didnt he say after he purschased it?Sgt.Gene wrote:
what r u fucking stupid i customized my alienware right on the internetFoodNipple101 wrote:
Btw You Cannnot Customize An Alienware After Purchse You Have To Send It To Them For Updates Do Not Buy 1
Poll
Alienware or build your own computer (saying u already have the money)
Alienware | 10% | 10% - 35 | ||||
Custom computer | 89% | 89% - 301 | ||||
Total: 336 |
Very Simply Put... Alienware Is A Nice Option For People Who Don't Know How To Build A Pc.
Alienware Is Way Overpriced, They Are Name Brand Equivalent
There Are Other Options For People Who Arn't Comfortable Building A System
Check Out Monarchcomputers.com
They Will Build, Test And Configure It loaded with the latest drivers and bios
At A Minimal Cost, Their Prices Match Newegg On Componets And They Offer A 3 Year 24/7 Tech Support Parts/labor Onsite For 100.00 (alienware Is 300.00)
They Won't Allow You To Build A System That Isn't Compatable And They Offer Twice The Selections You Would Get From Falcon Or Alienware At About 20% Cheaper
You Can Select It Piece By Piece In The Configurator And Put Your Money Where It Is Most Important To You. Ie. Memory, Storage, Video Card Etc...
Btw .... I'M Simply A Satisfied Customer Check Them Out At http://www.resellerratings.com/seller2079.html
Alienware Is Way Overpriced, They Are Name Brand Equivalent
There Are Other Options For People Who Arn't Comfortable Building A System
Check Out Monarchcomputers.com
They Will Build, Test And Configure It loaded with the latest drivers and bios
At A Minimal Cost, Their Prices Match Newegg On Componets And They Offer A 3 Year 24/7 Tech Support Parts/labor Onsite For 100.00 (alienware Is 300.00)
They Won't Allow You To Build A System That Isn't Compatable And They Offer Twice The Selections You Would Get From Falcon Or Alienware At About 20% Cheaper
You Can Select It Piece By Piece In The Configurator And Put Your Money Where It Is Most Important To You. Ie. Memory, Storage, Video Card Etc...
Btw .... I'M Simply A Satisfied Customer Check Them Out At http://www.resellerratings.com/seller2079.html
Last edited by Chef-Daz (2006-01-09 21:18:46)
As for the computer question all I can say is make sure to have at least 1Gb of ram, and Get an AMD processer. But you have to have Bf2 to play Bf2:SF.spyderman120 wrote:
ok, ill say it right out front, i am a noob to these forums, and have only been playing Bf2 for a month or so...go ahead and hit me, i'll turn the other cheek. (a little humor) anyways, i have two basic questions, which will inevitably open up into much more.
1st: i want to build my own, and first, PC. and i want to be ale to play these games on it, heh. so, if anybody could point me in the right direction, as in what to buy(specs or what you are using, just help in any way). price range is probably somewhere up to $1000, at the highest at this point.
2nd: i have been playing BF2, like i said, but am wondering, if and when i get my newly self-built PC up and running, should i get BF2 or BF2:SF? again, any help or tips
thanks!
nix alienware, why pay more for a logo on the lid? I had Sagernotebook.com build me a 5720-V (Basically a pro-built whitebox laptop) to my specs. yeah it cost me, but it beats any alienwhore out of the water for thousands less! <- me to Sager
Last edited by ifixphns2 (2006-01-11 22:16:08)
I posted this somewhere else, but thought I'd share it here.
Make up your own mind.I wrote:
Every two months or so, I scan my e-mail offers folder and occasionally find one or two good deals that I follow through with. Alienware was not among these.
Here's their latest and greatest:
Black Chassis
PC Power & Cooling 850 Watt
Athlon 64 FX-60 Dual Core
2x 512MB PCI-e 7800GTX (brand not listed)
nForce 4 sli x16 mainboard (brand otherwise unlisted)
2-3-2-5-1T "low latency" dual channel DDR SDRAM 400MHz 2x1024 (no brand listed)
2x in RAID0 74GB SATA 10K (brand not listed, though I know it's Western Digital)
2x 500GB SATA-II (they should be listing it correctly, as SATA-300, but they're forgiven) 7.2K (probably Hitachi)
16x Dual Layer DVD±R/W Drive
16x Dual Layer DVD±R/W Drive w/LightScribe Technology
Creative Sound Blaster® X-Fi® Elite Pro High Definition 7.1 Audio with XRAM Technology (oh god, they listed the manufacturer)
Win XP Pro SP2
AlienAdrenaline Video Performance Optimizer
3DMark '05
1-year warranty
Automated Tech Support Request System
Free T-Shirt & Mouse Pad (ooh.)
Alien Inspection (which means that they actually test the computer before sending it to you. how generous.)
So...how much does all this come up to?
$7046, with the oh-so-great $100-off e-mail coupon.
Let's see what I can come up with...
$1000 for the processor, $200 for the motherboard, $1400 for the video cards, $275 for the memory, $300 for the Raptors, $660 for the storage drives, $100 for the DVD writers, $300 for the sound card, $80 for the operating system, $30 for 3DMark '05, and a generic construction fee of $50, $20 for the chassis, and $300 for the power supply. That comes up to: $4715. That's right, around $2300 cheaper than an Alienware. If anything, Alienware has gotten more expensive in the last several months. Hell, I'll even add a monitor, scanner, printer, label maker, MIDI keyboard and battery backup to the mix and still come out with a slightly lower price.
Any of their customers between now and a few months from now are going to receive an unpleasant suprise when AMD unleashes Socket AM2 systems with DDR2...if Alienware customers even follow the industry. If you think you're getting any unique tech support by buying into them, just run a few Google searches on Alienware support, and make up your own mind. Alienware, though they used have some of the best systems, simply expanded through spammed marketing faster than their quality control could keep up. Error mileage may vary.
Sadly, this is not even libel.
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2006-01-12 16:43:24)
Its way better to customize. Because you know what parts you're putting in and you pick the parts. Its also cheaper too.
Custom Built.
wow this is an old thread lol
I could have 5 computers that could run bf2 for the price of one alienware.
yeah, diy
once upon a midnight dreary, while i pron surfed, weak and weary, over many a strange and spurious site of ' hot xxx galore'. While i clicked my fav'rite bookmark, suddenly there came a warning, and my heart was filled with mourning, mourning for my dear amour, " 'Tis not possible!", i muttered, " give me back my free hardcore!"..... quoth the server, 404.
If you must buy pre-bought, go with Acer (notebooks) or FalconNW (desktops).
DIY for the win, though.
DIY for the win, though.
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2006-05-17 02:50:02)
DIY is more satisfying
You can build your own, same specs, for half.Zedman wrote:
Alienwares are HIGHLY overpriced. Besides, Custom is much better, IMO. Since i like to tinker, but thats just me.
THen you can take your lady out to dinner every night for a month to help justify the ammount of money you just spent
Lol that alienware Build v Buy stuff is pure bullshit, this is my take on this page here
http://www.alienware.com/build_vs_buy_pages/style.aspx
Alien ware sayz: Be a good sheep and buy from us
And now for alienwares totaly bias comparison!
Alienware:
Be a cool kid, have a nice case
Custom:
Have all the kids at school laugh at you because your case sucks
(Sarrks Comparision)
Alienware:
Look like a total toolbox when taking that thing to LANs
Custom:
Get some *street cred* because you built your own, which takes SKILL, unlike clicking abit
Really most cases these days dont look like a grey box, and get this, NO ONE CARES WHAT YOUR CASE LOOKS LIKE! ITS THE HARDWARE THAT COUNTS! GET A CLEAR SIDE CASE IF YOU WANT TO BE COOL! Nice shitty lights will only look good for so long.........
http://www.alienware.com/build_vs_buy_pages/style.aspx
Alien ware sayz: Be a good sheep and buy from us
And now for alienwares totaly bias comparison!
Alienware:
Be a cool kid, have a nice case
Custom:
Have all the kids at school laugh at you because your case sucks
(Sarrks Comparision)
Alienware:
Look like a total toolbox when taking that thing to LANs
Custom:
Get some *street cred* because you built your own, which takes SKILL, unlike clicking abit
Really most cases these days dont look like a grey box, and get this, NO ONE CARES WHAT YOUR CASE LOOKS LIKE! ITS THE HARDWARE THAT COUNTS! GET A CLEAR SIDE CASE IF YOU WANT TO BE COOL! Nice shitty lights will only look good for so long.........
Alien ask to many money...
I got mine builded by a store :\ (Mycom The Netherlands)
Amd X2 4200+
Asus A8n-sli
350 Watt
Asus Dvd Writer/rwriter and more cant find the product name
ASUS DVD-E616P2
2x 512 mb ram
1x 250 Gb sata
Ati X850 XT PE 256mb
Logitech Internet Pro Keyboard
Logitecht G5 Lasermouse
for 2000,- euro
I got mine builded by a store :\ (Mycom The Netherlands)
Amd X2 4200+
Asus A8n-sli
350 Watt
Asus Dvd Writer/rwriter and more cant find the product name
ASUS DVD-E616P2
2x 512 mb ram
1x 250 Gb sata
Ati X850 XT PE 256mb
Logitech Internet Pro Keyboard
Logitecht G5 Lasermouse
for 2000,- euro
But I like my shitty lights and dohickies and whirlliegigs.Sarrk wrote:
Really most cases these days dont look like a grey box, and get this, NO ONE CARES WHAT YOUR CASE LOOKS LIKE! ITS THE HARDWARE THAT COUNTS! GET A CLEAR SIDE CASE IF YOU WANT TO BE COOL! Nice shitty lights will only look good for so long.........
mmm lights are good. but cases do matter for better air flow, and w/ window cases (especially for modders) can see if their fan is working or not without opening the case on the pc, so its kinda goodBurning_Monkey wrote:
But I like my shitty lights and dohickies and whirlliegigs.Sarrk wrote:
Really most cases these days dont look like a grey box, and get this, NO ONE CARES WHAT YOUR CASE LOOKS LIKE! ITS THE HARDWARE THAT COUNTS! GET A CLEAR SIDE CASE IF YOU WANT TO BE COOL! Nice shitty lights will only look good for so long.........
anyone had any experience with ibuypower.com? I've noticed their systems, and they seem to be pretty comparable with their prices, but i was wanting some input on their service/warranties.
Well for most of us (gamers ) building your own would be preferable, I used to paly BF2 on a old advent PC that I stuck a 6600gt in, knew nothing about power supplies, nothing about processors, basically I could turn it on and off, and blow a few virtual people up. However it was getting buggy, and I later discovered the PSU wass vastly underpowered and was for all intensive purpouses a pile of crap.
After reading a few places like this and considering the Alienware option I decided to build my own, tell you what it was up there with the top 20 ish things i've ever done in my life. You learn more in the space of a few weeks then any course could ever teach you, now I could go into any computer, name most of the important sections, and pull it all apart and put it back together again without batting an eyelash, just do your research and don't rush it. Make sure you find the cheapest (but most reliable) source for all your parts and your away, read as much as you can and if you have accsess to people who know about it for gods sake ask, a few mates of mine have blown £150 of stuff because they had no idea what they were doing.
However if your short on time (some people have to work I guess) or are not confident sure, buy alienware. If you think about it you aren't paying much more for the parts, but for the man hours it takes to build these, atleast you'll know that when you push that power button the first time it will start, and if it doesn't you've got someone to bitch and moan at if it doesn't.
After reading a few places like this and considering the Alienware option I decided to build my own, tell you what it was up there with the top 20 ish things i've ever done in my life. You learn more in the space of a few weeks then any course could ever teach you, now I could go into any computer, name most of the important sections, and pull it all apart and put it back together again without batting an eyelash, just do your research and don't rush it. Make sure you find the cheapest (but most reliable) source for all your parts and your away, read as much as you can and if you have accsess to people who know about it for gods sake ask, a few mates of mine have blown £150 of stuff because they had no idea what they were doing.
However if your short on time (some people have to work I guess) or are not confident sure, buy alienware. If you think about it you aren't paying much more for the parts, but for the man hours it takes to build these, atleast you'll know that when you push that power button the first time it will start, and if it doesn't you've got someone to bitch and moan at if it doesn't.
Yup my favorite case is a cardboard box...
I love pulling my board out of the box setting it on the table and have people looking at it like cheap junk.
When I'm first into a round they come over and look later.
Holy %$#$&*^, thats a dual processor with 15k scsi drives and 2 g of memory... unfortunately my x850 lost it's wow factor.
----------------------------------
Another great mod, a friend of mine has 120V squirl fan at the front of his case running off a relay, MAJOR AIR FLOW and not that loud at all.
I love pulling my board out of the box setting it on the table and have people looking at it like cheap junk.
When I'm first into a round they come over and look later.
Holy %$#$&*^, thats a dual processor with 15k scsi drives and 2 g of memory... unfortunately my x850 lost it's wow factor.
----------------------------------
Another great mod, a friend of mine has 120V squirl fan at the front of his case running off a relay, MAJOR AIR FLOW and not that loud at all.
Last edited by vjs (2006-05-17 14:13:31)
Huh? People still post to an ancient thread dated many months ago???
Hmm... custom all the way... because:
1) can get similar or better spec system for less
2) use leftover cash for Lian Li case
3) better latency RAM
4) and a widescreen Dell panel
All of this would add up considerably considering the overhead charges from Alienware. If there's about US$200-300 left over, that's just enough for a full-blown water-cooling system. And that would be the icing on the cake.
Hmm... custom all the way... because:
1) can get similar or better spec system for less
2) use leftover cash for Lian Li case
3) better latency RAM
4) and a widescreen Dell panel
All of this would add up considerably considering the overhead charges from Alienware. If there's about US$200-300 left over, that's just enough for a full-blown water-cooling system. And that would be the icing on the cake.