Nice. The only repair guy around me is expensive as hell, he charges $35 just to look at teh damn thing. He's an Intel freak to boot, so I'm afraid he would break my AMD system just out of spite if I took it to him.ExtremeRyno wrote:I've never had a prefabricated PC. I've put them all together on my own with random pieces. I don't mind being my own tech support. Unless it's a big problem that I can't track down myself...Which happened this time. I actually took my PC to the shop and they told me it was my hard drive. So I put my hard drive in my spare parts computer and it worked fine...Then they said it must be my RAM...So I put the RAM in the parts computer and it worked fine...Next they said it was the power supply (which is what I told them to check the first time I brought it to them...I've got lots of hardware and external things drawing power from the PC, so that was my first assumption).....Then they said everything was fine with my power supply, and that the only other explanation was a burned out motherboard. So they put the motherboard in an existing computer and it had the same problems...I was only out $29, though...So it's all good.
If it breaks on me and I can't fix it, then I'm SOL. I don't have that kind of chingo to lay down on my computer (college books suck up a lot of cash).
You lucky bastard. If I ever want a dual-CPU AMD MP system, 3-4 GB of RAM, and 5-10 hard drives, I would have to build it myself. I love server systems. Big, big $$$ though.Now I'm building a new one. Turns out that second link Pope posted kicks total ass. Kind of odd that when I choose one of the "Back To School" PCs and upgrade everything to top-knotch (exactly what I want) it is only $748, but when I chose any other system, the same parts ALWAYS equal over $1100.