
Systemax to Offer 'Hot-Rod' PC 170
Professor_Quail writes "C|Net News reports that PC maker Systemax is going to be offering a new line of PC's aimed at gamers and performance enthusiasts. The computers, priced at approximately 3-4 thousand dollars, are touted by the company specifically for their overclocking performance; the DoubleX line comes equipped with a water-cooling system and dual hard drives configured with RAID-0. The systems will be sold through the company's TigerDirect subsidiary."
Isn't that like Alienware? (Score:1)
I think reputation has a lot to do with sales success, so it may be hard for Systemax to break into Alienware's marketshare. The watercooling option is definitely a step in the right direction; I'm pretty sure no system retailer has attempted such an offer.
Re:Isn't that like Alienware? (Score:2)
Fast (Score:1)
Re:Fast (Score:1)
Oh wait, they're PC manufacturers.
Re:Fast (Score:1)
Re:Fast (Score:1)
Re:Fast (Score:1)
Re:Fast (Score:1)
YES! This is the speed I need. (Score:1)
Honestly people, we need to tell these people to patch the retail release IN THE BOX BEFORE I GET IT, and not worry so much about setting three programmers to really solve the "problem" with that pesky realistic-looking-liquified-guts-sliding-down-the
Well, I for one want gameplay. Most people do. That is why right now my wife is having an affair and is about to leave me for an Italian plumber from the mushroom kingdom. You should hear the answering machine messages. Half of my caller ID logs come from the Koopa kingdom.
Really people. Get a grip. Its almost as though game companies hire a bunch of obsessed nerds and then forget their target market, purpose of the game, most people's systems requirements, and their budget releasing some crap into the world that... oh.
Nevermind.
Re:Fast (Score:2)
Nvidia or SiS chipset for the Athlon!
Yeah, right (Score:1, Informative)
Erm, no. (Score:3, Insightful)
The hard drives are a nice touch, but any slashdot reader could build a system whose perfomance equals this overpriced iron and have enough left over for a hooker, a bottle of Courvissier, and a pack of Sheiks. The primary market for these bells-and-whistles systems will be late adopters with more money than brains and a tendency to be easily distracted by "the shiny".
Couldn't have stated it better mystelf. (Score:1)
Re:Erm, no. (Score:1)
Depends on your definition of "old". FWIW, the two oldest procs I own (K6-2/300 and P3M-1ghz) are *not* OCed and the newest (P41.6@2.4) *is*.
Talk about unfounded assumptions (Score:2)
I'm posting to slashdot. What does this tell you?
That said, if I want a top-notch prebuilt gaming system, I'll save a grand or two and buy alienware.
Re:Talk about unfounded assumptions (Score:2)
When you get back, say hi to the nice co-eds and look them in the eye when you do so.
Repeat as necessary until you get a date.
some of this, already done (Score:2)
Re:some of this, already done (Score:2)
Re:Talk about unfounded assumptions (Score:2)
Or build it yourself and save even more =)
my fault (Score:2)
Evaluate Tiger Direct on your own (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Evaluate Tiger Direct on your own (Score:2, Interesting)
doesn't look too good.. but then again, if you're a performance enthuasist would you pay 1000-2000 extra for something worth 100$-200$. watercooling can be had for 100$ and 400 will get you vapochill/mx3-eva type cooling(and the raid hd's and other stuff isn't worth it even unless you're unable to read, in which case buying a computer isn't very useful)..
Re:Evaluate Tiger Direct on your own (Score:2)
That was about a year ago and I'm still getting the catalogs. What a waste of money printing and sending a catalog to a consumer that will never use their service [again]
I actually do read the catalogs to see what's new and stuff and I saw this Symetac system for about 3k. It didn't seem that bad until I realized the flat screen monitor wasn't included. What a rip.
Re:Evaluate Tiger Direct on your own (Score:2)
Price spectrum (Score:4, Insightful)
$199 to 'three or four thousand dollars' is quite the spread for two items that, at a certain level, are more alike than different.
Re:Price spectrum (Score:1)
Seems like a tiny niche market -- folks with too much money and too much time to think about how they spend either.
fluff (Score:1)
though I might be talking out my ass for the newer P4's, since I haven't been CPU-shopping in a few months.
Re:fluff (Score:1)
Re:fluff (Score:3, Funny)
How do you even begin to attempt to warranty a system which you blantantly overclock beyond the cpu's normal parameters.
joe schmoe: "hello tech support, my 2.8ghz overclocked to 3ghz is fried"
tech support: "Why did you overclock it?"
Joe: "Because that's why I paid 4k dollars for an l33t system that I probably could have built for myself for 100 bucks."
Tech support: "Yeah.. I'm going to have to ask you to not call us again."
Overclocking? Who cares (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Overclocking? Who cares (Score:1)
You're right when you say how ineffective it is these days in a monetary vs performance % gain
These boxes are most likely going to be aimed that rich kid with lots of money, that lacks the desire to learn to do it themselves.
Just a thought
Just a thought...
Re:Overclocking? Who cares (Score:1)
Meanwhile, two VP6s with dual PIIIs running at rated speed are dead.
Hardware seems to be getting less and less dependable as we push the envelope on speed and heat.
Re:Overclocking? Who cares (Score:2)
These days, it pays to get a mid level cpu and spend the extra cash on the video card.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Overclocking? Who cares (Score:1)
It hasn't been rebooted in nearly 2 months.
Now compare the price/performance difference between a 1.6ghz/400FSB P4 and a 2.13ghz/533FSB P4.
Looks like a bargain to me.
Re:Overclocking? Who cares (Score:1)
Re:Overclocking? Who cares (Score:1)
You're ignoring the money factor. It's not a matter of "let's push a brand new bleeding edge chip to a speed they won't match for 'a few weeks'", it's a matter of "let's buy a slightly older chip which can be clocked up to better performance and save some money which can then go to a better video card/faster hard drive etc."
My main question about this article is how they plan to warranty a system that they encourage overclocking on...
Re:Overclocking? Who cares (Score:2)
Re:Overclocking? Who cares (Score:4, Informative)
With a 50% increase in clock speed, overclocking was well worth it. Even when I spent almost as much on my cooling solution as I did on the processor ($55 for former, $65 for latter). It let me build a system I was happy with for 2+ years at an unbeatable price.
Later, I went to a 800MHz Celeron. Just as I was considering pushing it to a 1.8GHz Celeron through an upgradeware [tomshardware.com] upgrade, a fellow LANner managed to snap two capacitors off my motherboard and fry the whole box. (Don't ask how - and no, he's not going to pony up).
I just didn't see the point in upgrading my box except with processor b/c I was maxed with 1GB of RAM and the box performed (almost) flawlessly. Need ATA-133, pop in a card. Yeah, I only had AGP 2x, but I held my own fraggin' with a low-end GeForce2. If it hadn't been for the accident, I wouldn't have upgraded.
Now I'm the proud owner of a Shuttle SS51G [shuttleonline.com]-based system. With a DVD-burner, a smokin' WD 120GB drive, and a GeForce4 Ti 4600 w/VIVO. I wanted to wait for the Athlon/nForce2 based systems to come out in October, but I had a dead box and couldn't really wait. Being an old-school overclocker, I decided to see how far the CPU would go:
I started with a stock 2.4GHz rev B Pentium 4 and cranked it up to 2.52GHz. Went a tad higher, but had to clear CMOS and start over. When I benchmarked the system at different speeds, there was negligible difference. Why make the extra heat? Bah.
My system absolutely smokes. I'm extremely happy and if current trends continue, I won't feel the need to replace this box for another 3-4 years. And the size is perfect for toting to LAN parties. Now I just need a sweet LCD monitor without tracies....
$1000 at NewEgg (Score:1, Informative)
Why post this? (Score:1)
Re:Why post this? (Score:1)
Where do these guys live, the past? (Score:1)
Despite some good PC titles, gaming has been trending towards consoles, which cost $200 each. Even with green lights and water cooling $4000 is just way to much. You can still buy systems, which you could pop the latest motherboard in with a faster Athlon or P4 and play fast enough for less than $1500, fully kitted with DVD/CDRW, and all. Maybe they're targeting the rich kids, you know, the ones who never get invited to LAN parties.
"If you don't let me play, I'll take my server straight home!"
Re:Where do these guys live, the past? (Score:1)
One is that gaming is moving towards the console. If that was true then the x-box being the closest to a pc would have selled like hot-cakes. It didn't.
Two is that $XXXX is to much, it all depends on what youre income is.
Three is that you presume pc games are mostly played by kids when in fact the average age hovers around 30 and many older people are starting to pick up games as well.
Four is that everyone is willing to spend the time building their own system. For some people the extra cost is easily offset by the ease of getting it out of the box.
Youre response sound a bit like you are jealous of people that would have the kind of money to buy this. Get over it. And if you can build the same system for less, well then open youre own bussiness and compete with them.
Re:Where do these guys live, the past? (Score:2)
One is that gaming is moving towards the console. If that was true then the x-box being the closest to a pc would have selled like hot-cakes. It didn't.
Yes, games have moved to the Console, more consoles sell than ever before and I can't find anywhere near the number of game titles for PC's that I can for Consoles. The notable exception is there are some much higher quality games for the PC's than you can play on consoles, but in shear numbers Consoles win. Don't confuse the Likeness to PC's of the Xbox with what should come out for it, it's hardly an open platform, with Microsoft willing to defend exclusive rights of development (i.e. DMCA smackdown for reverse engineering, etc.), thus they get a cut of ever title, same way Sony and Nintendo work.
Two is that $XXXX is to much, it all depends on what youre income is.
No, $4K is in excess of what's needed for a high performance gaming PC. I've been pricing parts to build my own (not particularly for gaming) and $1000-1500 is plenty. What they offer is the same as Gucci does, you can buy a handbag at Kmart or buy a Gucci, they both function equally.
Three is that you presume pc games are mostly played by kids when in fact the average age hovers around 30 and many older people are starting to pick up games as well.
Didn't say anything about kids as the predominant market for games, even I know better than that and I'm pretty stupid at times. The PC with all the lights and gewgaws is most likely to appeal to the less initiated, whereas the more experienced gamer, particularly those with DIY connections save their money for games, not buying glitz.
Four is that everyone is willing to spend the time building their own system. For some people the extra cost is easily offset by the ease of getting it out of the box.
You can buy a pretty high end PC right off the shelf from Dell, CompUSA, Circuit City, etc. for much less if you don't want to build. $2400-4000 (4000 being the one with the 240+gig of drives and liquid cooling) Read any magazines lately? The prices I'm seeing reflect some resepectable horsepower at a reasonable price. Just slap in your 128Meg graphic card and you're off and running.
Youre response sound a bit like you are jealous of people that would have the kind of money to buy this. Get over it. And if you can build the same system for less, well then open youre own bussiness and compete with them.
I'm sometimes jealous of people who have more money, but I'm rarely so of people who flaunt money or blow it stupidly.
Now, if you'd have actually RTFA you would have seen I'm not alone in my opinions:
Sean Aryai, a marketing director at Systemax could be quoted verbatim as of 10 years ago.
"It's hard to fathom that there's a large audience out there for (Double X), particularly in today's market," said Toni Duboise, an analyst with ARS. "But, on the other hand, it could appeal to those kinds of buyers who look at Sony and Apple...and those people who are willing to spend more on a stylized version of a PC."
Falcon Northwest (Score:1)
build your own (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:build your own (Score:2)
Gamers need Raid 0? (Score:1)
Re:Gamers need Raid 0? (Score:1)
Re:Gamers need Raid 0? (Score:2)
Another advantage is that it makes your two single drives of size N each look like a single drive of size N * 2. This was a big advantage back in the days of the all-common 9GB SCSI. If you had a 40GB movie file you were working with it was inconvenient (or impossible) to partition it up. Merging 5 x 9GB drives into one logical device was great, but with single-drive capacities reaching several hundred GB RAID0's single logical drive is not quie as useful.
Provided it is done via hardware and not software, of course.
Re:Gamers need Raid 0? (Score:2)
So depending on the type of access, RAID0 can be slower than a single drive. If you're primarily working with small files (e.g. Windows installation), the transfer rate may not outweigh the increased seek time.
YMMV of course. The only RAID I trust for boot volumes is RAID1 - RAID0 is fine for data, assuming you're working with large sequentially accessed files, and you back everything up on a constant basis. RAID 5 is probably a safer bet, with distributed parity and the ability to have live spares online and spinning to make up for any hardware failure.
Re:Gamers need Raid 0? (Score:2)
I would think the large-file benefit would outweigh the many small-file hit. I used to recall that Adaptec Ez-CD Creator (when it was called that) would do benchmarks on small and large file disk I/O. The actuall performance of the system was somewhere in-between. I would suspect it would be the same with your typical gaming system. Faster than a single drive but not as fast as if you had all large files.
I would never use RAID0 because as I stated a bad drive would hose the entire system. RAID1 is the way to go for low-budget RAID.
RAID 5 (10/01 et al) requires too many disks to be a consumer-grade RAID solution, really.
Re:Gamers need Raid 0? (Score:2)
RAID5 requires 3 disks. The problem is you write off 1 disk for parity (OK, parity is distributed across all disks, but a drive's worth of space), so the space advantage is virtually nil vs. a 2-drive RAID0 solution. You just pay for an extra disk and peace of mind. Of course, I haven't seen a hardware RAID5 IDE controller, so...
To be honest I haven't farted around with RAID0 since 4GB drives were the largest you could get your hands on. I think a current-tech 3-drive RAID0 array would have a faster seek than one of those drives. So it's possible that the seeks are so quick these days that even after adding a few it's still fast enough.
I think the only RAIDs in major use these days are 1 & 5, and variations on the theme ("RAID 50" scares me). RAID0 isn't really used except for temporary circumstances.
BTW, I had a drive fail in a RAID0 array. Back up early, back up often. I only lost a few hours of work. I can't imagine what would happen to someone who didn't have a tape drive.
Re:Gamers need Raid 0? (Score:1)
This is a good thing ! (Score:1)
If you are a patriot american you should buy one, if you are non-american you should buy one nevertheless.
A strong economy is good for everyone and makes much jobs and very much wealth.
Overloaded Market? (Score:1)
After all, gamers (those who play more than solitaire on the computer) are a subset of computer users. Gamers who need great performance (fps++) are a subset of that group (since many of the most popular games don't need ninja machines).
Of that group, Gamers who can't already build their own ninja machine are a further subset. And, there again, you're looking at a further subset who want a machine tricked out with lights and suchlike.
So basically you're marketing to Gamers who aren't technically saavy enough to build their own computer, but who play the most resource-intensive games, have a lot of money to buy these computers and also want lights and transparent panels, etc....
They're also targeting "high-performance enthusiasts", but I think, really, that this is even a smaller group. Most people who are really into high-performance can, and already do, build their own computers. Most, not all, but most. In my opinion.
Then there's the whole RAID 0 thing. RAID 0 stripes data across the 2 drives, and is very useful for tasks that require the movement of large amounts of data quickly, like video editing. In my opinion, no game gets any useful benefit whatsoever from RAID 0. Sure, on map change your Counter-Strike level may load a half a second faster than anyone else, but my Western Digital Special Edition (with the 8Mb cache) loads them within a couple of seconds, so I don't see what's to be gained here. A red herring, if you will.
Why? Because there's a major drawback to RAID 0. If one of the drives fail, the data is lost for both, since it's "striped" across both, with no parity bit to tell the array how to rebuild the lost data. Double your risk for a speed gain you're unlikely to see unless you do lots of video editing.
I hope their support line is ready for angry calls....
Still, it's a neat rig. But, it's a niche market. Very niche.
Uhhh (Score:3, Interesting)
What's the warranty, 12 minutes?
We do read other news sources, you know... (Score:2)
-b
fools and their money (Score:1)
It is so easy to get a custom built system with better components at a decent price.
I personally don't believe overclocking is worth the hassle, risk, or expense. Your super duper unstable overclocked box will probably be obsoleted by a normal system in a month.
Here's how to buy a computer: pick a reasonable price/performance point. Don't get screwed out of your money for that last 3% of performance. Keep the difference and replace your computer sooner than you could have if you'd wasted your money on the overpriced top end.
-Kevin
water cooling for games (Score:1)
Times change.
There used to be this game called chess that required little more than a candle and a keen mind.
Re:water cooling for games (Score:1)
Why do you need a $3,000+ PC? (Score:1)
Not what you'd get at systemax... (Score:2, Insightful)
Doom3 will not run like that on anything today, btw.
And as it's been said before, the whole system could be built for about under $1400 at newegg [newegg.com], and if you went down to your local PC shop for someone to put it together, it would probably cost $100 at the most.
If you spent $3000 on a PC, just max it out with top-of-the-line products, then buy an entire TERABYTE, or more, of hd space. Believe me, it can be used easily with broadband if you're a power downloader/ripper.
Besides, overclocking sucks -- it's like driving 80MPH in a 75MPH zone speed-wise, except it gets you in a lot of more trouble. Unless you have one of those 300A/1.5As that magically double themselves, of course...
Re:Why do you need a $3,000+ PC? (Score:1)
Game seems to be mostly CPU limited, and I think poor programming decisions are to blame for the bad frame rates. But it is an awsome game, but It would be so much better with like consitant 60 Fps.
Beware of Tiger Direct (Score:1)
Re:Beware of Tiger Direct (Score:1)
Re:Beware of Tiger Direct (Score:1)
Are l33t gamers deaf? (Score:1, Insightful)
What fun is a "super gaming rig" if you can only stand sitting near it for 15 minutes?
Personally, I'd rather pay a premium for a quiet machine. I'd pay as much as 50% extra to get a silent desktop. Until some progress is done on the noise arena, I'm sticking to my silent IBM laptops. For me gaming on a PC is dead and will be until the manufacturers start taking this problem seriously.
Re:Are l33t gamers deaf? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Are l33t gamers deaf? (Score:1)
Re:Are l33t gamers deaf? (Score:1)
As for gaming being dead to you, I am sure the hardware manufacturers give a damn. Gaming is not yet seen as their major customer. Despite the fact that only games require the latest and fastest in hardware.
Re:Are l33t gamers deaf? (Score:1)
Regarding your observation of the fact that games are driving the industry. I second that, but there is also one other thing. Java development.Not long ago, I had to purchase one of IBM's most powerful laptops available, just to meet the minimum req. of 1 Gig memory and 1 GHz processor for J2EE development. This machine will have a life span of 6 months before it'll be sent for destruction. Running huge frameworks on top of application servers eats memory and CPU like nothing besides games and 3D/ video processing. I'd estimate most consumers of powerful workstations are gamers. In second place Java developers and then far behind 3D and video specialists. These few are the only suckers which HAVE TO upgrade all the time.
Quite frankly I'm starting to get fed up with the argument "But hardware is cheep".
raid 0? (Score:1)
Re:raid 0? (Score:2)
Re:raid 0? (Score:1)
Re:raid 0? (Score:1)
Re:raid 0? (Score:1)
Raid 0 is striping. Wich means it spreads the data over the disks. This makes for faster writing and reading. Granted if one of the disks fail then you have lost all the data. Because now two disks contain all of youre data the risk of loosing youre data increases. Not the risk of the drive itself failing.
So the point is extra speed, handy for games, at a slightly increased risk of losing data, not a big deal for games.
It is called a trade off. You might not like the trade others do. vi VS emacs wars are pointless.
Potential Market (Score:1)
Does anyone see the problem here?
The case is designed for LAN parties, etc, as is the spec.
But anyone who goes to LAN parties, or anything like them, generally knows a bit about computers, enough to avoid this computer.
so why would anyone buy one, unless they had enough money (so we can rule out a lot of people) who thought they were keen enough to validate this spend, but don't know what they are buying?
Re:Potential Market (Score:1)
3-4 thousand dollars? (Score:1)
In two years, it'll be two hundred.
In three years, you can trade it for a chokolate bar if you want to drag the thing home.
It's the curse of Moore (or blessing, if you didn't buy it right away).
.
This reeks of dumbass... (Score:2, Insightful)
Most of the same enthusiasts that this is aimed towards, especially those needing/desiring watercooling, are going to do it themselves. They could build this system for $1500.
Not to mention the fact that they would do it anyways just out of the sheer enjoyment of tinkering with their machines.
Plus, they get to pick exactly what parts they want, not whatever the company decides to put in there.
There is the issue of a warantee, being able to send it back if it blows up... But is this worth the extra $1500-$2000? Absolutely not. You could build an entirely new system for that price.
Re:This reeks of dumbass... (Score:2)
And it's nowhere near as likely to be DOA as anything from TigerDirect.
Re:This reeks of dumbass... (Score:2)
I know quite a few gamers that like high performance machines, but never want to open a box. I know, I'm the sucker that has to build them.
LAN Parties (Score:1)
Here's a real Hot-Rod (Score:2)
Price for state-of-the-art (Score:2)
I can asure you that $3000 is easily spend on:
- Intel 2.8GHz at roughly $550
- Latest graphics card, currently the ATI 9700 family for about $400
- NEC 21" monitor for $800 (I actually bought a Sony 24" for $2000...Not a good buy)
- 2*512 DDR PC-2700 from Crucial for $360
- Adaptec ATA RAID for $390
- 2*100Gb IBM HD for $240
- Motherboard, sound, mouse, other perifirals $500
we are at $3240 without any games to play
yeah, these choices are not the cheapest solutions. You can save about 50% of the price giving in only about 10% performance. I'm just telling you there is a (small) market for these systems.
Anyway, back to CounterStrike at 1 BILLION frames per second
Re:Price for state-of-the-art (Score:2)
looking back on you post, I think you might be kidding.
Re:Price for state-of-the-art (Score:2)
I did however buy a Sony 24" for $2000 replacing my old Cornerstone 21" ($2500). Just didn't want to brag beyond belief in my original story.
$3000 PC vs $200 Console (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:$3000 PC vs $200 Console (Score:2)
That consoles will "soon" support broadband and multiplayer is irrelevant, firstly because it has been "soon" for some time now and has never really materialized, and second because consoles lack keyboards, and therefore automatically lose the very important social aspect of online gaming.
The only justification I can see for a serious gamer NOT having a high-end PC is that middle-end PCs run current games well enough. Howver, this will cease to be the case when ID releases the next Doom, and serious gamers use up the performance cranking detail settings anyways.
IHBT. IHL. HAND.
Re:$3000 PC vs $200 Console (Score:2)
1) Can't compare consoles vs. $3000 PC's because PC hardware is more advanced and PC's are multi-purpose. Well, of course you're right on both counts. However, I'm comparing a console with a $3000 PC being marketed as a high-end game machine. Sure, it might be great as a Web server, super as a file-server, build engine, etc. but the company building it is targeting it specifically for gamers. So, sure it can be used for other things, but that's not the way the manufacturer is positioning the product.
2) Any game that involves an hour or more of patching / configuration is defective. Again, I agree with you. However, it's been my experience that in the rush to get products to market, game companies frequently ship defective products. When testing PC games, game companies have to deal with a combinatoric explosion of different hardware and software configurations, with consoles - few (frequently one). Furthermore, with PC games, companies can get sloppy - knowing that gamers can always be expected to download the patch(es). With console games - they need to get it right the first time.
3) Broadband for games has been coming "real-soon-now" for a long time. Without keyboards, players miss the social aspects of the games. Console makers have announced broadband and multi-player services which are coming "real-soon-now". I believe them - from the perspective of a console maker, they promise increased demand for their consoles and games, but most importantly, promise an on-going stream of revenue (subscriptions) for the company. Consoles are sold at a loss, games make money but are a one-shot deal. Subscription fees for multi-player gaming are virtually pure profit once the servers are in place. I trust that Sony, Microsoft, and Nintendo will follow through on broadband - as it's in their own self-interest. As for a keyboard, there's no reason that the console makers could not add a keyboard or even a microphone (VoIP) to existing consoles.
Please don't get me wrong - I'd love to own a high end PC with lots of processing power, memory, and RAID disks. It would be a great development box. Just a little hard to justify as a game mahine.
Re:$3000 PC vs $200 Console (Score:2)
As a frequent dabbler in beta, demo, freeware and otherwise expected-to-be-bad software, I have to say that my experience is quite to the contrary. Back in the dark DOS when games had to interface directly with the hardware this was certainly true, but today they only deal with abstraction layers. It is true that companies can be somewhat sloppy because of patches, but (a) this is going to happen with any multiplayer console games, for the same reason, and (b) this allows for faster releases and thus a time advantage in games over consoles.
As opposed to multiplayer PC games, which are (with the exception of MMORPGS) never subscription. This eats up more of the price difference you were arguing in point (1). As for the keyboard, there certainly is a reason why console makers won't add one: they don't want to turn their consoles into general-purpose PCs, and most people don't have furniture setups suitable for keyboards around their consoles.
Wait, wasn't that.. (Score:2)
Barbie PC...get 'em while they're lukewarm... (Score:2)
Re:Barbie PC...get 'em while they're lukewarm... (Score:2)
I was just thinking about getting something that can run my kids software, (2,4).
it seem to me this will play game geared towards the under 8 crowd just fine.
AlienWare (Score:2)
AlienWare [alienware.com] does a similar thing, but I've heard much better things about them than this Systemax company - they've been tagged the Cadillac of computers.
Not to mention, a high-end machine costs, at most, around/less than $3000.
Neon lights and... (Score:2)
I have a feeling this is not aimed at the
To paraphrase Robin Williams: "Double XX boxen are God's way of telling you you have too much money." The target market is the same as the average Wall Street cocaine dealer: Guys who want to impress their friends with their electronics purchases (but limited to those with gullible friends).
Re:two stupid to spell (Score:1)
+1 Redundantly funny
Re:Sad day ... Stephen King dead at 55 (Score:1)