bchen@wpi.WPI.EDU (Bi Chen) (11/15/90)
Dear network news readers: I'm seriously considering to bye a 386SX computor. Since I am a graduate student in physics and I live on the little stipend as a RA with my wife, I'm really very poor and tight in budget. We have never been dinering out and seeing movies for about two years to save the money for a computor we loved so much. I want a decent, reliable, compatible and expandable 386SX at lowest possible price to a student. By the way I have never done major mail-order purchasing before. The following are some points which I want to get advice on: 1. Is the list price of a mail-order vender a stiff price? Can one bargain with a mail-order vender? If one can how much in percentage is considered resonable to bargain with? 2. Could one bargain with vender on the upgrade stuff such as more RAM, co-processor etc when one buys the system from a vender? How much is a reasonable discount one should expects with or without bargaining on the system. 3. How could one insure the compatibilty of such a computor from vender? By compatibility I mean it should run smoothly the popular soft ware such as Window 3.0 under all phases(enchanced, protected mode or not), graphics driver of Turbo C family and so on? How could one insure that the computor is UNIX, Xwindow compatiable for future expandsion? Is there a independent public or private service one can get information from? Can one ask the vender to provide with a written promise on the issue? 4. Since the quality and service are different from vender to vender, it may be difficulty to give a reasonable price reange on such a mechine. But how much should a 386SX with all stand features plus a SVGA monitor and card and a 65MB HD should cost around if valued by you? What is the "street price" of such a machine? 5. How could one safeguard to insure the computor he buy is from a morel and responsible vender who will tell truth on the phone and stand behind the computor he sales? Is there any public or private service where one can check the reputation of venders? 6. What is general caution one should take if he has to go to a mail-order vender? If problems do happened, for example if one pay the computor but does not receive it or if one returns the computor but does not receive refunds, whom should one go for asking help? 7. What is best configration for a physicsist who knows only a little about computor architechture but need to deal hardware on I/O, hard interupt and graphics for real-time experimental purpose. What is best BIOS for such a purpose? What is the best I/O BUS for this purpose? Is there any particular requirements on hardware for heavy numerical analysis job besides a co-processor? What kind of Extended-Memory with supported software (preferablely can work with MS.C,Fortran) under DOS or maybe OS/2 works most smoothly and painlessly? Any serious advice on any of the points is greatly apperciated. You can post it on Newsgroup misc.forsale.computor or comp.sys.ibm.* and so on. It may benifit other reader too. Any reference on article published on popular magzines, name and phone of mail-vender you feel worth to recommand are also welcomed. Please send e-mail to me if you don't feel to trouble. Thanks a lot in advance for your attention, time and help. Bi Chen email adderss bchen@wpi.wpi.edu
bryan@tahoe.unr.edu (Bryan Wolf) (11/16/90)
In article <BCHEN.90Nov14215304@wpi.WPI.EDU> bchen@wpi.WPI.EDU (Bi Chen) writes:
)Dear network news readers:
)
)The following are some points which I want to get advice on:
)
)5. How could one safeguard to insure the computor he buy is from a
)morel and responsible vender who will tell truth on the phone and
)stand behind the computor he sales? Is there any public or private
)service where one can check the reputation of venders?
)
)6. What is general caution one should take if he has to go to a
)mail-order vender? If problems do happened, for example if one pay the
)computor but does not receive it or if one returns the computor but
)does not receive refunds, whom should one go for asking help?
Anytime you consider buying from a mail-order company, you should call
the Better Business Bureau. Ask about this company, if they've had any
complaints, how long they've been in business, if they'e ever been charged
with mail fraud, etc. You can save yourself some serious heartache this
way. I've heard some horror stories about people that bought from Chapter
11 companies.
Bryan
--
Sadly, most computer users eventually become / bryan@tahoe.unr.edu
computer sellers to support their habits. / Bryan Wolf. whee.