pointjockey
New Member
I need to add a new PC for new design station. I have a budget of 2K. Anyone care to provide input?
I just bought a new Dell for around 1500 including a 24" monitor. I was trying to decide to have one built, but in the end just went to best buy and found a nice one there. I am happy with it. I dont do printing with it. I have an Hp laptop also and I would not recommend HP, they usually come with all sorts of crap programs on there, games, multimedia, and stuff like that, which just gets in the way you ask me. The dell wasnt like that. I have been buying dell for 10 years now and have been happy with their desktops and this 24" monitor kicks.
Pre-installed bloatware is something that every major manufacturer does from Dell to HP to Gatway to MSI and the list goes on and on. The only way to avoid it is 1) purchase a business class computer as often the will ommit the games and add-on trial stuff (which is probably why your Dell came without as much seemingly worthless stuff, the HP I'm betting was a consumer line such as the Pavilion?) or 2) do a fresh install of your own operating system.
Even if you do get a computer with a lot of bloatware on it, it's not too difficult to remove it and clean up the system to perform better for you.
Dell had a lot of issues with their pre-installed software a couple years ago. It was discovered that their Dell Support Utilities programs would actually allow personal information on the computer to be sent to Dell without the user's knowledge of it happening, and even further allowed Dell to remotely connect into the computer to retrieve information, track usage, and even remotely control the computer WITHOUT the need for authorization from the user. Needless to say this resulted in some HUGE lawsuits and since then Dell has changed their Support Utilities program as well as cut back a bit on their bloatware, but it is definitely still there.
If I remember correctly, Sony was the first to have these issues. Their support utilities were actually "spyware" programs in the way that they retrieved user information without the user's knowledge. Of course, lawsuits were filed and Sony reluctantly changed their practices. I would have thought that Dell would have learned from Sony's problems.