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Recommend a Good Desktop Computer
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2018-03-19 at 5:39 AM UTC
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2018-03-20 at 3:46 AM UTC
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2018-03-20 at 3:59 AM UTCAnything Alien Brand tbh.
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2018-03-20 at 4:16 AM UTCIS, buy one of Microcenter's PowerSpec prebuilts.
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2018-03-20 at 4:17 AM UTCThis one is basically an assfucker:
http://www.microcenter.com/product/497084/G460_Desktop_Computer
If you really want a flashy case, you can buy it and transfer everything from this one over. -
2018-03-20 at 5:16 AM UTC
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2018-03-20 at 6:12 AM UTC
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2018-03-20 at 6:16 AM UTC
Originally posted by benny vader so your saying that when demand increases … factories still sell their goods at the same price ???
1. Believe it or not, this crypto bullshit is a bubble and it's going to pop. There is no reason to respond to it right now-now, jack up prices etc.
2. PC parts sold a la carte are actually a small minority. the bump in demand only effects the buying and selling of a small amount of their total production runs. -
2018-03-20 at 2:55 PM UTC
Originally posted by benny vader so your saying that when demand increases … factories still sell their goods at the same price ???
what aldra said
major manufacturers buy wholesale in bulk at at pre-arranged dates, quantities, and prices.
the proles buy it retail when they build their own
yea...that whole manufacturer/wholesaler/retailer thing was a juden-kike invention -
2018-03-20 at 2:55 PM UTC
Originally posted by Zigzagoon Anything Alien Brand tbh.
thats what i have now but the bummer is im limited in what i can do with it. the mother board is proprietary and i cant do shit with it at this point. it would be the same situation in the future if i bought one prebuilt and it reached the end of its technological usefulness: stuck with a paperweight. right now this PC is fucked in the middle of being too advanced for the game i tried to load on it (falcon 4) but too shitty for a game i want to load on it. (x-flight 11)
the replies in this thread have pushed me in the direction of building my own, unless the PC im on now completely shits the bed and i have no choice but to buy a pre-made due to time constraints.
one of the main reasons for buying pre-built instead of building it myself is exactly what i knew would happen is happening: im wasting hours upon hours of time researching this uselessness. by uselessness, i mean that everything i learn will be obsolete in no more than five years. just like the first time i built a computer back when monochrome CRTs were the uber-tech. i still have boxes of the magazines and books i used for researching and buying components. (they didnt have internetz back in those days) -
2018-03-20 at 2:55 PM UTC
Originally posted by Jeremus 1. Believe it or not, this crypto bullshit is a bubble and it's going to pop. There is no reason to respond to it right now-now, jack up prices etc.
2. PC parts sold a la carte are actually a small minority. the bump in demand only effects the buying and selling of a small amount of their total production runs.
thats what im waiting for. and possible the next generation of graphics cards with movie-realistic video and CPUs that fix the shit-ware bugs -
2018-03-20 at 2:56 PM UTC
Originally posted by Jeremus This one is basically an assfucker:
http://www.microcenter.com/product/497084/G460_Desktop_Computer
If you really want a flashy case, you can buy it and transfer everything from this one over.
thats a decent price for what it is
the fucking video card alone is going for about $1100 or $1200 right now -
2018-03-20 at 3:21 PM UTC
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2018-03-20 at 4:51 PM UTC
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2018-03-20 at 5:03 PM UTC
Originally posted by benny vader so you mean like a surge in market demand wont result in a surge in factory orders ???
thats not how supply/demand actually functions when the judenkikes get their grubby mits into the works.
its more like speculation than actual supply/demand
its like massive transport companies (UPS, various airlines, trucking companies) purchasing massive quantities of fuel on paper at the beginning of their fiscal year while not actually receiving it. they buy it at a certain price and the seller is required to give it to them regardless of what the going market price is. -
2018-03-20 at 5:12 PM UTC
Originally posted by Jeremus 1. Believe it or not, this crypto bullshit is a bubble and it's going to pop. There is no reason to respond to it right now-now, jack up prices etc.
2. PC parts sold a la carte are actually a small minority. the bump in demand only effects the buying and selling of a small amount of their total production runs.
This. No reason for manufacturers to take the risk of ramping up production when the increase in demand from cryptocurreny miners could fall off a cliff tomorrow due to the bubble popping. -
2018-03-20 at 5:31 PM UTC
Originally posted by inb4l0pht This. No reason for manufacturers to take the risk of ramping up production when the increase in demand from cryptocurreny miners could fall off a cliff tomorrow due to the bubble popping.
You're taking Captain Faggot's advice seriously?
Point 1 is just wrong. Crypto demand will not drop off for 10 years+.
Point 2 makes no sense.
The guy is a fucking gas station attendant.
You are just a fag that likes to take extreme positions in order to pretend he's smarter than he actually is. -
2018-03-20 at 5:32 PM UTC
Originally posted by inb4l0pht This. No reason for manufacturers to take the risk of ramping up production when the increase in demand from cryptocurreny miners could fall off a cliff tomorrow due to the bubble popping.
that.
i dont even know what mining is, other than it dropped off exponentially a few months ago when the values tanked, which means its an unstable situation that isnt going to continue.
the only negative is all that hardware is going to get dumped into the worldwide market and someone is getting something that is mislabled 'new' when its actually 'fuckedintheasshardcorethenthrownintothestreetnaked.' -
2018-03-20 at 5:56 PM UTC
Originally posted by infinityshock thats not how supply/demand actually functions when the judenkikes get their grubby mits into the works.
its more like speculation than actual supply/demand
its like massive transport companies (UPS, various airlines, trucking companies) purchasing massive quantities of fuel on paper at the beginning of their fiscal year while not actually receiving it. they buy it at a certain price and the seller is required to give it to them regardless of what the going market price is.
yea, thats called fuel hedging and that works becos irregardless of what happened, fuels remain fuels
but i dont think thats how it works in electronics industry where each and every development cycle can be as short as one months.
i dont think its possible to hedge a batch of display cards 3months in advance becos its like a new model / revision come out every month or two. -
2018-03-20 at 6:02 PM UTC
Originally posted by inb4l0pht This. No reason for manufacturers to take the risk of ramping up production when the increase in demand from cryptocurreny miners could fall off a cliff tomorrow due to the bubble popping.
i dont think this is very business thinking.
electronic and fashion industries relied on fad and trends to maximize their profits and if theres an opportunity to make a huge profit based on some fad or trends ...
its highly like they would seize it.
afterall ... most things ebing sold these days are like 20/80 cost to profit ratio to the manufacturers and middlemen alike all the way down to your dealer.