- Aug 25, 2001
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I was at my local Staples store, and there is a coupon for $100 off clearance computers until Aug 30. They had two desktop PCs listed, one for $249.99, one for $279.99.
Edit: Those were the CLEARANCE prices, list prices stated on the sign was $399.99 ea, I believe.
I was surprised that no-one picked them up for $100 off already. Then I googled the specs.
The $249.99 Dell was a J1800 Celeron (Bay Trail-D Atom). The $279.99 one was an HP, I think, with an A4 in it (small core).
Although both were quad-cores, they just didn't seem powerful enough to waste $150-170 on.
The "race to the bottom", including the introduction of Atom / Kabini into desktop PCs, sold for as much as $400 list (4GB / 500GB), is also partially what is killing the desktop market.
Along with the stagnation of the higher-end Core CPUs as far as absolute performance goes (and how much does 10W of power consumption matter on the desktop? Not a whit, to most people).
If I were an average desktop user, and my PC was five years old, and I went into a store and purchased a brand-new budget-class PC, and found out that it was in fact SLOWER than my five-year-old PC, I think that I would be turned off of desktop PCs forever.
I can understand Atom and Kabini / Beema in laptops. Power-consumption is king there, as long as you have adequate or better performance. I don't fault Intel or AMD for pushing their small-core lines there.
But desktops? What garbage!
I would rather have a five-year-old Walmart-special desktop, with 4GB of RAM (removable, not soldered in), and an AMD Athlonn II X2 250 rig, than a modern Atom rig, even with quad-core. (Because the Athlon II has superior single-threaded performance.)
Edit: Those were the CLEARANCE prices, list prices stated on the sign was $399.99 ea, I believe.
I was surprised that no-one picked them up for $100 off already. Then I googled the specs.
The $249.99 Dell was a J1800 Celeron (Bay Trail-D Atom). The $279.99 one was an HP, I think, with an A4 in it (small core).
Although both were quad-cores, they just didn't seem powerful enough to waste $150-170 on.
The "race to the bottom", including the introduction of Atom / Kabini into desktop PCs, sold for as much as $400 list (4GB / 500GB), is also partially what is killing the desktop market.
Along with the stagnation of the higher-end Core CPUs as far as absolute performance goes (and how much does 10W of power consumption matter on the desktop? Not a whit, to most people).
If I were an average desktop user, and my PC was five years old, and I went into a store and purchased a brand-new budget-class PC, and found out that it was in fact SLOWER than my five-year-old PC, I think that I would be turned off of desktop PCs forever.
I can understand Atom and Kabini / Beema in laptops. Power-consumption is king there, as long as you have adequate or better performance. I don't fault Intel or AMD for pushing their small-core lines there.
But desktops? What garbage!
I would rather have a five-year-old Walmart-special desktop, with 4GB of RAM (removable, not soldered in), and an AMD Athlonn II X2 250 rig, than a modern Atom rig, even with quad-core. (Because the Athlon II has superior single-threaded performance.)
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