
Originally Posted by
Altena
While I do agree that $300 labour to plug in a GPU from whatever computer store is massively overpriced, your statement above is extremely false.
My mother is a very intelligent woman yet wouldn't know where to plug in a stick of RAM or how to install a hard drive. There are a huge amount of intelligent people that don't know how the components of a computer go together.
$4000 for an iMac? Lolwhat? I got my iMac 4 years ago for $2600 AUD, which was a top of the line iMac in its day. Where are you getting this figure? Because you are getting ripped off if you were quoted $4000.
You do have to also take into consideration that to buy an equivalent display, your options are quite limited and expensive.
If you have the display, the knowledge, and the patience to build a Hackintosh, install both Windows & Mac OS, sure you can build a computer using PC components for a cheaper price, however for the general population that is not an option.
Once again, my mother wouldn't know where to begin.
What is hard for you, may be extremely difficult for the worlds greatest cyclist, or swimmer, or body builder or *insert non IT profession here*. Being handy with computers is not easy for some people, even very intelligent people.
I believe your timing is insanely underexaggerated. To find 8-10 different components, price them all up, find the best deals, drive to each store or wait for online delivery, you are pushing on days.
If I wanted to buy a new apple computer, I would drive to my local Apple store, spend 30 mins with a sales rep to tell me what I do or don't need for my circumstance, hand over my credit card and walk out with a computer. I would then plug a power cable in, put the batteries in my keyboard and mouse, then be able to turn the computer on.
People pay money for this premium, and for people that don't know how to install a RAM stick, it is certainly the easiest option. You can't argue with convenience. People pay for it.