hard disk size, ram size (not frequency), and cpu cores), the CPU and GPU are not balanced (you can't play computer games with those), the PSU sucks.
3. it's not. If you add a video card you will ahve to buy a new case and a new psu because it's not powerful enough, the case is too small and the card doesn't fit, and the airflow is insufficent. It's very difficult to mount it in those cases too.
Adding memory is useless because it's still crap memory.
(I'm not even sure what CPU/GPU "balancing" is).
Everything you said is true.
Well, it was in 2003.
(I'm not even sure what CPU/GPU "balancing" is)
I've upgraded tons of prebuilts with memory, video cards, etc and I've never had to get a new case.
Please stop repeating stuff people have been saying for years, it simply isn't true anymore.
To get a high end gaming machine I would start from scratch, but for anything less, an upgraded prebuilt is a great way to get what you want for cheap. All of the Dell's I've seen have Kingston memory.
Your regurgitated theories are just plain wrong.
