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	<title>sohummm.com &#187; bootcamp</title>
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		<title>iMac? $1601.37 reasons I will not switch anytime soon!</title>
		<link>http://blog.sohummm.com/technology/imac-1601-37-reasons-i-will-not-switch-anytime-soon/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.sohummm.com/technology/imac-1601-37-reasons-i-will-not-switch-anytime-soon/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Oct 2009 04:27:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>sohum</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.sohummm.com/?p=184</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Anyone who knows me will know that I&#8217;m not the biggest fan of Macs. I&#8217;ve had the pleasure of using an Apple iMac quite consistently during my time working in the Marketing &#38; Communications department at Rice University IT and thoroughly enjoyed using it for web-design and graphics development, two of my responsibilities that were [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Anyone who knows me will know that I&#8217;m not the biggest fan of Macs. I&#8217;ve had the pleasure of using an Apple iMac quite consistently during my time working in the Marketing &amp; Communications department at <a href="http://www.rice.edu/it">Rice University IT</a> and thoroughly enjoyed using it for web-design and graphics development, two of my responsibilities that were made easy by iMacs. I always knew Macs were a bit pricey, but only when I actually began setting about building my own computer did I get an idea of how much.</p>
<p>As many of you may know, Apple released their new line of Mac computers today. They released MacBook Pros, the good old iMac and a Mac Mini or two. Among their new offerings were two iMacs built on the latest Intel quad-core chipset&#8211;the Nehalem architecture&#8217;s LGA 1156 offerings (the Core i5 and i7). These babies start at a price of, wait for it, <strong>$1999</strong>! This is daylight robbery, in my opinion, and I&#8217;ll take it upon myself to prove exactly that.</p>
<p>First, to gain even ground, let&#8217;s look at a spec-down of the two computers at hand. I&#8217;m going to compare the price of the components of the computer I build with an equally spec&#8217;d out iMac. Here we go:</p>
<p><strong>iSohummm Edition</strong></p>
<p><em>Processor:</em> Core i7-860 2.8 GHz<br />
<em>Motherboard:</em> ASRock P55D Pro<br />
<em>RAM:</em> Corsair XMS3 2x2GB 1600 MHz DDR3 SDRAM<br />
<em>Graphics Card:</em> Gigabyte GV-R467ZL ATI Radeon HD4670 1GB<br />
<em>Hard Drive:</em> 1TB Western Digital Caviar Black (7200RPM)<br />
<em>Optical Drive:</em> 22x Samsung DVD+R 8x DVD+RW 16x DVD-ROM 48x CD-ROM<br />
<em>PSU:</em> Corsair TX650W<br />
<em>Case:</em> Antec Three Hundred Illusion<br />
<em>Keyboard-Mouse:</em> Microsoft Wireless Desktop 6000 v2<br />
<strong><em>PRICE AFTER TAXES AND DELIVERY:</em></strong> <strong><span style="color: #333399;">$779.05</span></strong></p>
<p><strong>Apple iMac 27-inch</strong></p>
<p><em>Processor:</em> Intel Core i7-860 2.8 GHz<br />
<em>Motherboard:</em> UNKNOWN<br />
<em>RAM:</em> UNKNOWN 2x2GB 1066 MHz DDR3 SDRAM<br />
<em>Graphics Card:</em> UNKNOWN ATI Radeon HD4850 512MB<br />
<em>Hard Drive:</em> 1TB UNKNOWN (7200RPM)<br />
<em>Optical Drive:</em> 8x DVD±R 8x DVD+RW 6x DVD-RW 8x DVD-ROM 24x CD-ROM SuperDrive<br />
<em>PSU:</em> UNKNOWN (but apparently &gt;365W)<br />
<em>Case:</em> Apple 27&#8243; IPS-enabled Monitor<br />
<em>Keyboard Mouse:</em> Apple Magic Mouse + Wireless Keyboard Bundle<br />
<em><strong>PRICE AFTER TAXES AND DELIVERY:</strong> </em><strong><span style="color: #333399;">$2380.42</span></strong></p>
<p>A total difference of $2380.42 &#8211; $779.05 = <strong><span style="color: #ff0000;">$1601.37</span>.</strong> Hence the title of this post. &#8220;But what about your display!&#8221; you scream. Well, I&#8217;m going to be using my HDTV as my primary output for a while (until a decent LCD offer comes around). That cost me ~$854 after taxes and a 3-year warranty from Fry&#8217;s. And it has S-IPS (that&#8217;s Super IPS, for those who&#8217;re wondering) technology, supposedly. And it&#8217;s about $15 inches bigger (only diagonally, though) than the iMac computer. So the question is&#8230; is the all-in-one functionality+magic mouse+a slightly better gfx card worth a whopping $800? Or is Apple taking its dedicated user community on a ride (again)?</p>
<p>To better answer this question, I want to highlight a few details I picked up on while customizing my cart:</p>
<ol>
<li>Upgrading from the Core i5-750 (2.66 GHz) to the Core i7-860 (2.8 GHz) costs <strong>$200</strong> on the Apple store, before taxes. The retail price of an i5-750 on Newegg is <strong>$199</strong> and that of the i7-860 is <strong>$289</strong>. The difference is <strong>$90</strong>. Apple is charging its customers <span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>$110</strong></span> extra to make this upgrade (remember, the mobo+everything else does NOT need to change to enable this since both are on the LGA 1156 socket), over the retail cost, before taxes.</li>
<li>Upgrading from one 2x2GB memory kit to a 2 (in essence, buying another 2x2GB memory kit) costs <strong>$200</strong> on the Apple store, before taxes. The retail price of the most expensive 2x2GB DDR3 SDRAM kit at the 1066 MHz clock speed on Newegg costs <strong>$87.49</strong>. The price difference is a whopping <span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>$112.51</strong></span> extra that Apple is making from its consumers. Unless their original mobo only has 2 memory slots (which is kinda scary to begin with) and they need to do a mobo upgrade to support the second kit (did not appear true for any of the P55 boards on Newegg).</li>
<li>And here&#8217;s the kicker&#8211;Apple charges an upgrade price of <strong>$250</strong> for a 2TB hard-drive from a 1TB offering. That&#8217;s $70 more than the most expensive 2TB 7200RPM SATA drive on Newegg! And that is to <span style="text-decoration: underline;">upgrade</span> from a 1TB, which usually retails for around $90. So, Apple is charging consumers an extra <span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>$160</strong></span> approximately, to upgrade their HDD from 1TB to 2TB than it should cost.</li>
</ol>
<p>What does this mean? It means that Apple is not only charging a ludicrous premium on their i7 offering, but they are at the same time charging HUGE premiums on upgrades. I&#8217;m going to be in the market for another TB and another 2x2GB kit of RAM come Black Friday, and I don&#8217;t expect to spend more than a total of $150 on that (did I mention that my mobo also has onboard RAID support?). That&#8217;s more than Apple is charging than market <em>to upgrade</em> from a 1TB to 2TB.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s crazy. I&#8217;ve not been making many friends with Mac fans over the last couple of days (especially on a <a href="http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-10378884-1.html">certain CNET article</a>) but the fact remains that these prices are heavily, heavily inflated. The iMac, I understand, is targeted towards home and home business users, compared to the Mac Pro, which is targeted towards business users and professionals. I shudder to think how much one of those will cost, after being loaded by one of the higher end i7 chips. Probably well into the $4000&#8242;s as a base price.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll admit it here and once. If that Mac was available for around $1500, I&#8217;d seriously consider getting it. The cost would be just about $700 more than what I&#8217;ve spent currently to get into a seriously hard-to-upgrade, all-in-one machine with a sexy display. The best part would be I could use bootcamp and run Windows 7 off of it. But at this price, it would make more sense for me to upgrade all my components to their max (getting a 58xx video card, getting the $999 i7 chip) and I reckon I&#8217;d still just about break even.</p>
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<h1>22X  DVD+R 8X  DVD+RW 16X  DVD-ROM 48X  CD-ROM</h1>
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