gamerman4
Active Member
No I understand your point and agree with you on some level. You are ignoring what I am saying, which is you can't come close to building an iMac out of the same parts it has retail, therefore they are not over priced. You on the other hand, ignored that completely, and went with the idea that you can build something better for cheaper. I agree, you can, because when you build you can cut corners like not adding ABGN wireless, LED LCD screens, or BT. I am saying when you add all of that up part for part retail the Mac is generally the same price or a bit cheaper.
They aren't over priced they just use high end parts. So, it is you that is totally missing the original point, when I said show me how you can build an iMac and have it cheaper. You didn't do that at all, you just built a desktop. You also didn't cite any of your resources with links, but I of course took your word for it.
Last time I tried to build a Mac with the exact parts that a Mac would have out of the box they came out more expensive. When I built it off newegg or custom ordered it from Dell.
I get what you mean by saying that part-for-part they may not be overpriced but they are overpriced in that you have less of what matters most for more of what matter least.
The reason for this is Apples fault. Microsoft just has the problem that they have to make an OS that fits any computer configuration. Apple has the problem of having an OS and a computer to fit any person that buys one. They add every feature they can and have to make up for that by sacrificing computer performance. I'm willing to bet that only a tiny fraction of a percentage of Mac owner actually use every single feature in their Mac. You can't "shop" for a mac with the stuff you need, Apple just has the stuff "they" think you need. Maybe someone doesn't want ABGN, they get a computer with ABG and a better CPU or if its a desktop, maybe they don't even need a wireless card (which is often the case). Maybe someone plans on photo editing but not now, they would want the computer with the most RAM, but Apple sacrificed some RAM for a firewire card, something video editors need but not really photo editors. A feature that someone does not use is a wasted price, something they could have saved money on or could have gotten more performance for. My hypthesis is that %90 of Mac users do not use at least one (probably two) hardware features on their Mac, thus spending money on nothing. That is how I think it is overpriced. They should do what every other computer maker does and that on the computer config screen have an option for "none" for some components.
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