Average customer rating: 3.0
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eMachines eTower T1400 Desktop (Athlon XP 1600+, 256 MB RAM, 40 GB hard drive)
Manufacturer: EMACHINES Product Group: Personal Computer Binding: Personal Computers ASIN: B0000631YP |
Product Description
Experience the perfect blend of speed and power. The eMachines T1400 has it all with such features as the AMD Athlon XP Processor 1600+ for exceptional responsiveness. It comes standard with 256 MB of memory and a built-in 16x Max. CD-RW drive. So you can play and record music and add all kinds of productivity and entertainment software quickly and easily. Plus, a 40 GB hard drive gives you plenty of room to archive all your photos, songs and programs. It includes a V.92 ready 56K Fax/Modem and plenty of software already loaded up for you.Customer Reviews:
Dandy Little Computer.......2003-03-25
So I go to return it, describe the problems, and wouldn't you know it, it works fine, even through the modem-sound conflict. I was told the problems I was encountering are because "Office 97 and Windows XP Home aren't compatible." I've been computing for 14 years, programming for 6, and know that's not the problem. I'm told to run System Restore (heard that before, heh) and that of course doesn't improve things any. Therefore, matters were taken into my own hands.
XP is taken off. Windows 2000 [Pro] is the OS for people like me. Buy it before MS removes it from the market place ($... on Amazon, provided you have a relatively recent version of Windows), it's the best version of Windows Microsoft has ever made, as far as I'm concerned. I won't go into details of other software, as it's irrelevant. As I could afford it, other changes followed. The onboard video [is weak], so an AGP Radeon 7000 (64MB) (Sixty-four bucks here on Amazon, you can't go wrong) found its way into the system. Next, another 256 MB of PC133 RAM for forty-bucks came in. There were other upgrades, but these two brought performance up to par with a similarly configured P4-1.8 GHz system. The Athlon wins at some things, the P4 at others.
I wouldn't recommend a system like this to just anybody. Most of these upgrades (not my choices particularly, but _something_) are really necessary for this system to perform. Moreover, most users wouldn't be comfortable performing them.
The other big limitation is the lack of expandability. It has 3 PCI slots and 1 AGP. There's only 1 free drive bay. I maxed out all the internal expansion opportunities to a point where I had to remove the modem and rely on Internet access shared by another computer. The system also has a limit of 512 MB RAM.
As for my problem with the system freezing, it declined significantly in moving from Windows XP to Windows 2000, and further when I began using the "Hibernate" feature in Windows. I won't go into details of how Hibernate works, but if I can boot my system faster and it's more reliable, well, where's the down side?
If you get one that works it would be a good deal.......2002-04-18
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