Facts of Computer Life
Fact One: If you haven't yet today said "I hate computers!",
well, you haven't done much on one today!
The logo for this lesson shows a happy smiley and a yucky smiley. That's the way you'll feel - sometimes happy all over, other times ready to throw that #$!%^$#@ computer through a brick wall!
Fact Two: Something better is just around the corner.
No matter how spiffy your new hardware or software is, something spiffier is will be released soon. The computer market evolves faster than any market before even dreamed of. If you wait for the next generation to come out, the one after that will be announced. If you wait for that one, and the next one, .... you could wind up never actually buying anything!
Fact Three: The price will go down next week.
This is related to Fact Two above. Devices and programs drop in price when newer ones are released. Prices also drop from competition among similar products and as manufacturing techniques improve.
Pattern 1: Same product, lower price
You can often find a pricing pattern like what happened to CD-R drives,
drives that can write (record) CDs. At first they were only available for
publishing software in bulk and cost thousands and thousands of dollars. None
were available for the PC. The first consumer versions came out with a price
around $2300. In 1998 CD-R (write CDs) dropped to around $1000 then to $700.
The summer of 1999 I got a catalog that priced several CD-RW (can write CDs and
then erase and re-write) drives at under $500. In Sept. 2000 I found several
CD-RW devices from name brand companies as low as $159.95!! Soon they'll be
free!! Well, maybe not. In fact, DVD drives are rapidly replacing CD drives as
the default for new computer systems.
At the right is a
chart of actual prices of a CD-RW drive. The price dropped drastically from Feb.
2002 to March 2003.
Pattern 2: Same price, better product
The other common pattern is for the price to remain steady but the capacity of the device to improve drastically. This is what has happened with hard drives. The price of a drive has remained rather steady but the capacity of the drive has doubled and doubled and doubled again. So you get more for your dollar.
Fact Four: "All you'll ever need" is never enough.
Example - You get a new hard drive with four-times the space of your nearly-full one. "All the space you'll ever need." After a year, you're getting short on space again! You got more programs and bulkier programs and saved more and larger files. What you have to store expands to meet the space available.
Example - You get a new video card to run the new applications and games. It's blazingly fast with umpteen jillion colors. "Absolutely as fast as you'll ever need." Next year the new games need a card that is twice as fast, works in 3D, and requires a new motherboard because it uses a different kind of slot!
These are true real-life examples. They happened to me! And the list goes on and on. You could add stories about faster processors, larger monitors, faster printers, faster modems... Plus you really have to consider the introduction of new devices, too, like
cable modems, touchpads, handheld devices... Everyone has their own tales.
Fact Five: Release dates are fiction.
When something new is coming out that you really, really want, the release date will change and change again, but always to a later one. So don't hold your breath. Blue is not your color.
With these in mind, we can turn our thoughts to "How to decide" about hardware and software.

~~ 1 Cor. 10:31 ...whatever you do, do it all for the
glory of God. ~~
Last updated:
22 Jan 2008 |