PC Prices Reach $300 Milestone 515
Carl Bialik from the WSJ writes "Prices for fully loaded, name-brand PCs have slipped below $300 in the last few weeks, a major milestone. 'Ten or so years ago, when PCs cost five or even 10 times what they do now, it was common for analysts to say that they would never become a staple in homes until they were priced the way consumer electronics were, usually defined as costing less than $300,' Lee Gomes writes in the Wall Street Journal. 'In the days when PCs were $2,000 and even more, that target seemed to be something of a fantasy. Now, PCs cost less than some telephones--and less than a lot of TV sets--and can be found in roughly three-quarters of U.S. homes. But while they are priced like consumer electronics, the machines still aren't even remotely as easy to use, and the trend lines there aren't particularly encouraging.'"
Put Linux On It (Score:5, Insightful)
I now expect I'll be modded up as insightful. :-)
But in truth... Running IE and Outlook Express out of the box when pre-configured by Dell and hooked up by your local cable/DSL installer, vs. running Firefox and Thunderbird when configured and hooked up by your friend who knows their way around Linux... about the same learning curve. The trick is that if your friend who knows Linux set you up right, you won't be infected with three viruses and 18 types of spyware six months later.
Windows vs. Linux in usage... about the same. Maintenance... Linux wins.
- Greg
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3, Funny)
That of course, with the assumption it takes the user (6 months - 1 hour) to figure out how to turn the PC on and connect to the internet.
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3, Funny)
wouldn't it be nice... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:wouldn't it be nice... (Score:5, Insightful)
I switched my folks over to Firefox, and this is what I got. Ended up putting the IE icon back on their desktop. Told them I will not clean spyware any more.
Re:wouldn't it be nice... (Score:2)
Are you sure the font size wasn't just different, throwing them into a state of confusion?
You can tell it's Monday..... (Score:4, Funny)
Thought to myself... "Odd. I would figure blank pages would look the same in... ohhhhhh.. BANK pages...."
Re:wouldn't it be nice... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm sure there's some way to replicate this functionality in FF, but until mainstream sites take the time to do it, IE isn't
Re:wouldn't it be nice... (Score:5, Interesting)
Personally, I don't use picture sites, so...
Re:wouldn't it be nice... (Score:5, Funny)
I'm getting a vision of my mother calling me up and going off like that - "OMFG! i gav birf 2 u! WTFXOR!!! LOL!11"
Makes me laugh because my mom called me up the other day and, in a triumphant tone, said "Guess what I'm doing? I'm GOOGLING!"
Five minutes later, I was still cracking up, and even now I get a smile.
Re:wouldn't it be nice... (Score:5, Insightful)
As did I... And when they made that same complaint (somewhat more eloquently phrased), I explained that pages not loading (or even crashing their browser) meant, in no uncertain terms, that the owner of that site didn't want their business.
Problem solved.
As an aside - I've noticed that quite a few "major" sites DELIBERATELY crash Firefox... Weather.com, as the example I notice most often (since I actually visit it regularly)... I use the User Agent Switcher extension, and if I set it to MSIE (or even to no user agent at all), such sites work just fine. If I set it to FF or Moz - Bam!, dead browser.
I mean, not taking the effort to make a site compatible, I can understand - But to actually exert effort to deliberately break some browsers? You'd almost think such actions must violate some law...
Re:wouldn't it be nice... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:wouldn't it be nice... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:wouldn't it be nice... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:wouldn't it be nice... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm quite sure that Microsoft wouldn't love anything more than being able to enforce such things but I doubt that this is the main issue why oems don't do it.
The main issue is cost. Most (read all) businesses aren't about ideology. Why would they go through the trouble to disable some of windows and install Openoffice and firefox? If for example real was paying them to isntall their play, then I could understand but going through the trouble to install 3rd party software is not on the oem's agend
Re:wouldn't it be nice... (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh man, you've been in that coma for a while [internetnews.com].
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, if you're the type of friend who likes to get calls at 8pm on a Sunday night saying "Hey, I bought this USB video conversion thingy and want to edit my home movies, but the software doesn't install. How can I transfer my movies from my video camera to my PC and then burn a DVD of it?"
Sure, Linux can probably do it, but do you really want to spend the next 8 hours walking your friend through downloading and compiling packages, kernel modules, or hunting around for software to accomplish the task? Either let them use Windows, which 95% of the software out there assumes you have, or prepare to be their phone support for the next 2 or 3 years.
Face it, no matter how hard you try, some users are just not going to get it. I've had to explain to my mother how to drag and drop a file to copy it in Windows 30 times over the past 5 years and she keeps forgetting. Sure, it's probably a convenient excuse to get me to talk to her for more than 5 minutes, but I've got other shit to do.
5 minutes? (Score:5, Funny)
I've had to explain to my mother how to drag and drop a file to copy it in Windows 30 times over the past 5 years and she keeps forgetting. Sure, it's probably a convenient excuse to get me to talk to her for more than 5 minutes, but I've got other shit to do.
C'mon dude, this is your Mom we're talking about.
Besides, it's not like she's charging you rent to live in her basement.
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem here is that she is learning to follow step-by-step instructions - and not learning to abstract what is actually happening. I notice this a lot when I'm helping non-techy people.
Maybe she would remember what was going on if you showed her how to do it, then asked her to repeat back to you exactly what you just described, using completely different words. That way, she would have to assimilate what was going on, in order to rephrase it.
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3, Interesting)
This is exactly right. It was also well outlined in "In the Beginning was the Command Line" by Neal Stephenson. Basically he details how various GUI's are a brutal facade over the actual functions you perform on a PC, and how this level of abstraction can be terribly confusing for people, instead of helping the user
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3, Interesting)
That's because dragging and dropping a file to copy it is ultimately a counter-intuitive action.
It looks pretty, and I'm not going to dispute it takes a fair bit of computing power and some programming prowess to make the computer copy a file when you drag an icon -- but it really isn't what you'd expect to happen. Dragging and dropping suggests moving, not copyi
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3, Insightful)
Although I agree that usually getting things done on linux is a bit more complicated than doing them on windows, I feel must point out one thing:
SSH.
It's a blessing to be able to SSH into a friend's computer and fix it up in seconds, instead of spending the next 8 hours telling them "ok, c
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3, Insightful)
with Windows, you would have to go out to the store, buy three different software packages, and install them all while you hunt for license keys and hope that they don't all overwrite each other's DLLs.
With Linux, the driver for the video doodad is probably already installed; for everything else there's apt-get. No compiling, no driving, and probably less total time spent than the Windows approach
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:4, Informative)
I have been using a Plextor DVD recorder on USB2 for quite a while now, with no problems at all. In fact, I have hooked up 10 external CD-R drives to my main machine, all on USB2, all working fine with Alcohol 120% for disk duplication on a semi-industrial scale.
Last I looked, USB 2 was on par with FireWire for most things, certaintly in terms of bandwith/throughput.
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:4, Informative)
With FireWire, speed is independent of cable length while on USB2, length directly affects propagation delays which are a killer on simplex lines since it forces longer pauses between packets.
While USB2 may be 20% faster than FireWire in marketspeak, under real-world circumstances is only 50-60% as fast for one-way file transfers. When I got my first USB2 and FW HDD boxes, I did some benchmarking...
1- USB2 box with 3' cable: 23MB/s
2- USB2 box with 6' cable: 18MB/s
3- USB2 to USB2 with 3' cables on same root hub: 10MB/s
4- FW box with 3/6/9' cable: 32MB/s (FW/IDE bridge maximum)
5- FW box to FW box, independent ports: 30MB/s
6- FW box to FW box, stringed to same port: 25MB/s
USB's usable bandwidth suffers horribly as bus load increases. FireWire is much steadier under heavy loads. This is exactly the same story as 10/100Mbps Ethernet's hub VS switch... nobody sees the difference until network load exceeds 10%, beyond which point the switched/duplex alternative quickly becomes clearly superior.
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:5, Informative)
No, you pretty much missed his point, which is actually typical. 90% of the home media devices out there are a pain in the ass to use (if it is even possible) if you use anything other than Windows. Of the ten percent that remain, you are better off getting a Mac than a using a Linux box, because at the very least you can haul the rig into an Apple Store and the folks at the Genius Bar will help you get it up and running.
If I were to set my parents up with Linux, I would end up being their sole source for tech support. I spend enough of my life supporting computers as it stands now. At least if my friends or family choose either Windows or OS X, I can point them to affordable alternative sources of support. Neither Red Hat or Novell handles home user support very well (although I have been pleased with their corporate offerings), much less the groups of holier than though geeks who make up the online Linux community, particularly when the response of said geeks is to call someone full of shit and then present no solution to the problem other than to spout some buzzwords. Incidentally, I know plenty of people burning DVDs and capturing VCR home movie quality video over USB2 just fine using Windows XP -- perhaps the poster wasn't as clueless as you assume?
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3, Insightful)
They aren't really a whole lot better under Windows, if the ugly truth be told. Have you ever tried to get a cheap, "Windows-only" scanner working in Windows?
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3)
Honestly? Did you not even think of looking at HP's Website before posting your shit stain of a post?
It took me a whole 46 seconds (yes, I timed it) to find OS X Drivers for a HP Photosmart 1000 printer.
http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/softwareList?d l c=en&lc=en&product=61872&lang=en&cc=us&os=219 [hp.com]
Not to mention that Drivers for a HP-Photosmart 1000 COME WITH MAC OS X 10.4 and if you were running an older version you could simply use the drivers
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3, Informative)
Now, I will grant you that if somebody knowledgeable sets up linux, they can make it so that the interface is very simple and easy to use. That said, many people are still simply comfortable with windows. T
I beg to differ. (Score:5, Interesting)
An obvious security advantage, yes, but at the cost of obscurity. I build PCs for home users and I find it very difficult to sell Linux and mac based systems because users insist on being able to run the educational/edu-tainment titles they can buy in PCWorld (here in the UK) or presumably CompUSA on your side of the pond
Ultimately, home users want Windows and are generally willing to pay out for NAT routers, antivirus and anti-spyware apps to protect them from the consequences. As an aside, the cheapest branded PCs you can buy in the UK are about £300, which considering the state of the Dollar on the foreign exchange markets is a bit of a rip-off...
You can get a Mac mini for the same price (no monitor though)!
Re:I beg to differ. (Score:3, Informative)
Maybe seeing an article like this Nvidia and ATI should drop their prices, since their overachieved, undersupplied cards now equal 70 to 90% of a PC cost.
$200+ for a mid-range video card? Are you nuts? A good midrange video card is something like a FX5500 or a Radeon 9600, both of which cost about $60-$70 or so.
I'm guessing that most of these $300 computers use integrated Intel graphics an
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:3, Informative)
Isn't that the point of being easy to use? I'm sure I could find anyone who's an expert at anything to configure it for me... but that doesn't change the fact that it's too complex for the common user in the first place.
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:2)
Re:Put Linux On It (Score:2, Insightful)
The $50 minimum to clean up spyware, viruses etc. adds up to $500 a month for me. Why would I walk away from that?
Of course when I'm asked to build a system for someone it is built with all patches applied, AVG, users choice of firewall both hardware and software, Firefox and Thunderbird. That tends to cut down on the repair side but happy people are more valuable.
It doesn't necessarily need to be Linux and K
One problem... (Score:5, Informative)
Interesting article...but it seemed to fail to mention one important dynamic.
As time passes, operating systems and applications become progressively larger and more complex, requiring correspondingly more robust hardware to run on. I doubt that the 'entry level PC' (whatever that means) of a year ago is equal to the 'entry level PC' of today.
Re:One problem... (Score:2)
Me neither. The pig got 512 meg 3 yrs ago, and the same today.
With PCI Express, DDR2, Dual Core, x64, the sexy changes IMHO will be hardware, and those will filter down to everyone.
Re:One problem... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:One problem... (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, yesterday I saw a guy holding one of those up to his head while he was driving. I noticed the caps locks key was on...
Hmmm... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2)
I'll agree with you though that out of the box systems are becoming more simple to setup and use for those who have at least a casual interest in computers.
computers are easy to use as long as the user h
Where do you get your prices??? (Score:5, Informative)
I got a fully loaded (ie Windows and such) for ~$300 about eight years ago. It was (and still is..runs like a champ) an Emachines which I would call a major brand. These prices have been around for a while.
Re:Where do you get your prices??? (Score:5, Funny)
What about the Microtel PCs? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What about the Microtel PCs? (Score:3, Insightful)
You do know they're made in the same factory in China, don't you? With Microtel, you pay for the components (and someone to put them together, but child labor in China is cheap). With Dell, you pay for the same components and child labor, plus 4 or 5 full page ads in glossy magazines, a handful of TV spots and that billboard down the road. If you're lucky, you might get to sponsor a cinema ad in full widescreen D
Fully loaded? (Score:5, Funny)
*Ducks*
Re:Fully loaded? (Score:2)
hardly (Score:4, Insightful)
The PCs that are below $300 may be 'brand name' but they are hardly what I'd call 'fully loaded.' Usually 128MB memory and a Celeron or Sempron. Definitely not the Rolls-Royce of computing.
Re:hardly (Score:3, Interesting)
You really want at least 512 MB for Windows XP Home or a full install of current commercial Linux distributions for things to work decently fast. When you reach 1 GB of RAM installed (most current motherboards can handle this), the only time you need a faster CPU is to run the latest games or run high-end multimedia-editing programs. The big advantage of installing more RAM is that you drastically reduce hard disk memory virtualizatio
Re:hardly (Score:4, Informative)
I don't think anyone implied that. I would call the $300 PC the "authentic replica Rolex" of computing.
Fully loaded.... (Score:3, Funny)
Cost of Windows (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Cost of Windows (Score:3, Informative)
300 dollars for what? (Score:5, Funny)
Backward compatible, too (Score:2)
So, your garage sale purchase included backward compatibility! Totally forward thinking. This "Commodore" company really understands the course it's charting. Invest now.
(Though personally, I think consoles will always make more sense for gaming. You'd want an Intellivision for the games.)
Re:300 dollars for what? (Score:3, Interesting)
even more amazing given inflation (Score:5, Informative)
Re:even more amazing given inflation (Score:5, Interesting)
This is due to the volume of machines Commodore was stamping out. There's a reason everyone seems to have a C=64 in their closet. Commodore sold more than 33 million of the little buggers, more than ANY OTHER computer model ever made, even to this day. The only other machine that even comes close was the Apple II, which sold for 12 years continuously with only minor modifications.
The sad irony is that most books which talk about the home computer revolution in computing history concentrate on Apple/IBM/Microsoft, and conviently forget about the C=64, the home PC which truely changed the world, and one of the most popular machines ever created.
And yes, I still have mine.
Perception hasn't caught up yet though. (Score:2, Interesting)
Pity (Score:5, Interesting)
It won't be until computers are in the $100 price range that the average consumer thinks of them the way a lot of enthusiasts do: a tool with perqs.
Until that time, people like us can make money as Mr. Fix-its and computational handymen.
Then there is the other commonly heard phrase: "Well, you fixed it a week ago and it's broke again." To which I normally respond (at least to the people I call friends): "Have you used it since I fixed it?"
Computers don't break themselves. Users break computers.
But they should be (Score:2)
For 90+% of the population computers should be more like appliances, that just sit there and work. Not enough effort has been made by the hardware or software manufactures towards this end.
Re:But they should be (Score:4, Funny)
Maybe we should require civility licenses before allowing people to open their pieholes.
Re:Pity (Score:2, Insightful)
yuck (Score:5, Insightful)
Computers don't break themselves. Users break computers.
Well, that's quickly changing: these days, computers can break themselves, be it via automatic upgrades, spyware, or worms that come in through vendor-supplied security holes.
Re:Pity (Score:3, Informative)
Sharper Image's Ionic Breeze is less than worthless [consumerreports.org]. Please don't plug it as anything other than an ozone generating device.
PC's USED to cost under $300! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:PC's USED to cost under $300! (Score:2)
Re:PC's USED to cost under $300! (Score:2)
that's not what he meant (Score:3, Informative)
"how did we go from the $400 commodore 64 to the $4000 IBM PC within a year or two?"
no, we didn't have 1000% inflation in the early 80s
Example (Score:3, Informative)
Doing more adds to complexity (Score:2, Interesting)
It also depends on what you plan to do with your computer. If you use Quickbooks for example, that program alone has more complexity than most home theaters. The more complex tasks are that you do on a computer, the more comp
Laptops too (Score:2)
Hot off the presses! (Score:3, Funny)
What we need now... (Score:3, Insightful)
While lower prices for desktop machines is great, we need to find a way to get laptops down to a price point where they can be used to replace textbooks for highschool students.
This textbook replacement laptop doesn't necessarily have to have every possible feature, but I think it does need networking, USB, a harddrive, and a display that is fast enough for word processing and simple animations. The ability to play music might insure that the kids don't lose it. The kids can play FPS games at home on their $300 PCs; this machine is meant for study.
Obviously, Linux will be part of that solution, since Windows simply costs too much money.
The educational software for such machines should all be Open Source. This will make it easier for governments and school systems to adapt the software to their particular needs. Each school district can employ a couple of Open Source programmers. Think of what the combined capabilities of so many programmers will be when it comes to developing educational software.
It's sad that we don't hear about wonderful educational software. The people who work on such software aren't held in the same regard as those who work on business enterprise applications or on games, yet educational software could potentially have much farther reaching impacts.
Re:What we need now... (Score:5, Insightful)
My mother and favorite aunt are both teachers, I was a teacher before I was an engineer, and I have unending respect for the majority of the profession... but the level of technological expertise approaches zero. Forget firefox, the "power user" at my Aunt's school uses IE and laughs at the people stuck with AOL's browswer or a six year old Netscape-for-macs client. These are the folks who need to be on the ball if Bobby's Electronic Notebook eats his test fourty-five minutes into the period... do you see that happening?
Household staple (Score:5, Insightful)
I dunno about this, it seems to me that PCs have been a household staple for a while now. Even when they still cost $1000, they were common enough that it would be a surprise for a household not to have a PC in it. If you also consider the number of homes which have an obsolete PC (older than 5 years old or so) which are pretty much given away at rummage sales and such, the PC is just about ubiquitous.
Ease of use (Score:5, Interesting)
As for how easy computers are to use, I put my roommate, just an average consumer-grade computer user, down in front of my thinkpad running Debian (testing), and she was browsing the web, reading email, and doing research without a lick of help from me. Her response to "its running linux" was "what's that?"
Easy to use, and no virus/trojan/worm/zombie/whatever-the-latest-wind
Microsoft (Score:2)
Question: Is there a way we in the Free Open Source Movement can increase pressure on M$?
Real solutions are needed.
Didn't all cost that much (Score:2, Interesting)
In the early 90s, an Atari ST cost about $400.
linux on the box (Score:2, Insightful)
Pessimistic (Score:5, Interesting)
Computers seem to be the new styrofoam cup: we use them for a while, but they're with us forever. In my most humble opinion, I think the industry as a whole halt their progression towards ever cheaper computers for a while and instead focus on making fully recyclable computers.
Stable price (Score:5, Insightful)
Grow up! (Score:3, Interesting)
Using a computer today demands you know exactly what you are doing and why, For your casual surfer or media user that should not be tha case. All they need to know is where to go and what to watch. Its the OS that demands the users help, not the other way around. No sane user wants to maintain the computer. He do it because he have to.
The fast solution is cramming out specialized computers but that hits the wall pretty quick because of the lack of real standards on the net.
Until we have some sane (widely used by even Microsoft) standards for the web nothing will change and every appliance will fall flat on its face. The industry created this mess with their "not invented here" syndrome and they are the ones who should clean the mess up.
Idiocy (Score:5, Insightful)
Idiocy. Some things are complex and require more knowledge to use effectively than others not because they are poorly designed but because they are much more powerful and versatile. How many functions a typical representative of "consumer electronic" serves? Even a TV needs just on/off, channel up, channel down, volume up & down to operate (the rest is hardly used). Is anything more complex in the consumer electronic field?
What we have to do to shove this plain old truth down the underdeveloped journalistic cerebrums?
IMO: PCs are easier to use than other appliances (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe it's just me, but I still haven't mastered my stereo, or my TV/DVD/VCR/Remotes. My PC, by contrast, is a cinche.
With my entertainment system, it's always: " . . . no wait, if I'm going to tape the show, *first* I have to VCR power, *then* power-TV, then switch to the other remote, then push that little button on the top - no wait - that was with old remote - with *this* remote, I have to use the VCR remote to turn on the TV, I only use the TV remote to change to channel 3, and to adjust the volume. Damnit, that didn't work . .
And every settup is completely different. I don't have that sort of problem with a PC, with a PC I just follow the menus.
To me, this isn't exactly "good news"! (Score:3, Interesting)
The PC market has been depressed for a long time now. That new Dell PC with the latest generation of CPU and 512MB of RAM standard shouldn't really be selling for only $399.95. It only does because they can get Chinese workers to assemble the things for them for pennies per day.
And this carries over to ALL aspects of that PC, including the plastic molding process that makes the case! (A while back, I looked into getting a case made for a prototype product we were thiking of marketing. While there a a number of businesses in the U.S. that will do the injection molding process - they practically *all* informed me that I'd be wise to have the mass production of the end-result done in China or Taiwan. They simply couldn't compete at all on price for quantities. It seems they do most of their business helping someone get the very first sample done, and then selling you the molds that it was made with.)
I know many people say "So what? It's a global economy now!" and all that... But I'm not sure we can really preach and claim to be about such things as "freedom" or "individual rights" while letting our own economy slowly collapse. The U.S. doesn't seem like we export any technology anymore! (Heck, what do we export lately other than a lot of our jobs?!)
Being very much a "free market" proponent, it's almost hard to admit this. But right now, we're just not working on the same "playing field". I think the large nations of the world are going to have to get together and agree to add some steep tarriffs to goods imported from 3rd. world countries (and anyone using what amounts to slave labor practices to build their products).
Yeah but they're still borderline-unusable (Score:3, Insightful)
No, the PC will never catch up with the mobile phone. [chiralsoftware.net]
My experience with a fully loaded at $400 (Score:4, Informative)
Pentium 3.0.
motherboard video
Generic motherboard, case.
Speakers, mouse, keyboard.
DVD burner. 4.7 gig dual standard.
256mb ram.
--- I plugged in my home network cable and turned it on.
It started up and immediately worked.
I could see all other computers on my network.
I put in DVD's and they played.
I could burn DVD's.
The neighbors 3 blocks over called to complain about the noise.
--- Since then, I've made the following upgrades.
1) replaced the ram with a stick of 512mb mushkin ($29).
2) Installed two silent fans ($9 and $12). One replaced the noisy fan that was screwed to the heatsink- I kept the original heat sink.
3) New video card (but the 9250 is NOT dx9 like it says on the box so it's going back).
---
Out of the box, the GQ-7000 is a noisy good computer for playing, burning dvds, browsing the internet, and playing games that do not need heavy video performance. It is NOT suitable for modern games.
---
With MINOR upgrades ($29+$21+~$169), you have a very quiet, 3.0ghz computer with a 1 generation old (geo6600 or similar ati) graphics. Furthermore, you don't have to install the OS and you have a restore CD to quickly reinstall the OS later.
---
$300 computers are usually celeron/semprons in my experience and too far back. But at $400, you can get last year's state of the art performance without overclockiing.
Great write-up (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Uhhh.... DUH~! (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think the difference is as big as most people assume. Yes, OSs are huge, complicated and amazingly difficult to master, but the average person has no need of mastery. When you look at what the average person does, it's actually fairly easy.
-turn on, click on web browser, type URL of favorite site.
-turn on, insert disc, hit next, next, next, finished, use newly installed software.
-turn on, insert disc, hit next, next, next, finished, plug in USB hardware, use new hardware.
Have you ever tried to dial-in surround sound? Have you ever tried to make your TV, surround sound reciever, cable/sat box, and DVD player all work well using a single remote control? Have you ever tried to watch a TV, then switch to DVD using all of the remote controls that hadn't been unified into a single one?
Yes, OSs are complicated. Consumer electronics is too.
TW
TW
Re:Uhhh.... DUH~! (Score:5, Insightful)
Have HDTV?
Want to use surround sound?
Want to watch DVDs on the console?
Want to play online?
Don't want cords in the middle of the room?
Want to use more than one console?
Want to use a DVR and a console?
Want to use a DVD, DVR, VCR and cable box with the console?
As it turns out, as single entities consumer electronics are easier. But as soon as you want to hook them up with all your other goodies, they get really complicated, really fast. Want to go through a little thought experiment? How's this:
Experiment #1:
You buy a 27" standard definition (regular) TV and a PS2 for your 16 year old daughter. You give her the boxes, unopened, and have her set them up in her room by herself. Is she successful? Great. My daughter would do just fine too. But wait, there's more.
Experiment #2:
You buy a 27" HDTV and a PS2 for your 16 year old daughter. You also get her an HDTV-ready cable box. You get her surround speakers. You get her a surround reciever. You get her a DVD-recorder. You get her a Tivo. You give her all these things brand new and in their boxes and you send her to her room to set them up.
Is she successful? Well, it depends on how you define success. She might have plugged them all in, but she's already missing a bunch of cables. She might not even be able to hook up the speakers, much less have surround sound for the PS2.
Let's say she bought some cables and eventually got everything working. You go to look at her system and find:
-The picture is fuzzy because she used composite video cables. You ask her about component and she gives you a blank stare.
-She has 5 different remote controls and can barely keep track of them.
-There are wires all over the floor because of the surround sound.
-The sound is bad because she's used zip-ties to bundle all the cords, including the power, all the RCAs and the speaker wire. She just accepts it and figures she'll have to buy better speakers later on to improve her sound.
-She has at least a dozen manual-looking thing. Some are just "don't use your toaster in the bathtub" type warnings, but she doesn't know the difference. All she knows is she has more than 200 pages worth of stuff to read if she wants a better understanding of her equipment.
As I said, one console is easy. But in the real world when you want to use more than one device (the equipment I listed is very realistic) Consumer Electronics, as a whole, are not easy at all.
TW
Re:Uhhh.... DUH~! (Score:4, Funny)
Now I agree it would be easier to have one big button on the PC called "do what I want you to do", but unfortunately computers lack the psychic abilities to do that.
Re:WSJ articles... (Score:2)
Mac mini does solve one problem... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's what you're buying with the $200 difference. A Mac's still expensive for an entry-level PC, but it's not 2-3 times as expensive any more.
Mac mini cost effectiveness is overhyped. (Score:3, Informative)
That has not been my experience.
I got my employers to buy me a mac mini for evaluation purposes. The idea was to put the code developers on native Xwindows instead installing Xservers on Windows XP systems.
You can't do anything meaningful with a mac mini until you quadruple the memory, was what I found. Once you do that (and buy keyboard/mouse/monitor) the mac mini costs about twice what a comparable PC costs.
At the prices we're talkin
Re:Mac mini cost effectiveness is overhyped. (Score:3, Interesting)
What didn't "just plug in and work"? You didn't say that.
I got my employers to buy me a mac mini for evaluation purposes. The idea was to put the code developers on native Xwindows instead installing Xservers on Windows XP systems.
You're using a Mac mini for software development? Um, dude, OK, you can do that... but that's not exactly a $300 PC job.
You can't do anything meaningful with a mac mini until y
Re:junk (Score:3, Informative)
I have a $450 PC (and that includes monitor and printer) that's currently running Firefox, Thunderbird, Shareaza, iPodder, Copernic, Gaim, Picasa, Folding@Home, Proxomitron, WinRoll, Yahoo Music Engine, Clipomatic, AbiWord, McAfee Firewall, and Norton Antivirus with no slow-down. Why, pray tell, would a top-of-the-line $1000 unit be better?
If you're not a gamer or animator, a cheap PC will do the job. Hell, I know a guy who's still getting by with X-terminal on a 48
Re:Article comments on MS software price decline (Score:3, Insightful)