I last worked for the company in 1995. To its credit, the company did much to persuade me to finish college: It motivated me to get an education so I could get a better job. A few things have changed since 1995, but what I've read today about the company rang so true.
Gateway is hoping that its quarter-billion-dollar purchase of eMachines will help it turn around and make it the #3 PC maker in the United States. Seeing as eMachines is consistently #3 in terms of sales, eMachines plus anything is probably the #3 vendor.
The interesting thing to me is that eMachines is profitable. That wasn't always the case.
Long ago, I used to hunt for killer prices on computer equipment, and when I'd find something good, I'd post it here. It seemed to be a fairly popular feature. I haven't done that in a long time, mostly because I haven't been in the market for anything.
Vendors. I've been trying to get out of the build-PCs-for-friends business and for the most part I've succeeded. My reasons for getting out are twofold: time and support. It takes some time to spec and build one, and if something goes wrong, I've got some responsibility for it. It's something I don't understand, because the systems I've built for myself have been reliable (I had a system appear dead that turned out just to be a corrupt MBR--I can live with that now that I know how to fix it, and it wasn't the hardware's fault) but the last two PCs I've built for friends have been horrendous.
First things first. About a month ago I ordered an FIC AZ11 from GPS Computers. One of my readers recommended them because he found Duron motherboard/CPU combos for a Backstreet Boys song there. I agreed. The price was unbelievable.
Don't order from PCNation.com. That was the outfit I got my NEC 19" monitor from. I won't call them a PriceWatch bottom-feeder, since I'm not sure if they advertise on PriceWatch, and they did actually ship product. I made the mistake of waiting out my slightly-damaged NEC FE950+ monitor to see if its defect was indeed only cosmetic. PCNation offers a so-called 30-day return policy, so I figured I'd give it about three weeks. Big mistake. I should have made them eat the monitor.