Octopod wrote:God damn it. Dell canceled my order. They sent me an email on the 23rd and I just checked that email to see if by some miracle my comp had shipped. Apparently I had 24 hours to respond to that email and I didn't. After waiting for over 20 mother fucking days. I'll take this as a sign. I never want shit to do with Dell again. I'll find another comp or I'll just build one. Shit.
I stopped buying from dell back in 2000 or so. Freakin' retarded company... ugh. My step mom had purchased a machine from them and when it showed up it wasn't the specs we ordered and they had added a printer to make up for the fact or some crap. We didn't need a printer, we had a damn nice printer/scanner/copier combo in the office already... what the hell do we need this stupid bubblejet printer for!?
I don't know about you, but ever since I learned to build my own computer (around 2000 as well) I haven't purchased a prefab since. I don't know, it just feels like I know my computer better when I build it. If something goes wrong I know who to blaim and I can go in and figure out what it is.
Yeah this means the first couple years was a lot of learning and smacking my head trying to figure out what the hell is going on. But once I got over that hump, no 'tech support' can match my ability to do it my damn self. And to me that's worth a shit load more then any tech support fees! And at the lower price of building it myself having to replace a little part every once in a while isn't that bad... usually by the time something breaks I was going to upgrade anyways. Lastly it doesn't come preinstalled with all that shit software Dell loves to incorporate into the damn install (which is how they make their money, most of their profits come from all the demo-ware they shove in the machine).
I'm not saying you should build your own machine... just telling you what I did to do it. And what to expect.
I look at it like a car. I don't get them damn check up warrenty bullshit things on cars either (the manufacturer warranty of course... but tune ups and oil changes... bah). I can do that my damn self for the same price or cheaper. It takes a little know how, but not much, and in the end you're better for it. You know what makes your car run! As my dad explained when I was a teen and he taught me to change brakes, oil, etc etc... "You're going to be driving a car all your life, and I'm not going to always be here to help you fix it... so learn it now while you're still young and just get that part over with."
The computer is pretty much the same. You'll be using computers for the rest of your life, they aren't going anywhere. And most of the parts have warranties on them anyways, what is the Dell tech support (or any other companies) giving you? They're giving you oil changes for your computer. Wow, how freakin' hard is that!?