Mercutio
Fatwah on Western Digital
I'm doing my "Teaching Kids how to build computers" classes again this summer. As in years past, this means buying low-end parts by the score.
Here's the system:
Celeron 430 1.8GHz CPU
Intel branded 945-based uATX motherboard (with no PCIe slots, something I didn't notice until after I bought a bunch of them)
1GB Corsair RAM
80GB Seagate 7200.10 AS
20x Optiarc DVD burner
Foxconn uATX case with 300W PSU
Vista Home Premium
HP D2460 Printer
Hanns-G 19" widescreen LCD
The whole setup runs to a total of ~$580.
Anyway, I have at this point taught 122 kids to put these things together. I have 31 more kids to do. I'm thinking that 150 systems is a good number, a number upon which comment may be made.
1. Intel motherboards have STAGGERING reliability. Zero failures, zero defects in the builds to date. Compared to the boards I used last year (Gigabyte and Biostar for AMD-based systems), this is quite surprising. I'm used to seeing about a 4% DOA rate on motherboards.
2. Seagate 7200.10 hard disks are SHIT. I'm talking about a 12% failure rate. None of these drives have had the decency to be DOA. They've all been media error issues. Newegg has been shipping me the drives in Seagate factory cases; this isn't a packing problem, nor is it a bad batch of drives. No single batch has had more than two bad drives in it (though several have had two).
Why stick with Seagate, then? The main reason is Seagate Discwizard, a free OEM version of Acronis TrueImage. This is also the main way that I discover the media errors.
3. The Hanns-G monitors have been excellent for a budget brand. They have glossy screens and DVI, and even though they aren't full-range (16.2M colors instead of 16.7M), they look very good. I'm very pleased with them and frankly the people getting the screens think they've been given premium hardware. Goodness all the way around.
4. Foxconn cases: One PSU failure this year from all the cases. It's a HEC brand power supply. I had another case that was beaten to hell (its power supply, however, worked fine). I called my distributor (the case and Windows are the only thing I didn't buy from Newegg) and they just gave me another one. It's not worth anyone's time to ship them back, apparently.
5. HP D2460 Printer. Here's the thing: I need a CHEAP printer for these classes. I literally CAN'T spend more than $50 on a printer. My options, therefore, are basically Lexmark and HP models. The former $40 HP Printer at least included both Ink Tanks. The CURRENT HP model only includes the color tank. No blank.
Let's repeat that: NO FUCKING BLACK INK.
And then the driver bitches at you every half hour until you install a black cartridge. One that you have to buy. Because it isn't in the box. There's no setting to tell it not to bitch. It's basically an advertisement that you get every half hour to buy HP Ink.
On top of that, since I had one that shipped with a broken cover that I had to send back, I set one up to see how much it would actually print on its single color cartridge. Any guesses?
Well, with full page text coverage (Lorem Ipsum etc), the answer is 46 pages.
That's just disgusting.
More to come.
Here's the system:
Celeron 430 1.8GHz CPU
Intel branded 945-based uATX motherboard (with no PCIe slots, something I didn't notice until after I bought a bunch of them)
1GB Corsair RAM
80GB Seagate 7200.10 AS
20x Optiarc DVD burner
Foxconn uATX case with 300W PSU
Vista Home Premium
HP D2460 Printer
Hanns-G 19" widescreen LCD
The whole setup runs to a total of ~$580.
Anyway, I have at this point taught 122 kids to put these things together. I have 31 more kids to do. I'm thinking that 150 systems is a good number, a number upon which comment may be made.
1. Intel motherboards have STAGGERING reliability. Zero failures, zero defects in the builds to date. Compared to the boards I used last year (Gigabyte and Biostar for AMD-based systems), this is quite surprising. I'm used to seeing about a 4% DOA rate on motherboards.
2. Seagate 7200.10 hard disks are SHIT. I'm talking about a 12% failure rate. None of these drives have had the decency to be DOA. They've all been media error issues. Newegg has been shipping me the drives in Seagate factory cases; this isn't a packing problem, nor is it a bad batch of drives. No single batch has had more than two bad drives in it (though several have had two).
Why stick with Seagate, then? The main reason is Seagate Discwizard, a free OEM version of Acronis TrueImage. This is also the main way that I discover the media errors.
3. The Hanns-G monitors have been excellent for a budget brand. They have glossy screens and DVI, and even though they aren't full-range (16.2M colors instead of 16.7M), they look very good. I'm very pleased with them and frankly the people getting the screens think they've been given premium hardware. Goodness all the way around.
4. Foxconn cases: One PSU failure this year from all the cases. It's a HEC brand power supply. I had another case that was beaten to hell (its power supply, however, worked fine). I called my distributor (the case and Windows are the only thing I didn't buy from Newegg) and they just gave me another one. It's not worth anyone's time to ship them back, apparently.
5. HP D2460 Printer. Here's the thing: I need a CHEAP printer for these classes. I literally CAN'T spend more than $50 on a printer. My options, therefore, are basically Lexmark and HP models. The former $40 HP Printer at least included both Ink Tanks. The CURRENT HP model only includes the color tank. No blank.
Let's repeat that: NO FUCKING BLACK INK.
And then the driver bitches at you every half hour until you install a black cartridge. One that you have to buy. Because it isn't in the box. There's no setting to tell it not to bitch. It's basically an advertisement that you get every half hour to buy HP Ink.
On top of that, since I had one that shipped with a broken cover that I had to send back, I set one up to see how much it would actually print on its single color cartridge. Any guesses?
Well, with full page text coverage (Lorem Ipsum etc), the answer is 46 pages.
That's just disgusting.
More to come.