Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
i will second what pierre is saying. he turned me onto Thinkstations a while back, they freaking run. I have built systems myself, I've had systems built, but nothing compares to the reliability of a Thinkstation. Heck, the processors are Xeon, which are server grade. On many of the systems you buy for $600-$1000 the video cards alone are worth twice that. Pair that with ECC RAM and everything else they use and they are awesome systems.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on January 08, 2016, 07:36:11 AM water cooling, etc. Annnnnnnnnd ish just real! Never done water cooling myself, that's some serious stuff!Bought all the fixings for one of the last computers online for in store pick up. When I went in to get it, the kid that brought it all to the register said "woah, that's a serious gaming rig bro!" Ahhhhh yes, that reminded me why I enjoy buying online for delivery!
water cooling, etc.
I used a Rosewill Challenger U3... not a "small" case, but clearly not enough.
Those Thinkstations aren't bad for those that don't want to get their hands dirty.It's not the insane markup that most charge for lesser machines.I build PC's as part of my living... it's SUPER easy... but at the same time, my brother, who is a database genius.... barely can hook up the tower to the peripherals. Some people it just doesn't click for. I don't get databases in almost the same way he doesn't get hardware. I 100% agree with you that you can save money by building yourself... but some would rather spend the extra 200-400 and be done with it. That's how I make my living. Also there are many tweaks that go into setting up a system PROPERLY. So much so that I keep a check list for various styles of builds (AMD vs INTEL, SSD vs Platter) as I can't remember it all.
I agree to a certain extent, though unless you are building a pretty low end machine, that $200-400 is more like $600-800+ in my experience. For a basic computer that will run Office and lets you browse the internet, sure go for the prebuilt if you have no experience. For something with ample power to run Adobe without any slowdowns, render the odd video or 3D model, or truly multitask, you are going to spend a lot more on a prebuilt. Hell, if you don't want to build it yourself, buy the parts and pay a flat fee for someone like Gilligan to put it together.
Do these particular factory refurbs come with the same freshly installed bloat and sleazeware that seem to be Lenovo's current trademark and among the worst in the industry with their consumer PC's and laptops?I just needed to buy a mid priced laptop and avoided Lenovo on this principle.http://www.networkworld.com/article/2978021/microsoft-subnet/lenovo-bloatware-firmware-pcs.html
It's probably on a chip that never even sees any usage with as much RAM as you put in the system. :p