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-- Why are Dell computers looked down upon?
Why are Dell computers looked down upon?
I've seen some general hate for this brand. I never owned a Dell, but my dad plans to buy a Dell laptop and I'd like to know why a great majority of you dislike Dell pcs? Please state some legitimate reasons, thanks.
I got a dell in 2001 and its still working fine. The only reason i got a new laptop is because the configurations became to obsolete to handle the demands of modern software. I only needed to contact their customer service (which was exemplary btw) twice over 5 years.
And you are right, even I purchased a toshiba because i heard bad things about the current dell laptops. I think there could be several reasons for that:-
1) The whole battery setting the laptop on fire incident didnt help their cause much.
2) Their laptops are big and bulky and dont look sleek.
3) I also heard that their hardware quality has gone down recently since they apparently use the cheapest available parts to manufacture their laptops. The same about their customer service.
THe reason that many people do not like Dells is that they use propriitary(sp?) components. That means that you cannot upgrade many of the parts later on if you want. Also, many of the systems that they market are not even powerful enough to meet the minimum standards for windowsxp (the last time i checked). I hear that even their new XPS brand of gaming computers run super-hot. Also, Dell has been known to install a crapload of software onto the pcs eventhoguh you do not ask for them.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Polt THe reason that many people do not like Dells is that they use propriitary(sp?) components. That means that you cannot upgrade many of the parts later on if you want. Also, many of the systems that they market are not even powerful enough to meet the minimum standards for windowsxp (the last time i checked). I hear that even their new XPS brand of gaming computers run super-hot. Also, Dell has been known to install a crapload of software onto the pcs eventhoguh you do not ask for them. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Polt THe reason that many people do not like Dells is that they use propriitary(sp?) components. That means that you cannot upgrade many of the parts later on if you want. Also, many of the systems that they market are not even powerful enough to meet the minimum standards for windowsxp (the last time i checked). I hear that even their new XPS brand of gaming computers run super-hot. Also, Dell has been known to install a crapload of software onto the pcs eventhoguh you do not ask for them. |
because name-brand PCs are overpriced, and you do not get to choose the components that go into them. remember, computers are a lot more complicated (in terms of choice) than they were 10 years ago. so whilst you might get that 1Gb of ram in a dell, it might be of a shitty speed compared to if you built your own systems.
packaged systems are for mums and dads who dont know any better.
Dell's are pretty much a case of you get what you pay for, dont pay much, dont get much. The cheaper ones are exactly that, they're cheap, simple and relatively over-engineered with the hardware and software too survive the abuse of fairly much any kind of moron can throw at them. Its why unless youre very specific about what you want they simply find the cheapest alternative based on its durability, supply and price which will suit the purpose.
It's fairly easy too be snide about them but when you remember they literally sell these things too the lowest denominator of customer 9 times out of 10 that just wants the damn thing too work when they flick the button.
Besides, if you are a high end user, you DIY and people like you make up only a tiny fraction of their customers.
i have a DELL XPS laptop. Good enough for a student I'd say. Inexpensive and decent configuration. But if you are after style, brand name etc you might wana try something else.
Personally, I think its a lot more fun building your own PC rather then buying a major brand PC. When building your own PC, You can put the newest parts you want, Then months later you can upgrade to even better parts, The motherboards are built to support newer CPUs once they come out, And this usually through a bios upgrade.
Dell doesnt cater too the DIY crowd, who by and large do it for the fun and optimisation rather than anything else. Dell's are built either for large workgroups where the administrators have too fix/upgrade anything software base with something as simple as a ghost-image or just over the network and if one breaks, just throw in one which was exactly the same.
Or like I mentioned, average home users.
The 'fun' probably ceases when youre building a few dozen or few hundred of the damn things as well and servicing is easy because theyre all the same. 
i find it relatively easy for me to use Dell for buying computers for my family members. Because I don't live with my parents to 'troubleshoot' issues, I find it much easier for me to link them up with a dell and throw on the customer support stuff in case they need to fix something. It makes my life much easier because my family needs are not nearly as much as I need, all of my computers are DIY built since I can be more specific about my needs and expectations for my computers.
i have a dell ps 400 from 1999, thing is as heavy as a brick, but its a great internet portal for visitors since it resides on the coffee table...people who want internet, feel free to jump on the laptop =)
help keep people off my computer, i despise people on my computer, i feel like they are downloading spyware, viruses, and trojans. therefore the dell laptop acts as a communal internet portal for everyone....
depends on what u want a PC to do and how much u want to spend.
for an office environment, or a lite PC user then a Dell is fine as it's cheap and will function perfectly.
If u want a hardcore PC to overclock, swap and change hardware, add devices and all that, u've got no chance.
I have a dell at work and it's so compact you cannot put a standard PCI card in it. thats the performance vs design argument.
Tho in true Dell style they had to cheap out on it, and did. They've put a horizontally mounted DVD-ROM drive in a narrow tower case, and mounted it vertically - meaning CD's slide off easily, and also i moved the case by accident while it was reading the disc and slipped off the purch (as there was nothing to grip it) and the cd came loose doing whatever nuts speed it was, got it back out and all the outside film was scratched like i'd ran it over the road.
Also, i believe Dell got caught flashing high end graphics cards with weaker bios's to avoid overheating - as there cases have no airflow system.
Bottom line, for lite PC's and offices they're fine, for a home enthusiast, they're budget.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN because name-brand PCs are overpriced, and you do not get to choose the components that go into them. remember, computers are a lot more complicated (in terms of choice) than they were 10 years ago. so whilst you might get that 1Gb of ram in a dell, it might be of a shitty speed compared to if you built your own systems. packaged systems are for mums and dads who dont know any better. |
I used to DJwith my inspiron for 2 years and it always overheated..
i downloaded this utility taht let me manually control the fanspeed. so naturally i had it on high always and it never over heated again.
it also showed me the fanspeed in rpm by the clock and and the temperature in Fahrenheit and Celsius for the harddrive and cpu.
i've since moved on to a newer laptop but i'm sure that anyone that still uses a dell will find that utility is a lifesaver.
i don't have the site anymore just google it if you need.
also newer dells might nothave this issue especially with all the new low heat processors out.
peace
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Thomas Radman I used to DJwith my inspiron for 2 years and it always overheated.. i downloaded this utility taht let me manually control the fanspeed. so naturally i had it on high always and it never over heated again. it also showed me the fanspeed in rpm by the clock and and the temperature in Fahrenheit and Celsius for the harddrive and cpu. i've since moved on to a newer laptop but i'm sure that anyone that still uses a dell will find that utility is a lifesaver. i don't have the site anymore just google it if you need. also newer dells might nothave this issue especially with all the new low heat processors out. peace |
I believe the utility you are refering to is Speedfan. Link here
I personally would never buy one but I use Dell PCs because I get them free through my work so I can't complain too much. I've never really had any issues with them. I prefer to build my own PC.
dell just recently opened a factory in my town heh, I think the deal with dell is, they are pretty much the wal-mart of computers, which causes everyone to hate them. They just cheap out hardcore, better get that warranty, or get decent stuff homebuilt for the same price.
The place I work for recently got one and I wasn't happy:
1. came with a roller ball mouse. wtf i didnt know they still made them.
2. comes loaded with a bunch of junk software.
3. No system retore disc, believe it or not you have to pay extra for it. the restore is on a special partition on the hard drive. The most likely event you need to restore is that you have a virus or your system has gone wacky in either case you don't want the restore to be on the hard drive your using.
4. trial software. comes with norton antivirus software. great! oh did i mention its only a 30 day trial version.
Stupid shit like this makes me wonder why the fuck you'd want to cut corners like this. Its like selling a hamburger but you have to pay extra to get it on a bun.
Makes you wonder about the shortcut they made inside the box that you don't know about.
With the new XPS Dell's and the Core 2 Duo's, plus the Nvidia GeForce 7900 GTX, I've heard they are pretty damn good.
There is the problem of them being huge and overheating, but if you don't move it too much and generally know how to speed up things, and remove useless junk then they should be ok.
I'm planning to get one around christmas, as I can get it half price. Should do me fine for music production and games well into 2007. After that, I plan on getting a desktop anyway with quad-cores (who knows, will probably have 1 million cores, 250gbs of RAM, and 2 terrabyte GPUs by then, lol. At the speed technology improves, I wouldn't be surprised
) so no problem.
I would custom build one but then I would be spending double, and I could build a much better desktop, so no point in that.
So it's official, dell sucks unless you pay an insane amount of moeny for their higher end pcs. This is why I like hp. You get a great computer for a low price. With dell you get what you pay for. Alright thanks guys.
Because of that stupid gimp in their commercials!
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