vvbee wrote:Only, you need to be critical of your own approach as well if you want the pursuit to go somewhere.
No, we don't, since I merely tried to answer a question.
I don't need nor want this pursuit to go anywhere.
I am just being critical of the 'data' you keep bringing up and the 'argumentation' you are using.
vvbee wrote:Why the cpu? Because that's what the intel gpu comes with.
Wait what?
I thought we were talking about the Millennium and the Pentium 60 here. Intel GPUs and CPUs have nothing to do with that (aside from the fact that you can't put a real price tag on Intel's GPUs anyway, since they are not sold separately).
vvbee wrote:Some would look at it and say, where am I going to pinch the $200 to afford this system, and strike out the pimped-out millennium. It depends on what they were wanting to do with the machine.
That's the thing, we are talking about Dell and Compaq machines that are twice as expensive as the 'bargain basement' competition anyway.
If you are shopping for these brands, you are clearly not trying to pinch off a few hundred bucks. By definition you are going for 'the best that money can buy', or something in that general direction.
And in that clientele, either the OEM will make the choice for you: "We're just putting Millenniums in all our high-end machines, period"... or, a reasonable share of clients will say: "I'm spending this much money on a machine I will be using for many hours every day for years to come, I want to have the best possible image quality and performance as well, I'm not going to cheap out on the video card and monitor".
Why are we having this argument anyway? I mean, what could it possibly lead to? It was already established that Pentium 60s with Matrox Millenniums were indeed sold.
I still don't get why you have to keep beating this dead horse. Why this cognitive dissonance? How difficult is it to grasp that $3000+ Pentium 60 system + $340 Matrox Millennium + $1500 high end CRT (Eizo or such) makes sense? The Millennium isn't the thing that's going to make or break the bank.
These people aren't penny pinchers. Penny pinchers would never buy the type of 'brand machine' that Millenniums would come in by definition.