good local motherboard source?
Rich Braun
richb at pioneer.ci.net
Fri Oct 31 08:59:47 EST 2003
I thank my lucky stars to be living in a place like Cambridge, where two local
suppliers are willing to go at it in a cut-throat competition on PC component
prices.
I have done business with each of them since they opened (PCs for Everyone is
actually the reincarnation of Unitech, a 1980s PC-clone shop that wasn't as
good). They are both far better now than in the past, IMHO, and I haven't
really had problems with them before. The main improvement they've made the
past few years is to make PC components available in a much broader and less
expensive way. Unless you were willing to compromise on quality, you simply
couldn't build your own PC for less than a factory-built one until this
competition arose. Recently.
It appears to be their way of forging a niche against the online competition
and keep their doors open.
But it can only happen in a place where there is a large customer base of
teenagers who like to build their own. I can't imagine going to a place like
Hartford or Norfolk or even Fort Lauderdale and finding similar options.
* soapboax mode *
Am I naive? I can't believe someone's complaining about the sky-high $129
price of an AMD **2400+** /with/ motherboard at a local company that's willing
to accept returns no-questions-asked even if your dog gnawed the box and ate
the receipt, and wink-wink it's been a tad over 30 days since the purchase.
Sheesh.
* end soapbox mode *
(I do not work for either of these shops, but I'd find it very sad if either
of them went bust because of, say, their overly-generous customer return
policies.)
-rich
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