"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Brad or Pierre need to post the link(s) for these gems
all of the above are with Quad core Xeon CPUs. While usable to a much larger extent than anticipated, I would follow Brandt's advice and stick with newer CPUs.The absolutely biggest advantage workstation class offers is the extent of testing done to limit any possibility of crashing or similar issues. This is where I disagree with Brand. He has a lot of experience building the systems and is picking top of the line components that he knows are working together well. Monkey could put the components together, but the reliability offered and in depth testing will not be there. Yes, this might be a difference of one crash a month, but if there are a couple of components not playing well together, it could turn ugly quickly. To further emphasize the advantages of going away from a white box, Lenovo has a support page with fixes to any known issues (usually not many). If there are problems with new drivers or OS patches, you'll find out before getting in trouble and the solution will be posted.pierre
My regular company I deal with gave me a quote with an AMD 8 core processor and 16 gigs of ram, graphics card, hd and all the other basics for around $1100.00 I priced the same parts out at new eggfor around $850 so $250 didn't seem too much to put it together. How does the AMD processors stack up against the Intel's?