Dwain77
quality posts: 4
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NOOOOO!
I saw this early this morning while driving to work. Meant to come back, go over the specs and make the purchase...but got hung up at work and now I see they're long gone.
AGGHHH!!!
I'm 1 of the infamous "Honest 200".
RonnyBoy
quality posts: 3
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note2001 wrote:Bought a better model (slightly better CPU, 2G more memory) NEW at staples a couple weeks back - was $100 more, but came with a beautiful monitor to make up that price point difference. OK, so it's missing a wireless card, but I don't know anyone who totes their desktop around like a laptop - do you?
Point it, as "great" as this price is, guys, I'd skip it and look for something new with a 1 year service guarantee to go with it.
We've got wireless cards in most of our desktops in our home. Makes it very easy to connect to our wireless router. Alternative was to cut holes in walls to connect CAT 5 cables to the router. Don't know of what will happen a few years from now when Motorola figures out that all the wireless signals in our home has been frying out our innards.
I joined on April 15, 2005, instead of working on my taxes. The hell with taxes.
friartek
quality posts: 15
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rikua wrote:Naw, see if I got this, it would be as a building block to grow upon for gaming. upgrading power supply; no problem. Flimsy case; manageable. HDD already there; no problem. CPU; maybe a problem. Lack of SATA ports; problem. Have to buy my own gaming Graphics card; manageable, but would take up the 16x slot.
The real thing lacking here is a full specification list. In the past Woot! has listed this information. Why they skipped this time, I don't know. But there are 4 SATA ports. The MB has 6 ports etched on it, but they only put hardware on for 4. I have seen the other version of this board used on another system with all 6 ports. So there are at least 2 version of this board. HP specifications are here.
tolerance: a fair, objective, and permissive attitude toward opinions and practices that differ from one's own.
BOC: 4 Including the very last Woot!-off B)C. One of the lucky few.
cleaner00
quality posts: 3
Private Messages
scharacter wrote:As a former Process Engineer at a plant that re manufactured these, Make sure the memory is in dual channel and stress the hell out of these, also there was an issue with the cpu socket on the Alvorix main board. If you experience random crashes, no post, or blue screens, Reseat the CPU working the latch no less than 3 times. This was the solution provided by the mb manufacturer.
Can I pair 4g chips of the same type/speed with the 2g already onboard?
Unique Woot items purchaced: 69
Bundles of Clones#39;s attempted: 42 (including the Dow Jones bag)
Bundles of Clones#39;s acquired: 3 (25Sep09/26Mar10/26May10)
Wyatt8
quality posts: 10
Private Messages
robcohen wrote:I can echo the reaction to HP support being about as bad as anything I've ever experienced. I do this stuff for a living and I've had a handful of clients in the past few years for whom I needed to contact HP 'support'. One of these was just a couple of weeks ago so it's very fresh. Nearly two hours on the phone with Pakistan to confirm the in-warranty DVD drive I'd already tested as failing was -- well, failing. Then the poooony decided to 'lose' the support case, probably because I insisted on hurrying him up a bit near the end. Then last week I needed install DVDs for a HP laptop where the customer had forgotten to burn them or lost the originals. First, a half hour arguing with Pakistan again about why I didn't need to pay them $100 to speak to me and take my order for the DVDs for another $30. Finally hung up on this guy and ordered them over the web from HP. Finally, they arrived, would not install because they were the incorrect ones though I had supplied the model and serial numbers. So, yet another call, a full hour of arguing with another guy in Pakistan about it before he agreed to send me to level two where a nice fellow confirmed they'd sent the wrong media the first time and I received replacements via overnight express.
Dell has its flaws at times but if I make it clear to the rep who I am and what my qualifications are, I can usually get the call over with in less than 15 minutes. This presumes I've run diagnostics and identified the failing component ahead of time along with the appropriate failure code from the diagnostics. And Dell's drivers are very well organized and it's easy to locate originals as well as updates. Plus, with the service tag number I can locate the original configuration and purchase date in seconds.
I tell my clients to buy HP at their peril and only if it's a very inexpensive desktop refurb. So I purchased one of these for one client this time only because we need a decent system box by next week for a new guy. Desktops are easy enough to service and you can replace failing components with off the shelf 3rd party items so I'm really not worried. Unless the machine simply fries itself in the first three months (read motherboard) I would never bother calling HP again - costs us less to just go the the part store around the corner and purchase a new drive or power supply.
HP support is worse than useless.
Rob
When Dealing With HP Customer Abuse:
1) ask IMMEDIATELY for a Case Specialist (these people want rid of you by giving you a solution, rather than trying to feed you some piece of 'script' that you "need to run, youself then call back...")
2) I found when I sent an email to the CEO's office ... I got another team who's job it is to keep things off the CEO's office.
This resulted in calls back from two Different Support Groups (who had mis-dealt with me previous) BOTH Scrambling to get Any Kind of Solution into my hands they possibility could to make sure That guy didn't call them again.
3) Noone ... not even the "special assistant to the CEO" can actually get any kind of response from the "repair group." Noone.
And Regardless of the problem in your computer (mine was a faulty touch pad ... which is a Mother board issue) the FIRST thing they do is take out your hard drive and replace it with a refurb off the shelf.
Wouldn't matter if it was returned for a faulty hinge ... the first thing they do is replace the HD with a wiped drive ... Then when That does not "fix the problem" ... they put it on some shelf for 6 weeks ...
ALWAYS ASK FOR A CASE SPECIALIST IMMEDIATELY AND REPEATEDLY UNTIL THEY GIVE YOU ONE. ALWAYS SEND A LETTER OR EMAIL TO THE CEO'S OFFICE.
That will save you hours and hours and hours of getting jerked around by a sub-contractor that gets paid, I assume, per phone call and per phone minute. Not per solution. So, the worse the tech skills of the people they hire, the more money the sub-contractor makes.
I'm guessing here, but all symptoms point to...
a perfect day to have a great day on purpose...
or because the store clerk told you to...
friartek
quality posts: 15
Private Messages
penguinmasterinfinity wrote:Since everyone is saying that the power supply is horrible, does anyone have any recommendations for good ones.
Prices vary so wildly on them and I wouldn't want to spend $20 on a 500-600w one that breaks my system. Nor would I want to spend $60 on one when I could have got a good one much cheaper.
Horrible is an overstatement. It is not a great PS, but it will do the job. I currently have 2 very similar systems, both with the 250 watt supply and they work fine and have for over 7 months now. Each has a second hard drive, additional memory and one has an additional DVD drive. It just depends on what you are adding. Why spend the money if you don't have to.
What really gets me are manufactures of video cards who say you need a 500-600 watt supply. Tell me how much your card really uses and let me figure it out(plus a margin of safety of course). How do they know what I really need. But that is easier said then done sometimes. Trying to find specifications on OEM devices and cards, MBs and systems is next to impossible.
I don't mind a recommendation. but facts would really be nice.
tolerance: a fair, objective, and permissive attitude toward opinions and practices that differ from one's own.
BOC: 4 Including the very last Woot!-off B)C. One of the lucky few.
friartek
quality posts: 15
Private Messages
mustang2k00 wrote:Did anybody try upgrading the cpu to a AMD Phenom II X6 1100T? I have the 750GB version.
AMD Phenom II X6 10xxT Six-Core (Thuban core) is on the list for this MB. The MB requires a CPU with an AM3 socket and max TDP of 95W. I'm not sure where you came up with the 750GB version since both of these in this offer have a 1TB drive.
tolerance: a fair, objective, and permissive attitude toward opinions and practices that differ from one's own.
BOC: 4 Including the very last Woot!-off B)C. One of the lucky few.
friartek
quality posts: 15
Private Messages
mustang2k00 wrote:I had bought the 6727c model. The part that throws me off about the processor is that the hp website says it's 10xxT and the model of the chip that I'm looking at starts with 11 and not 10. I don't know if that one model is built differently than the other 6 core processors.
1) p6727c System specification
2) MB Specification
The real key is in the MB Specification. Under the processor upgrade information you will find the Max TDP(Thermal Design Power) which is 95W. This is the average amount of power in watts that a cooling system must dissipate. In other words what the MB was designed to tolerate. The processor you are looking at(1100T) was designed for a board that has a TDP of at least 125W. It also must use an AM3 socket. Look at the upgrade list for supported processors.
tolerance: a fair, objective, and permissive attitude toward opinions and practices that differ from one's own.
BOC: 4 Including the very last Woot!-off B)C. One of the lucky few.