More Cheap Linux PCs 326
prostoalex writes "The low-cost Linux PC market so far dominated by Lindows got a new entrant. According to News.com, Linare plans to sell a $199 no-monitor model with 1GHz VIA CPU, 128MB RAM, 20GB HDD, KDE, OpenOffice. An extra $50 would get the user upgraded to a 2GHz Athlon. Company is located in beautiful Bellevue, WA, which, as News.com noted, is quite close to another Seattle suburb - Redmond, WA."
Will they donate to linux development? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Will they donate to linux development? (Score:5, Interesting)
'Right' or 'wrong', we both know that's not going to happen with a $199 PC.
The PC market isn't known for its huge margins to begin with; I'll bet that in that particular sector *every* cent counts, and someone else would leap in and release a $5-cheaper machine without the donation.
Like it or not, that's what would happen.
Every Sale IS a "Donation" (Score:5, Insightful)
However, don't count out the value of getting more "desktops" out there in the hands of ordinary users! Every system sold (assuning these boxes are reasonably well built, and configured with software that works well together so the whole thing doesn't just backfire) is another new Linux user. Every new Linux user is another step towards the kind of market share that will get the attention of real, honest, money making businesses. And, if you get their attention, they are going to start looking for Linux developers to build things for these boxes.
It might not be money in my pocket now, but it's more likely I'll have a fun job developing real stuff for Linux and OSS in the future...
Re:Will they donate to linux development? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why is it that so many people release stuff under the GPL and therefore give it away for free, and then want paying for it? If you want paying for your product DON'T GIVE YOU PRODUCT AWAY FOR FREE! You can still give the source code away, but just don't let people give away / sell their own copies of the product.
sounds cool (Score:5, Interesting)
More importantly... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:More importantly... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:sounds cool (Score:5, Informative)
And for another $50 ... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And for another $50 ... (Score:5, Funny)
wont work , support costs to much (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:wont work , support costs to much (Score:5, Informative)
Linare will try to offer better technical support than do current $200 PC makers by outsourcing technical support to employees in India who don't cost as much to hire. It will also sell its products in India, not just to countries such as the United States, where Microsoft holds more sway, Sundaram said.
"Because we are going to keep the operating expenses low, it gives us a good profit margin,"
Re:wont work , support costs to much (Score:5, Funny)
Sure, they only support it for twenty four hours after you purchase it.
Re:wont work , support costs to much (Score:2, Funny)
Re:wont work , support costs to much (Score:2, Interesting)
- 1 GHz VIA Processor with Motherboard (built in everything) - $50 US
- 20 GB JTS (heh... probably not that bad) HDD - $40 US
- Keyboard + Speakers + Mouse - $2
- Case with 100 watt power supply - $15
- 128 MB RAM - $15
(wholesale prices, of course)
Total: $122.
Lots of room for profit.
Re:wont work , support costs to much (Score:2, Interesting)
You point is valid, but that part is a little hard to swallow.
A very cheap wholesale mouse might be $1-2, a cheap keyboard maybe $3, and incredibly crappy unamplified speakers maybe $2.
Even that is getting very close to the raw materials cost of the plastic case, the semis and connectors.
On the other hand, you may have overestimated the cost of the case and power supply, I've bought cases and power supplies retail for about $12 that cam
Contact them =) (Score:5, Informative)
I'm about to leave work, so someone else try calling and finding out =)
~Berj
Re:Contact them =) (Score:5, Funny)
http://www.linare.com/images/prod_left.jpg
That's right kids, even if your two bit operation is barely off the ground a hot receptionsit and a proper slashdoting can get your linux clients banging your door down in an instant!
Re:Contact them =) (Score:3, Funny)
She doesn't even look human. She looks more like your Real Doll (TM).
Re:Contact them =) (Score:3, Funny)
HEY, take that *back*!!!
THAT'S my WIFE!!!!
Re:Contact them =) (Score:3, Funny)
Either that or she's happy to be getting boinked by the president of the company.
include the cost of a monitor (Score:3, Informative)
Re:include the cost of a monitor (Score:3, Interesting)
I recall that Lindows PCs from Walmart had a huge shipping markup (like $100). Looks like the shipping is more reasonably priced at ~$15 now.
Looks like a good choice for a router (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm currently looking for a cheap computer to use as a router/firewall/internet gateway for my home network. This looks like a good solution; just bang in the spare wireless & ethernet cards sitting in my bits box, bridge them together, and then hook in my USB ADSL modem. Stuff on some iptables rules and some intrusion detection, and I've got just the setup I need. Best bit is, I won't be paying for the two expensive things I don't need: MS Windows and a monitor.
Re:Looks like a good choice for a router (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Looks like a good choice for a router (Score:5, Informative)
How about just buying a fucking router?
Because most routers I have come across have broken functionality, broken security, and don't have much scope for expandability. What if I want to use my router as a proxy web server too? Or as a DNS caching server? Or to host a website for my home network? Or as an NTP server so all my machines have their clocks in sync?
Re:Looks like a good choice for a router (Score:2, Insightful)
I would do that any day rather than trust a retailer to assemble a system for me.
Then you could make use of that inventory of spare computer components of varying degrees of use and obsoleteness any sensible geek keeps handy.
Good, I'd like one too. (Score:2)
Re:Looks like a good choice for a router (Score:4, Informative)
Making a port forward to another machine with them is often impossible.
I have not found this to be the case. Every one I have ever used has offered configurable port forwarding, port forwarding with a trigger port option and a blanket DMZ forward all rule (ouch).
A true firewall includes things like proxy services, if only to make sure your LAN isn't going to open your network up to the world, not to mention the possible performance improvements with caching.
I agree with you that home routers do not have these abilities, but I have never expected such devices to be able to do that, specially since they cost less then $35. I use my Linux machines behind the router for those functions. Why would you want your router to do those functions anyway? The less it runs the easier it is for you to keep secure.
Why people think a $100 or even a $200 router from a retail outlet is capable of being a bastion for security I'll never know.
Again these devices cost less then $35USD, not 100 or 200. They are much better then hooking up a pc directly to the wire and way more secure then an unpatched/uncared for Windows or Linux machines running the show.
They do have easy to use setup screens and do offer quite a bit of filtering, VPN, rulesets, and forwarding options but each has something the other does not. My main issue I have with these home routers is I have not seen one that defaults to deny and I have not found one that can block outgoing requests to specific ip addresses. That is why I still keep my floppy based Freesco [freesco.org] router that runs on my old DX2/66 around, plus I can dial in on it.
Re:Looks like a good choice for a router (Score:5, Interesting)
Slap in a firewire card you could serve several hundred gigs of movies, music, content and porn to your whole neighborhood.
Computers like that are simply too powerful to put in the hands of anyone who can afford $250.
Re:Looks like a good choice for a router (Score:2, Insightful)
Don't get me wrong... I realize a full fledged *nix NAT box would be considerably more flexible, not to mention more fun.
$200 silent PC (Score:2)
Re:$200 silent PC (Score:3, Informative)
Re:$200 silent PC (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, extra silent
Re:Looks like a good choice for a router (Score:4, Informative)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi
do an ebay search for 'compaq deskpro en sff', my personal favorite machine. That one is a PII/400 and can be had for $90. It has 128 MB RAM, CD (optional, worth $40 on its own; bootable), floppy, and two PCI slots (one shared ISA) *plus* onboard PS/2, serial, parallel, and Intel 10/100. It's about 1/2 the volume of a typical desktop--20-30% shorter on each side. Few things have a longer lifespan than a corporate Compaq.
More friendly than what?? (Score:5, Insightful)
I love statements like that, More friendly and reliable than what?? A TRS-80?? Mac?? Silly marketing
Re:More friendly than what?? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:More friendly than what?? (Score:2, Funny)
That is, until their webmasters started reading
Re:More friendly than what?? (Score:2)
Mini-ITX (Score:5, Informative)
They're like a regular PC, but in a much smaller box (perhaps the size of two 5.25" CD-ROM drives stacked on top of each other), and are often fanless (no, that doesn't mean they overheat, it means they're designed not to need one...), resulting in much less noise and much less power consumption. Many are cheap, and they make ideal Linux/BSD boxes for all kinds of things - web/mail/dns/anything server, backing up your data (or each other), monitoring security cameras for movement, etc. Here's a few examples for more information:
Here [ramms.co.uk], here [linitx.com], here [mini-itx.com], here [openbrick.org], here [ultim8pc.co.uk].
Some of them do actually officially support Linux/BSD AFAIK, such as the OpenBrick and LinITX.com.
-Andrew
RAM? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd rather have a 600 Mhz machine with twice as much RAM so that KDE doesn't run like a slug.
Maybe 128 MB would be excusable if they turn the anti-aliasing and other shiny eye-candy off by default.
Re:RAM? (Score:5, Insightful)
I usually pull a stick of RAM out of one of my own boxes and lend it too them for a week or so. They usually end up buying more RAM.
It's really amazing how much trust people put in companies. It's even more amazing that companies get away with all the crap they pull.
Re:RAM? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:RAM? (Score:2)
On my windows box I run 512 and an XP1800 and there are many times that it seems like twice that is needed. Go figure.
Kind of excited, I've decided to port all the machines on my network to Linux and run Wine o
Re:RAM? (Score:2)
Yeah, maybe they shouldn't put KDE (or GNOME) on these "low end" 1 GHz 128 MB RAM desktop machines. My computer works great without them. If it weren't for bloatware like KDE, GNOME, and Billy Gates put out, we could have $100 desktop computers.
Re:RAM? (Score:2, Interesting)
The fastest machine in the house, the Pentium III 800, is dedicated to video edi
Once again (Score:5, Insightful)
The more of these dime companies release crap boxes, the more Linux will be thought of as a crap OS, the kind of thing your redneck friends buy at Wal-Mart because they can't afford a real PC from Dell or Gateway with the "good" OS.
Sounds crappy, but that's where I see this going. Keep it up.
Re:Once again (Score:2)
real PC from Dell or Gateway with the "good" OS
Regardless, if people buy the product, this is a good thing, as the quality will improve with time.
Compare this with the changing views on Japanse electronics 20-30 years ago, for example. A bit later, non-american cars in the US. I'm sure there are other and better examples of this type of 'evolution' of brand names.
Re:Once again (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah, right.
The more of these dime companies release crap boxes, the more Linux will be thought of as a crap OS, the kind of thing your redneck friends buy at Wal-Mart because they can't afford a real PC from Dell or Gateway with the "good" OS.
I walked into a store and saw one of these special offer white boxes for 300 Euros (about $360) and grabbed it immediately, for a test box. It's a K7 2400+, with 40 GB disk and a 256 MB memory stick, which I doubled just on basic principle. I could have done even better pricewise online, but nothing beats being able to walk out of the store with a new machine in less than 5 minutes. It's a fantastic machine, no real speed daemon, but that's mainly because of the IDE disk, not the processor. It compiles a 2.4 kernel in about 5 minutes, that is kickass.
I'm posting with it now, by the way. Totally solid, I haven't got a single complaint. Oh wait, the mouse was too cheap, I returned it for a 3 EU credit and got a logitech.
But what if it works? (Score:4, Insightful)
But what if, for $200, you get a computer that you can take out of the box, plug in and start surfing the Web within a couple of minutes? In short, what if the computer works as advertised and gets you doing what you want without any fuss?
I'd imagine that if Joe Public wanted a machine that could send email, and if that's what he got for his $200, he'd be happy enough. By and large, the operating system would be transparent and irrelevant to what he was doing.
Exactly! (Score:3, Insightful)
I personally could give a shit less about 128 megs of ram here, 500 Mhz here, 5 FPS there. The one thing I care about is getting things done. If a computer is capable of doing such, then it is good. Anything actually capable of getting things done is worth the price in my mind. If that price is $200, then hell yeah!.
Notice that this
Re:Once again (Score:2)
wow you dont know much. almost EVERYONE in IT warns people away from DELL and Gateway... ESPICALLY Gateway... they are crap pc's....always have been. and the "tech support" for both companies sucks Huge donky turds. i'm sorry, but "insert the restore CD and reboot" is NOT A FRICKING ANSWER!
If you want the absolute best computer for your money... go to a good local computer
Re:Once again (Score:2)
Re:Once again (Score:2)
I agree with you. But I have to remind you that years ago there was at that time not so big company [microsoft.com] that actually pulled stunt like that (crappy OS on not so hot hardware) and did pretty well. Unlike others [apple.com].
SuSE in the mix also.... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:SuSE in the mix also.... (Score:2)
"Note: Linux operating systems may not be compatible with some dial-up Internet services, such as AOL or Wal-Mart Connect."
Not that I care in the least about making use of Wal-Mart Connect, but it is a delicious little piece of irony.
"Beautiful" Bellevue, WA (Score:4, Funny)
This sounds really sweet for a low-end computer user. I know a couple of people I'm going to recommend this to. They will probably blow away the OS and use Windows on it, though.
Re:"Beautiful" Bellevue, WA (Score:4, Funny)
Renton is suburban hell. Des Moines is suburban hell. Kent (and pretty much anything near 167) is total suburban hell. I'll take the blonde soccer moms in Bellevue to the 80's haired, cameltoed proles in that shithole area south of I90.
Re:"Beautiful" Bellevue, WA (Score:2)
The lack of a true downtown is what upsets me about Bellevue. I mean, even Kirkland has a downtown (with a biker bar, or at least it used to be a biker bar). Redmond has a downtown (kind of). Bellevue has a mall. Right at its heart. A mall. Like Lynnwood with a higher per-capita income and Nordstrom's instead of Mervyn's.
80's haired, cameltoed proles in that shithole area south of I90.
You are giving way too much credit to the Southend
Re:"Beautiful" Bellevue, WA (Score:2, Funny)
"Oxymoron" suggests contradictory terms.
I guess dictionaries aren't available out there yet.
Re:"Beautiful" Bellevue, WA (Score:2)
Seriously, I don't understand why being based in Bellevue is an issue. There are plenty [real.com] of other [click2learn.com] companies in the Eastside area who've competed with Microsoft, and some [nwsource.com] that have even hauled them into court.
The reality is that, largely because of Microsoft, the greater Seattle area is a software development corridor, much like Mountain View, CA, or Boston, and it would be surprising if there weren't competitors to Microsoft there.
Re:"Beautiful" Bellevue, WA (Score:2)
And the problem here is......what?
Question (Score:2)
Its the quality that counts for most people. The after sales service had better be spectacular
Amazing how much leaving out Windows saves you (Score:3, Insightful)
XINE mp3 player and XMMS media player? (Score:3, Funny)
Is it just me, or did someone in Marketing get mixed up?
Re:XINE mp3 player and XMMS media player? (Score:2)
But they probably did mean the opposite, yes.
Re:XINE mp3 player and XMMS media player? (Score:4, Funny)
I'm sure they messed up, otherwise they would have MPlayer for movies. ;-)
Decisions, decisions... (Score:5, Insightful)
Well worth the $$ (Score:3, Insightful)
This market segment's future? (Score:2, Informative)
I picked up one of the cheep $200 Lindows PCs mentioned in an article here last monday to play with. When it arrived on Friday the modem card wasn't installed correctly (it was screwed into the case but not actually in the PCI slot) and the HD was dead. I'm waiting on a replacement HD. (I'm still hoping it will make an ok toy.)
Based on the photocopied sheets in the box I assume the DOA percentage of these machines
Creation of a blue collar computing segment (Score:5, Interesting)
What this means, I think, is that we're starting a new generation on cheap PCs that will be more maintenance heavy than Dells and Apples. This will have the same effect that cars have had over the last forty years: since new cars are so expensive, and the only option for the poor to own one is to get a used one or an extremely cheap one. There's a pool of talent/skill that gets built in the lower classes around practical maintenance.
In other words, the same way that my brother's Lexus is worked on by someone with a high school education who tinkered a lot with cars, the sysadmins of tomorrow will generally come from blue collar backgrounds, while the white collar users will move further out of the ability to generally maintain computers. In a business, the IT department will become less educated overall, while having a much stronger base of practical skills.
I'm already seeing this at my workplace, a manufacturer of household commodities. Lots of the factory workers ask if they can buy/have old PCs that we're getting rid of; several have built their own from old pieces they scrounged. We have a developing pool of computer knowledge that comes from nothing but the tinkering of people who can't afford to do otherwise.
While I dislike the possibility of computer expertise segmenting along economic lines (for social reasons), I do see some benefits: clearer cut job descriptions and areas of expertise, and increased adoption of open source software simply because of the price. To get to that $200 price point, you need Linux (or BSD...)
Re:Creation of a blue collar computing segment (Score:5, Insightful)
If the working poor are using the cheap PCs and Linux as opposed to the Wintel machines out there, all that practical experience could conceivably serve a grander purpose: "street smart" computer users who with a little more formal training could be sysadmins and jump into the IT sector with the corresponding higher wages.
Being "less educated" with the greater set of "practical skills" is not necessarily a bad thing. When Microsoft advertises its MCSE program, encouraging people with (and I nearly quote) "no computer experience needed!" to apply, I put people with practical skills above those with a zero pervious experience and a nicely framed certification certificate.
It's a simple case of "book smarts" versus "street smarts." "Book smarts" can get you the honors at graduation; "street smarts" get the job done.
My $b10 for the day.
Re:Creation of a blue collar computing segment (Score:2)
"street smart" computer users who with a little more formal training could be sysadmins and jump into the IT sector with the corresponding higher wages.
Except that if the blue collar moves into the IT positions, there will be corresponding drop in wages because businesses will get skilled workers cheaper. I don't see this as a path up the ladder for those "street smart" users, and that's the social angle I dislike: education with computers, practical or formal, should be reflected by higher wages.
Re:Creation of a blue collar computing segment (Score:2)
Re:Creation of a blue collar computing segment (Score:2)
I don't see it as a path up the ladder either but I don't understand why it should mean higher wages. Especially if the skill-set spreads and is no longer a scarce commodity, as will surely happen, the average basepay will certainly fall - as it should. The high-end wages for experts will probably stay the same
Re:Creation of a blue collar computing segment (Score:2, Insightful)
Technical != nerdy != academic (Score:5, Interesting)
This is an interesting insight, and it's sad to think of things being drawn along economic lines like this.
However, on the brighter side, there's another group of pessimists that have believed we'd have a technocracy, where techies rule the world (scary thought with plenty of jokes), and the non-technical ignorant masses left to collect minimum wage by flipping burgers. I've always considered this view to be too extreme. There are many fields that have technical aspects to them. Ever listen to the gibberish that car mechanics spout? They may not be nerds, and may not have college degrees, but I'd argue that they're extremely technical. Those same skills - especially troubleshooting and understanding how little details make a bigger thing work - are the exact skills that everyone needs, from programmers to network administrators.
I know a car mechanic who's picked up on the computer stuff to the point that he asks questions about trade-offs and disadvantages of PPPOE, DHCP and static IP addressing, and understands the difference between bandwidth and latency. I know many IT professionals that don't have that kind of knowledge. Of course, I know many IT professionals that became so because it was the cool career field, not because of an interest in computers.
In that sense, I think it's a very positive thing: the world now knows you don't need to be a wiry, pasty-faced, greasy dork to be good with computers. The thing that might be scary to those of us (you know who you are) who really just want to hide out in a glass room until we vest in our 401(k), this could be scary, and certainly should be taken as a wake-up call. Most of what we do with computers in the business world is inherently practical. We can draw all the cute diagrams and use the latest buzz words, but the core value we add is primarily through practical construction of some simple, maintainable systems. Fancy Visio diagrams don't change that.
As another aside, a couple years ago I was amazed to overhear conversation between two gentlemen behind me in line at Best Buy. They were the standard fare burly rednecks, with unkempt beards, in camoflage coveralls, but what they were discussing was rather different from the stereotype. With missing teeth and bad grammar, one was educating the other on why he should upgrade his video card, discussing details about how the amount of RAM as well as the RAMDAC spped and features such as T&L affect frame rate. And the other redneck dude gave all impressions of understanding the conversation.
In conclusion: the world is changing, computers aren't only in the hands of the "have"s, and in my opinion this isn't a completely horrible thing.
Thanks for listening. ;-)
Re:Technical != nerdy != academic (Score:3, Insightful)
Most car mechanics I know are nerds in some way. It just is not generally with computers, but they know all kinds of factoids about their love--cars.
Have you ever watched Monster Garage? I think Jess
as a blue collar... (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess it's funny, there's such a widely diverse market, and it's happened so quickly. Nearest I can recall is how fast portable "transistor" radios caught on, one year, nada, next year a few, at 50 to 100$, which was serious money then, within a few more years, everyone had one, cheap as all get out. What are they now, a dollar a piece in small quantity wholesale lots? computers now are the same deal, so many out there that work well and only run 50$ used, I think that's where a lot of the sales are going. Or people get them given to them. I have a stack of older pentiums I fool with, I bought a whole pallet of them for really cheap, with a ton of other doo dads thrown in, like another stack of ibm clickers, heh. PCs are cheap now, that's why the flat new sales, there's no absolute "need" for millions of people anymore.
Hmm, I have YET to make a "cluster" hmmmm.....
Re:Creation of a blue collar computing segment (Score:2, Insightful)
The same is the case here. You might hire some of these people to maintain the desktops in your enterprise but you sure as hell won't have one of them being sysadmin on your mission-critical mainframe servers.
Re:Creation of a blue collar computing segment (Score:3, Interesting)
Us techies were just boys that knew what we were doing - in fact it was only when we got a couple of grads that we ran into problems (no common sense, no problem solving skills, inability to RTFM, etc.).
There's no need for degrees to install and fix computers - just a lively mind, which is better found outside the graduate corps rather than inside.
Re:Creation of a blue collar computing segment (Score:2)
Are you sure? Microsoft's already written the software; additional copies cost them pennies, so if they can figure out a way to charge $20 to the people with $20 without losing the chance to continue charging $200 to the people willing to spend $200, they will. I don't know exactly how they'd do it (more handicapped versions at low price points? Set the price of a license to be a fraction of the systme price?), but there must be a way....
--Br
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
I bought a $199 Linux PC at Frye's (Score:3, Interesting)
Seriously, the hardware seems OK - the salesman said that they had sold a lot of this model (totally made in China, with a Chineese Linux that immediately got replaced with a fresh SuSE install) - and no returns so far.
Anyway, I love cheap commodity hardware! That said, I wouldn't mind a dual G5 system.
-Mark
Re:I bought a $199 Linux PC at Frye's (Score:2)
Funny. Looks a lot like a Mac... (Score:2)
http://www.linare.com/linpc.htm
The PaperRoute Box (Score:3, Insightful)
Linare plagiarized from Suse (Score:2, Insightful)
is a word-for-word ripoff of:
http://www.suse.de/en/partner/become_partner/
Linare is quite full of themselves ..... (Score:3, Insightful)
Excerpt:
"Linare is the worldâ(TM)s premier technology system integrator for Linux solutions in the enterprise."
I wish them all the luck in the world though
Peace,
Ex-MislTech
Re:broken website..? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:And for another few bucks... (Score:2)
It looks like they deliver a pretty usable set of software... (don't know how its setup but if it comes preinstalled not much can be fucked up
Jeroen
Re:Trying to run XWindows with only 128MB of ram (Score:2, Informative)
Running X with only 128MB of RAM isn't the problem. I have machines that have run linux & X for years with much less memory than that. X isn't the problem. It's most likely KDE. I had it on a PII-450 w/ 128M and KDE was very slow. It was like being on a 486 again. Firing up Mozilla on a P-166 w/64M of ram was more responsive.
Unfortunately, the default environment for these machines is KDE. I'm not sure if the 1GHz Via chip & the rest of the system can compensate for the lack of memory and st
Re:Trying to run XWindows with only 128MB of ram (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm currently working on trying to get RedHat 9 running on a P200 with 64MB of RAM. I'm going to replace KDE/Gnome with IceWM and the IceBlueCurve theme. I'm also swapping Mozilla out for Firebird (it is *much
Actually, I wouldn't. (Score:3, Insightful)
You can build a regular Duron 1.3Ghz box including case, keyboard, mouse, 30GB HD, 128MB RAM, and using onboard video, sound and LAN for about £140 including the 17.5% sales tax.
Generally US retailers bizarrely don't include the tax
Re:Actually, I wouldn't. (Score:2, Interesting)
Sales tax is not as fixed here in the US. We have 50 different States, each charging their own tax. In Wisconsin, where I happen to live, this is 5%. Add to that the fact that some counties (which there can be 100's of in a state) also charge sales tax.. and its virtually impossible to list prices with sales tax.
Yet it g
Re:Actually, I wouldn't. (Score:2)
Oh, I did realize that. However, isn't sales tax based on the location of the retailer rather than the buyer? For example, if I wanted to buy one of those cheap Linux PCs for $200 on the Web, and they were based in Wisconsin.. then I'd pay $210?
Add to that the fact that some counties (which there can be 100's of in a state) also charge sales tax.. and its virtually impossible to list prices with sales tax.
Re:Actually, I wouldn't. (Score:2)
But at least you can see how much tax has added to the cost of the item you purchased, and so far shopping online and out of state will exempt tax generally...
"These guys are in the US, and they're trade.. so they're getting their parts at well below $200, and probably have a margin of 50%, excluding labor, which, admittedly, could be the deal breaker in the
Complete for cheap = possible (Score:3, Informative)
Re:More info please (Score:2, Informative)
Re:More info please (Score:2)
No, but my Matrox Video card was choosen back in its day because it had the best 2D video output. Of course now it is obsolete, but it still works great, and my text looks good. (Good enough that I can tell my cheap monitor is the limit) Other video cards have not looked as sharp.
Other things I want in a video card: support for high resolutions and color (at least 1600x1200x24bpp), and fast output. With onboard video I'm stuck with whatever they decide
I want a $200 computer because frankly my dual