Honold, anyone would think your initials were MD.
I agree that the inclusion of MS Office, and the remarkably cheap Radeon option, are great bargains. Unfortunately, the rest of your argument founders in a puddle of logic.
Yes, you can (or could) buy a PC from Dell for $599, sans monitor. However, you're not just comparing apples to oranges, it's more like apples to cherries.
Firstly, the main profit here for Dell is that they are more a finance company rather than a computer company. In this, they are by no means alone. Many people will jump at the monthly instalment option, and pay 85% more than the advertised price, because most people do not understand finance. Why do you think they have the rebate scheme?
Secondly, the things you got wrong:
The warranty is one-year, not three. And whereas Mercutio will care how long his customer is off the air, Dell won't. Consumer goods warranties are slippery things at best, and at worst they apply to computers. Of course, the customer is free to engage someone else to fix the PC they so desperately need - not only will they be out of pocket for this, but Dell explicitly denies all further warranty responsibility once anyone else gets their hands on it.
About the only time a PC will be fixed onsite is if the CD-ROM drive is dead, or something equally ubiquitous. There is not just a gap between
real onsite service and what Dell offers, It's a yawning chasm. Frankly, I'd like to see all companies making such outrageous claims prosecuted, but there is an ever-diminishing chance of that in the modern world.
I'm not even going to start on the fact that the overwhelming majority of problems are down to software, something explicitly excluded in the Dell support agreement.
Secondly, Dell tells whoppers (and gets away with it). For example, the 256MB option isn't dual-channel. You need
two (or four) matching DIMMs to support dual-channel, and the 256MB is clearly a single DIMM. Of course, if you pay a whopping $140 (or $150 if you're enough of a mug to forego the rebate), they'll happily provide a second 256MB DIMM!
I'm afraid that I'm cynical enough to wonder if the "400MHz" they advertise applies to the actual DRAM clock or the FSB ... You'll notice that they avoid any reference to "DDR400" or "PC3200".
In any case, the terms "800MHz" and "400MHz" are of course misleading. Increasing the data rate doesn't affect the request (address) rate, which is still languishing at 200MHz (AFAIK). Hey, I'm being picky today after being reminded of this by a thread over at Aces.
Thirdly, the configuration is wildly disparate with Mercutio's - as he tried to point out to you. My efforts with Dell's online customization yielded $1278 (after rebates), depending on speakers (none with the base config). If you want an optical mouse and passable keyboard, add another $50. And it would only cost him an extra $200 to add MS Office. The 9800 might hurt, though ...
Fourthly, adding the missing items aftermarket is creative but impractical. This is a Dell PC, not a white box. Go read their warranty terms, then tear it up. After changing the HDD, CD and RAM, you expect them to support you? I assume their support still revolves around the hidden backup partition, which will no longer exist.
Just adding those three items will cost $200-250, making you the loser, but you also forgot the graphics card, speakers etc ...
Fifthly, I dispute your suggestion that a P4 2600 is faster than an Athlon XP2800. If it was a Palomino (2250MHz or 87% raw clock speed), your statement would be wrong 90% of the time. I'll concede a Barton might be considered equivalent, but for most people the 'feel' of Mercutio's configuration will be the same or better.
I take umbrage at your suggestion that a high-end Compucase product is in
any way inferior to Dell's Palo Alto plastic toys. You need to get out more. And as for the power supply ... :roll:
Sixthly, I'm not sure that a six month subscription to AOL can be considered a plus. Okay, you can select an 'alternative' ISP, but I'd love to know the terms and conditions.
To finish, I'd like to be perverse and leave you with the advertising that Dell is bombarding us with here. Now this may be a threat, although Tea would say that anyone who buys one deserves everything they get.
Celeron 2.2GHz
128MB DDR-SDRAM (up to 32MB allocated to graphics)
40GB HDD
48x CD-ROM
3.5" FDD
15" CRT monitor (13.8 viewable)
WordPerfect Productivity Pack
1-year limited NBD onsite service
MS Windows XP Home
Free Delivery (!)
US$590 (excluding taxes, assuming exchange rate of 65c, etc)
The real killer they offered a couple of weeks ago was more or less the same thing (Celeron 2GHz?), but for $530. With Oz pricing, that's hard to beat (not that you'd want to).