Small business customers who buy Microsoft products at CompUSA will now have more than telephone support available. Read more
Hewlett-Packard is expected to announce today a small-business initiative that includes a computer server priced at $499. Read more
Furthering its leadership in the blade server market, IBM today announced a new low-cost IBM eServer BladeCenter chassis and a unique set of "business-in-a-box" solutions to help lower the cost and speed the time it takes for a small to mid-sized business to purchase, deploy, and implement BladeCenter servers in an IT infrastructure. Read more
Intel's Celeron-based SS4200-E is the company's latest effort to clinch market share in the SOHO storage space. Is it enough to usurp more established incumbents? Read more
Detailed graphics card specifications and reviews are great—that is, if you have the time to do the research. At the end of the day, though, what a gamer needs is the best graphics card within a certain budget, and that’s what we’re going to show you. Read more
With Team USA's winning scores in its sights, the German teams battled it out for the chance to compete in our world final even later this month. Read more
Usually, green hardware means you're giving up performance in order to cut back on power consumption. But Western Digital's second-generation Green Power drive changes all of that. Read more
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Thread : Small Business?
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Question. Why aren't there more small business startups building these machines? Seems like it would be relatively easy to setup a shop with +1 tech and start mass building and selling machines. How come more people don't do it? With a retail resell license--you could buy all the components for wholesale saving upwards of 5-20% per component. There's at least one store (krex.com) in my area that are doing this... Why aren't there more? How can Dell make money off those $399.99 machines?
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You can buy parts on-line just about same price as wholesale, unless you are talking about buying large lots of the same component.
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Let me just add a few things to Rich's answer. The costs of doing business on a very small scale far outweigh the returns in anything except the satisfaction of a juob well done. As a p.s., the average margin on wholesale for 'ones and twos' quantity is 5-10% max. You may not even get a real discount until you hit quantity 10+.
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Thanks for the responses. I'm still unconvinced myself if it's worth it to build or buy. I've never built a machine before; I have installed numerous components. I'm doing my homework now, researching components, purchased an O'Reilly book on building a PC, reading articles and forums, etc.
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You get a learning experience, whether good or bad, plus you get a slight, sometimes larger performance advantage all along getting only the components you choose, but you really dont save money, often times costing more than what retailers can offer.
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That last one is a killer. I'm on my own. I think maybe I take some small chances. Ebay has amd64 3000s for $15.00... Maybe I'll piece together something from there first before diving into $185.00 video cards... Thanks for the feedback.
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At one time in the past, there was real risk involved in building your own machine. That time is largely past, though it does restrict you to keeping to mainstream component manufacturers. Not that that is bad. The only real issue was warranty. Now you can get the same warranty on parts that the dealer does, so that difference is gone. Doing it yourself does have two big pluses- you save the labor cost of letting someone else do it for you, and secondly, you gain a lot of knowledge about how your system works.
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I just built my first pc too. I went back and forth for months between prebuilt and building. In the end, the more educated I was, the less I liked the idea of getting a gray box with who knows what generic POS is inside it. Sure, it says AMD whatever, but what about everything else? Secondly, the needs I have for the PC(multimedia, gaming) aren't easily found in prebuilts and I knew I was going to be upgrading/adding to them soon anyhow. In the end, comparing the cost of both wasn't too far off, and I knew exactly what I was getting. Not to mention, when you buy all of your own parts, you get the manufacturers warranty for each item. If you buy a box from Best Buy, you are stuck dealing with them for the next however many years.
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"but you really dont save money, often times costing more than what retailers can offer."
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Thank you all for your exceptional comments and feedback. This post really should be a sticky for all newbies. I'm gonna go for it...
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Let us know if you actually can get that CPU for $15 |
