The Ten Worst Products of the Year 601
WaZiX writes "Not sure what you want to buy for christmas? Well me neither, but PCMag has an interesting article on what they consider to be the 10 worst products of the year, so at least you know what not to buy. Helpful article that picked out products from different categories such as PDA's, Notebooks and MP3 players."
Missing option (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Missing option (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Missing option (Score:3, Interesting)
"I got the Weeners losers! HAHAHAHAHA"
Re:Missing option (Score:3, Insightful)
and if you're NOT a subscriber.. then hopefully some of the dupes get filtered away before you see them.
Re:Missing option (Score:3, Insightful)
See the star next to my name? It won't be there for long since I discovered that I have already read 5/6ths of the stories before the ever get on Slashdot, much lesss gett Slashdotted.
My last subscription at Slashdot for sure.
Interesting Thought... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Interesting Thought... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Interesting Thought... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Interesting Thought... (Score:4, Insightful)
Not quite go so far to totally discount them, but with knowledge of what they are about one can gleam some nuggets from them
Worth a subscription to PC Mag? No.
Re:Interesting Thought... (Score:3, Insightful)
Heck, I'm amazed PC Rag is still around.
Re:Interesting Thought... (Score:5, Funny)
eMac (Score:5, Insightful)
His reviews mostly made sense except for the eMac rip. I'm not a huge Mac fan (nothing wrong with them, just not my cup of tea), but I thought he seemed to be targetting a different audience with his review of the eMac. 40GB would certainly not fill up quickly with the type of things my parents do on a computer, and I think anyone wishing to play "this fall's hottest games" wouldn't be considering an entry level computer. Finally, $800 seems to be about right for the price of an eMac. Sure, you can get a dell for $499 with a monitor (please don't correct the numbers), but Macintoshes cost more because they provide more value for their target audience. And when he said, "buy a Dell", does that mean if I pick an entry level Dell it will play "this fall's hottest games?" Although IANAG (gamer), something tells me you're not going to get stellar HL2 performance on an Intel 810.
Re:eMac (Score:5, Informative)
Re:eMac (Score:4, Interesting)
Am I the only one that thinks paying $999 for a computer that Dell does with a flatpanel and twice the RAM for $699 is absolutely stupid?!
The eMac needs a real update. I'd be more than happy to pay $699 or even $799 for a G5-based 'pizza box' with which I can use my own monitor.
Re:eMac (Score:3, Insightful)
The Mac might be more expensive but it won't subject your giftee to any of the annoying malware associated with Windows. That's also something conspicuously left out of the original analysis. This is always swept under the rug.
Re:Any ware (Score:5, Funny)
Unless you want software specifically targeted at some obscure niche, like an accounting system geared towards left-handed people who work in the trout farming industry, you'll find plenty of Mac software available.
Well, or unless you want ten million ways to wander around rooms and kill off robotic monsters, instead of only one million. Then I can't help you.
D
Re:Marketshare has everything to do with it. (Score:5, Insightful)
In a highly connected environment, it only takes ONE virus writer to cause havok on a planet of billions.
Viruses exist on any platform because they can. If they can be made, SOMEONE will make them.
These things don't require army divisions to pull off.
Re:eMac (Score:5, Insightful)
Why? Very simple: Spyware, viruses and other annoyances. I just spent the weekend of cleaning the 3 month (!!!) old Acer PC from one of my cousins. This cousin is not your local geek, he's a law student and uses his laptop for surfing, chat and writing papers. Hey, he's a student, he doesn't have tons of money, so he bought the cheapest laptop he could find: A Celeron with 256Meg RAM and 30Gig HD, Shared Graphics and whatnot. It ran Win-XP Home SP1, don't ask me why a OEM doesn't ship SP2 by default now... I suspect it cost him around 800Euro.
Now an entry level iBook is around 1200Euro, so it can't match in price. I'll grant you that. But what would have happened to my cousin if he didn't have a nice geek in the family willing to rip his hear out while cleaning up this barfed-up XP machine? He would have spent a lot of money by letting it be cleaned up by a company. If he would have opted for an iBook, it would have chugged along. His Acer was essentially a paperweight after 3 months of usage.
So, please, if you compare on price, also compare on value. I know I just compared a low-priced iBook with a low-priced laptop... The same hold for people not wanting portability: low-end Dell versus eMac.
I know that you and I wouldn't bother with such machines (though I own an iBook, because I am a "switcher"), but we are not low-usage-users.
Re:eMac (Score:4, Insightful)
Windows can be reliable, it just isn't reliable without taking action yourself.
Even if the Dell was $1 and the iBook was $50000 according to you the iBook would still be a better choice because I want a reliable computer and a Dell just is not reliable.
No, because at a 1$ price, you could buy a new Dell every 3 months. Buying an iBook in that scenario would be idiot.
I'd like to know where I didn't stick to the facts. Please point out where. I challenge you to give a XP machine (bought straight from an OEM), give it to a non-geek student *and* keep it running reliably without making any changes to the basic configuration of the machine. If you can do that, I must tip my hat for you, and I'd be glad to take some sysadmin courses from you.
Re:eMac (Score:4, Insightful)
Tell your friend not to install all that stuff that gives him malware.
Re:eMac (Score:3, Informative)
However, I can surf with Safari without getting drive-by-downloads, or whatnot. It is pretty much secure out of the box. Besides, there is not a single service active on a newly installed OS X. Windows XP SP2 has a firewall to protect its services now, but currently all OEMS ship with XP SP1.
Tell your friend not to install all th
NOT the same as on Windows (Score:5, Insightful)
Two things of note - if you don't patch a Mac, right now you have a working unpatched Mac. If you don't patch Windows (or even if you do), you PROBABLY have a comprimised computer for the majority of users. You are confusing two possibilities with the reality of the situation at hand.
Which leads me to my second point. All Macs come set up to update weekly, so issues are patched quickly - AND because of the security setup in OS X you'd have to have the administrator password from the user to be able to disable this process. On Windows it would be a lot easier for some spyware to stop Windows Update, or even redirect it to install more unpleasant things!
Macs may not be an unbreakable fort, but at least that have a fence and are in a good neighborhood!
Re:eMac (Score:3, Interesting)
And the autoupdates thing in a mac is a little more reliable than autoupdates in winXP. I've ran several mac's with and without virus scanners. None have had any problems.
I've gotta call back EVERY SINGLE FREAKIN winXP dell laptop at least every three months and wipe the bish out of it. Even patched, reconfigured, virusscanned, they all get something freaky. I've given up on fixing them and just wipe the drive each time.
I was just amuzed to even see PC mag flouted on
Re:eMac (Score:4, Insightful)
I agree with you completely. It'd be stupid to pay $999 for something that Dell does for $699. Now, show me where Dell sells a comparible machine (first hurdle: must run OSX) for $699.
Re:eMac (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:eMac (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, I know plenty of people that don't have 40GB HDs and no DVD writer. Some people don't even have a DVD-ROM drive. Most people interested in the eMac line are probably low end users that aren't going to be "off-loading" great amounts of data to permanent backup anyway.
Re:eMac (Score:5, Funny)
Text-based GUI though (Score:3, Interesting)
That's why I downloaded GnuEmacs and use that. And in answer to the other posters question, yes it uses standard OS X widgets so the text is AA.
Re:eMac (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:eMac (Score:5, Funny)
Actually he said "this fall's hot Mac games," so that probably means Myth 2 and Marathon Infinity.
(i kid, i kid.)
Re:eMac (Score:5, Funny)
Re:eMac (Score:3, Informative)
Re:eMac (Score:5, Informative)
"Don't buy an eMac cos it sucks at X, Y and Z. Buy a dell instead, they also suck at X, Y and Z"
Re:eMac (Score:3, Informative)
Look at the 4200 I think. They are the cheapest, and sure, they have onboard video but the Radeon 9200 is shit anyway. And you can add whatever AGP graphics card, something I'd take over a built in 9200 card.
Re:eMac (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:eMac (Score:5, Informative)
Also I have a Dual G5 PowerMac with a total of 1.3 Terabytes of digital photos which I don't have a problem moving about with GigE or Firewire. Hasn't this guy ever heard of Firewire, USB and Ethernet?
I have to wonder how real is the rest of the list?
Re:eMac (Score:3, Funny)
Man that is a lot of pr0n, you sir are my hero.
Re:eMac (Score:5, Interesting)
~Philly
Already Know that. (Score:5, Insightful)
I find it disapointing that PC magazine decided to choose the eMac as its bad system to buy not because they chose an Apple computer but because there are so many Windows PC that are of very poor quality and are advertised as much more then they are. But it is no secret that PC magizene is no Fan of Apple anyways. Back when the PowerMac g5 was released their "Glowing" afermation of the G5s power was saying it was just as good as the top of he line PC.
Re:Already Know that. (Score:4, Funny)
"Blah, blah, blah, cold fusion, perpetual motion, time travel."
"You must be pretty clever, that all sounds very Sciencetific!"
Re:eMac (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm about as far from your average Mac zealot as you can get (typing this on a home-built dual-boot Fedora/win2K system), but I'd be perfectly happy with an eMac on my desk.
Re:eMac (Score:4, Funny)
For the past 7 years, every time there's been an article that mentions the price of an Apple computer, these people come out of the woodwork and go batsh!t trying to show us how frugal/industrious they can be without ever understanding the market dynamic.
Please, we all understand that you can build a "Most Excellent" PC with glowing neon lights and water cooling that SPECmarks the h3ll out of a dual processor G5 for $.75 Canadian and it will run Slackware and GiMP and MAME and dual boot into Windows XP Super Home edition and play Halo 7 and Duke Nuke 'em at the same time in separate windows because you're driving 18 LCDs with the Radeon super-nuclear video card that you can get at the local computer superhaus for $1.95 and two packs of bubblegum.
Mac users just don't care, Ok? We really, really, don't care.
Re:eMac (Score:5, Insightful)
As far as the cheap crap revolution goes, one in five components I buy have to be RMA'd. The time I spent troubleshooting this (along with shipping, not mention waiting) usually costs more than the device itself. Don't get me wrong, if you're a geek and know how to build PCs and can spot a failing IDE controller a mile away, then go save yourself some money. But most people aren't, especially mac users.
These are two very different markets, but people will compare them regardless. I think its because they see OSX as a threat to their own pet UNIX. The enemy of my enemy, etc.
Re:eMac (Score:3, Interesting)
You, Sir, are correct. I am a huge Mac fan and I am going to forfeit my
Re:eMac (Score:5, Funny)
Re:eMac (Score:4, Insightful)
Agreed. If you wanted to play this year's hottest games, first you wouldn't get a Mac anyway.
If you want to play one of last year's hottest games, like Knights of the Old Republic, you wouldn't pick a $799 eMac (where the "e" stands for "economy", I guess). However, a $1299 iMac or even a $999 iBook could fit the bill (with a bit more memory). Not cheap, but it's nowhere near buying a dual G5 Power Mac with a 30" screen.
The eMac is more for people like my mother-in-law who just wants to write emails and go to those horrible greeting cards web sites. Calling the eMac one of the 10 worst products of the year because it has a relatively small hard drive or no DVD burner is simply missing the intended market for the product.
Apples aren't cheap, but they do provide a lot of value (i.e., quality in relation to price). This doesn't mean that it provides the fastest processor for the cheapest price; it means that it delivers the the highest valued attributes for a particular market segment for the price the segment is willing to pay. For example in one of my Marketing classes we studied how the iMac provided the highest price to quality of any product, to the point where Apple could have increased the price by 20% and still maintained sales. By keeping the price point where it was, Apple was able to gain market share. In fact, the two companies that gave the highest value were Apple (with the iMac) and Dell. The lowest were Gateway, Sony, and NEC.
Maybe PC Magazine was just looking for an obligatory bash against Apple since the iPod is so popular.
Re:eMac (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, the e stands for "education."
The eMac was only ever intended to be a school computer. That's why it's really heavy, really sturdy, has a cheap-ish but rugged screen, and has the power button hidden on the back of it.
It just happened to turn out that a lot of consumers thought it would be a nifty machine for other situations where the LCD-based iMac was not really called for, and Apple decided, after the fact, to make it available.
I use one in my music studio with a MOTU DSP as my main record-to-HD system. I like that it's whisper-quiet thanks to the big slow-moving cooling fan yet still fast enough to run my multi-track recording software. Also, it fits nicely on top of my audio equipment rack.
Would I use it for a game PC? Nah. I know from seeing other people game with them that it can run a lot of games okay, but already I have a cheap home-brew PC for games.
It's all about the right tool for the job, as far as I'm concerned, and the eMac happens to fill a useful niche or two out there.
Re:eMac (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:eMac (Score:3, Informative)
Or a Penguin Revolution 2200.
jim louderback
Re:eMac (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:eMac (Score:3, Insightful)
Good point, and it's why my mother uses a Mac. Yes, there is a greater initial cost, but the Mac OS and hardware require less maintenance over time.
My sister uses Apple as well, a powerbook IIRC. She's carted it across three continents, dropped it enough times the case is held together by duct tape and it still works fine.
Apple is expensive i
Re:eMac (Score:3, Insightful)
Uh... this statement is just wrong. I use a Mac, but then again I also own a PC with Debian Linux and Windows XP Pro on it. I'm a software developer with experience in several languages, and lots of experience with various *nixes, yet my main machine is a Mac. Am I "new to computers"? Definitely not.
What's great about Mac OS X is that it's perfect for virtually everyone, it doesn't make using a computer "easy" because it lacks features, but rather because
Re:eMac (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah. I've only been programming computers since 1970 and have owned pretty much ever home computer since the apple iie, so I havn't been using computerd for very long.
I've used PCs ad a desktop machine since about 89 or so (and hated switching from my Amiga) and have got used to their nonsense.
I was forced to use a G4 iMac last summer for 2 weeks and found it to be a nice and reliable BSD box for all intents and purposes. Since BSD is mostly what I use I found it a really nice consumer BSD box ifinitly more reliable and easy to use that winbloze. I don't play games, I work for a living and I'r rather use a G3 iMac than any PC, although would obviously prefer a G5.
I will not be buying any more PC's, ever. They don't seem to actually work.
Re:eMac (Score:3, Insightful)
And that's the same reason I recommend them to *experienced* computer users, too. Even though I am smart enough to *know* how to *fix* spyware, I'da rather not *worry* about it at all!
Re:eMac (Score:3, Funny)
Ah, but you miss the point grasshopper.
True, the mac is good for a novice.
True the mac is good for the expert.
But what over the great ocean of mediocrity? Embracing mediocrity to generate extraordinary profits, that is the way of the enlightened business plan.
Re:eMac (Score:4, Interesting)
As a "computer for your parents", a Macintosh still trumps a PC running WinDOS.
With Linux, you can at least do remote support over a 2400bps serial connection if necessary.
Re:eMac (Score:3, Insightful)
Good question, but easy answer: the "switcher" crowd Apple hopes to attract from the Wintel markets with its free iLife apps, its gorgeous and nearly-passe-as-a-fashion-statement iPod, and so on. One of the Wintel crowd's biggest advantage has ALWAYS been price point, and with the original smash success of the iMac, Apple has made strides to combat that. The eMac, remember, was supposed to be a cheap way to take back schools, where Apple II's used to dominate in the 80s and now
Re:eMac (Score:5, Informative)
So where is this "provide more value" you are talking about?
It's called OS X.
Re:eMac (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe they don't think in OS terms, but they sure want "that computer that doesn't crash as much". I made my parents buy an eMac when I got married because the free tech support was leaving the nest. They appreciate it, even though the eMac was a bit slower than the machine that it replaced, because it doesn't crash every time you look at it sideways. It just works a lot better.
Re:eMac (Score:4, Insightful)
I think it's the effect of the sum of all the nice touches. Expose, the dock, the menu bar at the top of the screen, the nice graphics effects, the quality of the built-in apps. The fact that you can drag-and-drop everything: drag text off a web page and not only does a ghost of the text appear and move with the mouse cursor, you can drop it anywhere - stick it on the desktop and it appears as a snippet. Everything just works as you would expect it to, somehow.
Clearly that does have value to a lot of people.
Spyware and viruses are a serious problem, too. Let one slip through and that could be a day's productivity gone: that's the price difference between a Dell and a Mac made up in one day. I've seen it happen several times to my parents, intelligent people who've been using computers since the days of daisy-wheel printers.
Re:Here's my view on that: (Score:4, Insightful)
Okay, so you're in Grade 4 (in North America -- about 10 years old). You won't be entering the workforce for at least another 8 to 14 years (depending on whether or not you attend University). Do you think it will matter one whit 8 to 14 years from now whether you did your web surfing and word processing on a Windows machine or a Mac?
Your logic lacks a basis in logic. Computer hardware and software generally changes at a fairly rapid pace (particularily in terms of how they interface with humans). The idea of getting an education in computer systems should be in how those systems generally function, and in making good educational use of them now, rather than trying to train students on specific software packages that will be out-of-date long before they enter the workforce.
If you want skills in software that companies and industry is demanding, go to a cheap local community college. That is what they are there for. You can go and get your MS Office certification and bask in the knowledge that you just spent a whack of money for a piece of paper that will be meaningless in two years time.
Personally, I find it much more useful to teach children in K-12 much more basic skills, such as language, mathematics, science, and the basic principals of information research. Virtually any computer can do this for them. The key is to make the computer accessable to the student, and this means having a system that is easy to use, somewhat intuitive in its functionality, and somethat that requires little maintenence, permitting a teacher who doesn't hold a computer administrator certificate like an MCSE to spend as little time as possible keeping the machines running for their students.
When I was 12 years old, I became an expert on the Commodore 64, the most popular computer at its time. Want to know how useful any of that knowledge is today, or how many C64 software titles I need to work with? Zero. The things I retained from then that are useful? Basic concepts like binary logic and math, and some programming fundementals.
Trying to teach the latest and greatest software misses the whole point of an education, and is simply a waste of time and effort. Teach students the fundementals, and they'll have the tools they need to figure out how to use new software packages as the need arises.
Brad BARCLAY
If you've waited until now to buy gifts (Score:5, Funny)
I'm in Denmark, you insensitive clod.. (Score:3, Informative)
;o)
The PSP. (Score:2, Insightful)
I can go on all day...
Disagree with at least one (Score:2, Interesting)
It copies when the attached PC is down, works fine as a network printer and isn't that slow. It takes a minute or so to warm up, but it is a laser, that is to be expected.
Re:Disagree with at least one (Score:2, Informative)
The HP 1300, which is an entry-level laser printer (PS), warms up in 8 seconds. 1 minute way more than is expected for modern laser printers!.
Worst. Product. Ever. (Score:5, Funny)
the list (Score:3, Informative)
PDA: iPAQ
Phone: Samsung D415
Desktop PC: eMac
Notebook PC: VoodooPC Envy m:380
Multifunction Printer: MFP Laser Printer 1600n
MP3 Players: Mojo 1
HDTV: ADS Upconverter
Camcorder: Fisher's FVD-C1
Wireless: WF717-APR router
Re:the list (Score:3, Informative)
Re:the list (Score:3, Funny)
That's because the editors who tested that last year were unavailable for comment this year.
The Ten... (Score:5, Insightful)
you get the picture
i think companies that make things like (Score:2)
SCO License (Score:3, Funny)
Hmmm. I'd have figured the SCO license would have surely made that list. $699 and you don't even get a pet rock out of the deal.
Missing product (Score:5, Funny)
Shudders
How to make a PC Mag "worst of" list (Score:4, Funny)
1. Find worst product in catagory. Mention it.
2. Post a link to the "PC Mag guide" for that catagory with the tex "for better options in (name of catagory) see PC Mag's guide
3.Profit!
Tech Credentials (Score:4, Funny)
GIGO (Good In, Garbage Out)
Way to show your tech credentials! [catb.org] Coming soon, to a PCMag article near you, the newest and hottest acronyms:
Re:Tech Credentials (Score:5, Informative)
GigaWhat? (Score:5, Funny)
Could the article be anymore GigaLame?
Worst PCMag article of the year (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, why waste the time to write an article about 10 things you don't recommend?
Re:Worst PCMag article of the year (Score:3, Interesting)
From the article (Score:5, Funny)
So when do we get a list of... (Score:4, Funny)
Agree and Disagree (Score:5, Funny)
They missed #1! (Score:4, Funny)
an SCO Intellectual Property license for the Linux lover in your life.
Its all junk (Score:5, Funny)
The worst desktop computer of the year is the super nintendo. I can't seem to get it to run Open Office and I have to fold my CD's in half just to get them in the ROM drive. See our review here. [slashdot.org]
The worst spread sheet application of the year is Windows Calculator. I see that you can congifure it to use Radians, but you can't even plot y=mx+b. How am I supposed to get my paper published in Science using diagrams created with a tool like that? See our review here. [slashdot.org]
Cisco makes these terific and robust managed routers, but the Netgear FS108 is a piece of junk in comparison. It only has 8 100MB ports. It doesn't have any built-in firewall. And, to top it all off, I still have to use cat5 ethernet cables. Can you image what the designers could have been thinking when they came up with that? See our review here. [slashdot.org]
Maybe I'm being too critical of this article.
Pulitzer Prize! (Score:5, Funny)
"glacially slow processor and anemic memory"
"designed by orangutans without opposable thumbs"
"longer than it took the Minnow's crew to escape Gilligan's Island"
"it's slower than a 330-pound defensive tackle with two bad knees on a muddy field"
"like watching the neighbor's TV with a periscope"
"look worse than an ancient Philco"
"control more twitchy than Jennifer Tilly in Seed of Chucky"
"this twisted offspring of a Norelco shaver"
"you'd be GigaWrong. Buy this one and you'll end up GigaSad"
"doesn't matter a NanoBit."
eMac (Score:5, Insightful)
I am not a Mac fanatic, yet I do not like that eMac made the article. It is a solid machine for somebody who wants to have a stable client for checking e-mail, using a digital camera, surfing the web and being somewhat secure. Especially for $800.
Please do not give me "my Linux box can do the same for less" crap because there is no fucking way in hell I am going to recommend a Linux box to any of my relatives or non-techie people. Currently, I still see Linux as a great system for servers and desktops owned by techies who know the differences between kernel 2.4 and 2.6. Dell is okay, but as long as they run some sort of Windows, I am not touching them.
A couple of months ago I spent 2 days cleaning my friend's computer from every goddamn malware program out there. Then I cleaned my aunts computer, then I helped my mom because her box was extremely slow due to all the "addware" that she managed to install. Being a naive and a non-experienced user sucks, especially when companies do not want to be on your side. That is why I strongly push my mom toward an eMac because as far as I am concerned it represents a solid machine for beginners who do not want to spend all their free time maintaining it. Let's face the facts: not everybody enjoys configuring their computers whenever they have free time.
Here is why I like eMac:
It runs Mac OS X. This eliminates tons of malware available for Windows users. It is also easy to upgrade and maintain. I can enable SSHd and login to my mom's computer whenever she has a problem that needs to be fixed.
It is relatively cheap for what it is. Because I do not have to spend my time maintaining the computer, I can do something else. How much does your free time cost?
It has enough disk space. Believe it or not, 40GB is enough for any normal person. So far, all my software on my computer takes up 20GB. A person who does not download movies or music does not need a large hard drive to begin with.
eMac is pretty damn compact. I do not want my mom to deal with tons of wires, so a single box seems to be a perfect solution.
And that is just the beginning. Granted, I am a little biased towards Macs because since I got one, I noticed increase in my productivity. Now I can actually spend my time on writing code and doing fun things that do not involve system administration 24/7.
Typo About the eMac (Score:5, Funny)
It should have read:
...and the Radeon 9200 graphics card won't even run this fall's hot Mac game.
Apple eMac does not belong here (Score:3, Insightful)
Worst Product of the Year (Score:5, Funny)
George Bush.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The MP3 Headphones (Score:5, Funny)
Re:worse pressy (Score:5, Insightful)
No-name modems, video cards, network adapters, etc might seem like a bargain but when you run into any kind of problem, or when you come to changing OS, then a no-name product is going to leave you up shit creak without a paddle virtually every single time.
Providing tech support to friends and relatives is one thing, providing tech support for a cheap, near-unsupported part is another thing altogether. If for no reason other than I don't want to piss off people I care about, I always make sure that I have them buying with reliability rather than false value in mind, and if that means I take the extra time necessary to research exactly what they need and handpick the product that they should buy then that's what I'll do.
Re:eMac bashing (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The eMac is not even a PC (Score:3)
Nooo, it's a Mac, it's more than just a personal computer, right? Whatever.
Still, from the article, impossible to get information off of it because of a lack of a DVD burner? What's the author smoking? What did we all do with our 40+GB drives before DVD
Re:how come? (Score:3, Informative)
If you want to get honest car reviews, I'd recommend Edmondston's Lemon Aid Car Guide [lemonaidcars.com]...100% independent, uses public access to information through safety councils, etc. Its Canadian based, but should be very applicable to all North American-available automobiles.
You'll find this same experience with most stereo
Re:how come? (Score:4, Informative)
It's funny and worth a read.
Re:Is it just me... (Score:3, Funny)
I agree completely! Give me a name brand Sorny, Magnetbox, or Panaphonics any day!