I am going thru the
same pains right now.
I am probably spending $220 for a 2.53ghz proc and a another $150 on a decent MB, maybe even $200 for a Granite Bay dual channel (preferably the Asus but I really want the Gigabyte) . Also a Radeon 9500 Pro. That alone is going to run me around $550-600.
For that price you can get a Dell 2.4ghz with a Radeon 9700 TX (better then 9500 Pro) ready to go.
The only real problem I have with a Dell machine is that I will want to swap the MB and case. Thats gonna cost me.
I figure the cost of building a nice setup is gonna run me well into $1100. The Dell will only be about $600 then some extra RAM for $80. It will be usable now but within 4 months I will probably swap the MB, case, add drives and more which will cost me more in the long run. I have to get a new case before the heat of summer where my computer studio gets 90-95º even with the AC on.
I am really having problems deciding.
$220 CPU
$150 MB
$100 case
$100 HD
$150 RAM
$100 CDRW
$50 fans and cables
$90 Win XP
_______
$1100+
Dell $700 w/$100 rebate
Add another $100 for RAM
Few weeks add $100 for another HD
Few months new case $100
Within 6 months new MB to dual channel DDR. $150?
I think I should go with the Dell...
I haven't seen any barebones kits that I really thought were worth the money. Usually you get a something you don't want like maybe a MB or the case is not so great, or something. It's usually not hard to put those components together yourself for a similar price.
P.S.
Staples is selling a Compaq Athlon 2000+ for about $320-350+shipping. Its not a bad start and you can add a Geforce 128mb 4200ti for $100. I am getting one today for a friend. It's not bad but Dell's are not much more $ for a better machine.
p.s. building your own is very educational but through the research of the components, not really the assembly. Assembly these days is not really difficult. A chimp could build a computer these days if given the right parts. Its knowing what parts you want and why which is the real helpful education.