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>From: alan anderson <address@hidden> >Organization: St. Cloud State >Keywords: 199909211630.KAA00214 PC hardware specs Alan, >Could you provide the vendor for the above? After sending you the hardware lists yesterday, I got the following from Mike Schmidt: Also, due to a number of bungled orders, I wouldn't recommend AMEC any longer. So, I will not be sending you the vendor contact information for the dual 550 Mhz machines. The vendor contact for the dual 450 Mhz machines is: The machine was bought through a company called Workstation Direct. This company has offices all over the country; we got ours through an office in Denver. The main reason we did this is that we knew one of the people who was sorking there (he has since left) and trusted him. The URL for Workstation Direct is: http://www.wksdirect.com/ >Also, I will pass your message to my colleague; his name is Tony Hansen. >I suspect he may email you with some additional questions. Tony has been >on our faculty about a year, and was the mcidas person at Augsburg College >in MSP. I remember Tony. >Also, can you take orders for the machine you described at the end of your >message? Well, neither I nor Unidata is not in the business of putting together machines. I sent along the information so that you would be aware that one can put together fully functional machines for very little money. I did this for the machine I use at home and am very pleased with the results. The process I went through in putting that machine together was: o take an old, obsolete machine here at Unidata o purchase a FIC VA503+ motherboard from TC Computers ($70) o use a 200 Mhz Pentium processor that we had on hand; I since upgraded this to a 400 Mhz AMD K6-2 processor for $43 o purchase an ISA 56 Kb modem; ISA modems are not likely to be Winmodems so it was usable "right out of the box" in Linux and NT ($42.50) o purchase an 8 MB 2x AGP video card based on the Intel 740 video chip ($39) o purchase a 40x CDROM at Best Buy ($29.99 after rebate) I was so tickled after upgrading to 400 Mhz that I decided to peruse the Sunday advertising supplements to the Denver/Boulder papers and add to it the cost of the motherboard and processor. An especially good URL to remember if you decide that you might like to try putting together a machine is that for PriceWatch (tm): www.pricewatch.com This site's only purpose is to scan the net looking for the cheapest prices for a wide variety of equipment. This is how I found that the price of the AMD K6-2 400 had dropped to $43. Four months ago the same chip was almost $150; right now it is down to $41. Tom **************************************************************************** < Unidata User Support UCAR Unidata Program < (303)497-8644 P.O. Box 3000 < address@hidden Boulder, CO 80307 < ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- < Unidata WWW Service http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/ < **************************************************************************** <