"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
yes, it is dated, that was never in dispute. That's why it is cheap. 250 for the system, 150 for the Windows and 80 for RAM will bring it up to much more than usable specs.
It will be a reliable and plenty fast machine. Is your's faster? Yes it is. Is it $500? no it is not. Can you buy something comparable for that kind of money? I doubt it. In my eyes, this is a good value that will reliably perform everything one needs in a shop for next three to four years.
Joking aside - I could build a computer with workstation components that would equal the performance of a high end Mac. They essentially would have the same parts. The difference would be the price and the operating system.
Let's be fair here.Yes, Pierre said "think Xeon" and this is FAR FAR FAR from that. Not sure how those wires got crossed but that could be looked at as some SERIOUS misleading.
But Brandt. Sure, 146gb is "small" but it's perfectly fine for an OS drive and it IS 15k RPM's... this is TWICE as fast as what you accused him of having in that system.
Do you honestly suggest having a single 2TB 7200 RPM drive in a system would be better?
I believe you only have a 10k RPM drive and it's your OS drive and you have other 7200 RPM drives for data and such.
I got no beef with that hard drive...
I put a SSD drive in the wife's monster... it's REALLY small... but it's only the OS drive. I want it to be super fast... and it is.
also, 146 is fine if you have a server that stores all of your files. I have 2 1TB drives in my machine and love it, but I don't really need that anymore.
I did not say that all the thinkstations are Xeon processors, just that they can have it. This particular one did not.I had a chance to look around a little bit and found this:https://shop.itxchange.com/OA_HTML/xxtgeibeCCtdItemDetail.jsp?sitex=10020:22372:US&item=297098S20, will support up to 48GB of RAM, comes with Win 7, 90 day warranty and bigger drive. If it was my money, this is what I would be buying. One available, sitting in NC.I would add some RAM as 4 will get you going, but more would be better. pierre
Quote from: blue moon on May 02, 2012, 10:52:10 AMI did not say that all the thinkstations are Xeon processors, just that they can have it. This particular one did not.I had a chance to look around a little bit and found this:https://shop.itxchange.com/OA_HTML/xxtgeibeCCtdItemDetail.jsp?sitex=10020:22372:US&item=297098S20, will support up to 48GB of RAM, comes with Win 7, 90 day warranty and bigger drive. If it was my money, this is what I would be buying. One available, sitting in NC.I would add some RAM as 4 will get you going, but more would be better. pierreMuch better computer over all.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on May 02, 2012, 11:06:36 AMQuote from: blue moon on May 02, 2012, 10:52:10 AMI did not say that all the thinkstations are Xeon processors, just that they can have it. This particular one did not.I had a chance to look around a little bit and found this:https://shop.itxchange.com/OA_HTML/xxtgeibeCCtdItemDetail.jsp?sitex=10020:22372:US&item=297098S20, will support up to 48GB of RAM, comes with Win 7, 90 day warranty and bigger drive. If it was my money, this is what I would be buying. One available, sitting in NC.I would add some RAM as 4 will get you going, but more would be better. pierreMuch better computer over all. yes, I agree with you. Much more bang for the buck.
Quote from: Gilligan on May 02, 2012, 10:20:36 AMDo you honestly suggest having a single 2TB 7200 RPM drive in a system would be better? Never said that, but as I have already pointed out 146gb is NOT enough for OS/Programs/Storage. How fast the drive is wont be important if you cant store any work on it? So they will either have to put a secondary larger drive in the machine or a larger 15krpm drive (if they want that speed), or SSD.