Okay, le double post, le slap moi wrists, n'e pas?
Getting back on topic, here is an admittedly pro-Mac mini article ...
http://www.macworld.com/weblogs/editors/2005/01/miniapplesandoranges/index.php ... but one that I think makes multiple good points about where the mini is priced. It even spots the low-end Dell a handicap by taking away the cost of the monitor and keyboard/mouse it comes with, based on Dell's own valuation (a $45 monitor ... hmm).
By the way, Dell is asking for it by pooh-poohing the mini, so I don't think this is hitting below the belt
So, without further ado, some of the highlights from low-end Mac vs. low-end Dell:
- The low-end Dell has shared video memory. Ouch. In fact, up to a 64MB hit.
- The Celeron in the Dell -- and in fact in most low-cost PCs -- lacks an L2 cache of any kind.
- The low-end Dell is limited to 512MB (?!).
- The Dell only has XP Home, not XP Pro. I would imagine most systems in this price range also have just XP Home. I think most XP users here will agree that XP Home is pretty crummy compared to XP Pro (I'm not even talking XP vs OS X, just XP against itself!).
Some of the concerns are a little specious, like FireWire not being a BTO option for the Dell -- getting a PCI card to do that isn't THAT hard -- and yes, you would have to get a third-party DVD/CD burner since Dell offers no BTO option for that, but that's no hardship either. Both of them add costs, though, that the mini has out of the box (even the base mini can burn CDs, at least). And, I do think that the mini does have a minus in having no PCI slots at all -- even just one slot would have been something, although most of the stuff we use PCI cards for is already on the board (video, FW, USB, Ethernet, modem).
I still maintain, and agree with the article, that the mini really cleans the Dell's clock w/r/t software.
The obvious counter to this is that one could do better buying one's own components, but I'd like to see those numbers. You need a motherboard, you need a case, you need a power supply, you need a CPU (even if just a crummy one), you need Ethernet, you need USB 2.0, you need FW400, you need a Radeon 9200 of comparable spec (in this case, AGP4x with 32MB VRAM with DVI), you need 256MB RAM, you need a CD-RW/DVD-R drive, you need a 40GB drive and finally you need some sort of sound card. Also add in the cost of XP, DVD burning software, some sort of light-grade video editor, word processor, music jukebox and music synthesis software, and keep in mind that the machine is only warranted to individual components, assuming you buy them new. I suspect the Dell has that beat for aggregate cost, let alone the mini.
I really am seriously interested in someone taking the article apart, though. Other than the things I noticed, what else rings wrong on the other side of the fence?
"you're a doctor.... and 27 years.... so...doctor + 27 years = HATORI SOHMA" - RoyalWing, when I was 27
"Al hail the forum editting Shooby! His vibes are law!" - Osaka-chan
I could still be champ, but I'd feel bad taking it away from one of the younger guys. - George Foreman