I did it. I dithered and dithered for weeks, and then I made the plunge. I bought an ASUS CM5570 (refurbished) which has a pretty fast CPU and 6gigs of RAM. Now, I am, for the moment, stuck with Windows Vista (Home Premium), but I am thinking about going to Windows 7 ASAP. That move will be determined by what the upgrade costs me. If Microsoft is gonna gouge (and I can't finagle something CHEAP), I'll suffer through with Vista for a while. In other words, any upgrade to Windows 7 will be strictly determined by price.
After our conversation of about a month ago about how my old Dell was starting to do weird things and how I needed a new desktop machine...and she said that she was OK with this if I could do it for under $500, I haven't raised the issue again. When this little box showed up for like $421, with all that RAM, a big hard drive and an NVidia video card, I just couldn't resist. However, I haven't specifically mentioned that this is actually a done deal. I'm waiting to see how long it takes for either her to notice that I seem to have a new toy, or to finally ask if I am happy with my new machine (you know, letting me know that she knows...).
Of course, there is a small caveat at work here. While the 'puter did cost less than $500. I had to replace the monitor as well. I had two monitors die within two weeks of each other. I took the 22" Gateway in to someone who works on flat screen TVs and asked what it would cost to fix it. His answer was somewhere between $120 and $150. Well, I had originally purchased that monitor for $129 about 8 months ago. And I knew that I could get a new flat screen monitor for about the same cost...so I did. I found an nice 22" Dell that was going for $139 to replace the Gateway. The guy at the shop told me that it was just not cost effective to repair these bits of technology. So, the next time my town has an electronics recycling day, I will contribute two flat screen monitors, one 17" and one 22". I would have been much happier fixing these because I'm sure that what failed in each is a relatively small and inexpensive part.
Ah well, such is life in Babylon...
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2 comments:
Muhahaha... I sense the blackmail coming. ;)
And thus, I am reluctant to throw out my old CRT monitor that I just finally replaced. It is 9 years old and still works well. Haven't had an issue with it!
I wish I could find myself a puter for under $500, but I don't think I'll be that lucky. Besides, I kind of want to build my next one from scratch.
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