ALIEN-WARE
2007-03-31 08:57:31
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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What are you doing with it?
x86 is the standard, then there is the apple macintosh- this also includes the intel based and ppc architecture.
sun SPARC for workstations
Z series for servers
MIPS for research
You need to look atn the operating system you are using.
Something simple like plan9 and minix need very little memory and resources but more user knowledge.
The BSD releases are good for security
general public use is still with windows and some macintosh.
SAP and oracle for business
redhat and for server
qnx, lynx for embedded.
Having a computer with five gigabytes of ram and it runs slower than one with 256 megabytes isn't a good sign.
2007-03-31 16:39:19
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answer #2
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answered by mafubalah!! 5
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None all pre built systems suck and are over priced learn to make your own its a ton cheaper and good experince. It may be a little intimadating at first but once you put tog that first rig you'll be glad you did and never go back to pre built off the assembly line crap.
2007-03-31 15:58:34
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answer #3
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answered by rwd420247 5
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My opinion is Dell. I have owned several brands and find this to be best with the best warranty and support. I even bought 4 extra years support and it has been worth every penny of it.
2007-03-31 16:07:18
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answer #4
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answered by Jan C 7
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Apple Computers are by far the most stable and reliable, plus they come with great software. You probably wont even need to buy any software once you have the computer.
2007-03-31 16:05:59
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answer #5
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answered by Mac Guru 4
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From Experience, I'd have to say Dell - reliable, all round PC's at a decent price.
2007-04-01 01:44:14
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answer #6
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answered by kwilfort 7
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HP, Gateway,Acer,Compaq.I didn't put Dell because you have to pay there high prices if you need to replace some thing.
2007-03-31 15:58:31
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answer #7
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answered by p_o_s_pc 1
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