Originally posted by: Harvey
The thing that bothers me about most "department store" brands is when they offer dirt cheap entry level machines that will light up a Windows desktop but are so underpowered, they'll take a dump the first time you try to use some serious aps.
For example, my sister bought a cheap Dell that included onboard video. When I looked at the motherboard, I saw that it had the holes for an AGP socket, but they were too cheap to stuff it so you couldn't add your own vid card to offload it from the 256 MB of RAM it included.
Here's a current example. For $299, you get a box with a Celeron, 256 MB of RAM, onboard video, an 80 GB drive and a 17" CRT monitor. I don't argue with the drive or the monitor (as long as they work), but 256 MB of RAM is barely enough to keep the machine crawling if you want to run a decent spreadsheet while keeping a couple of other related Office apps running. If this current model doesn't at least allow the option of upgrading to a separate vid card, it's damned near useless.
This machine is obviously targeting first time buyers who usually don't enough to understand what they need for what they may even think they want to do. Under that condition, I think even offering this kind of crap with no upgrade path to bare usability is pretty close to fraud because it can only lead to disappointment.