Comments on: Dell's PC business drags down earnings
Computer retailer's financial disappointments continue in the fourth quarter with plunging desktop sales and flat notebook sales.
Computer retailer's financial disappointments continue in the fourth quarter with plunging desktop sales and flat notebook sales.
January 7, 2010 11:03 PM PST
January 7, 2010 10:41 PM PST
January 7, 2010 9:41 PM PST
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That's what he said about Apple a few years ago.
I guess Vista hasn't helped PC sales.
What "legacy port" do you need and why?
I'm surprised at your really nasty tone - do you not understand that some people out there might have a laser printer that has worked great for 10 years and would rather not buy a new one just because their PC is missing a $1 part? I've had several users get such a nasty surprise. I've had to install print servers for them mostly, a really complicated solution to a very simple problem.
I have no problem with not including the parallel port, but it should be made obvious when you order the system. I would have happily paid a $10 fee to have it included in those systems, would have saved my customer over $100 in time and hardware.
long. There must be plenty of people who think so little of
themselves that they would subject themselves to such low level
garbage.
Dell can only show innovativeness or creativeness when it comes to
accounting and granting stock options. Their pitiful trash boxes
belong on Walmart's bottom shelf.
clear preference for laptops--snapping up two notebooks for
every desktop this past holiday season."
Herein lies Dell's biggest problem. Who cares how heavy a
desktop computer is or what it looks like, though, for the most
part, Dell's are okay. But EVERYONE cares about the computer
they have to lug around, and Dell's laptops leave a lot to be
desired. They are clunky, heavy and look like yesterday's
technology.
Dell has a long way to go to catch up with the quality and styling
of the laptop offerings from Sony, Apple, Toshiba and others.
Not to mention their "Outsourced-to-India" support is among
the worst in the industry. Good luck, Dell. You need it.
Mr. Dell is losing customers "one at a time".
Memo to Michael Dell: move your assets to something you can make better than PCs. Snow tires, pinatas, shoe lifts, rat bait-- there must be something your company is better at making.
Sure can't be PCs. Your PCs stink on ice.
So, all things being equal, I buy Dell because they have facilities in our state. I spent our dollars as close to home as possible, when it makes economic sense to do it.
Sorry to say, but the folks at Dell didn't give a rip so now I don't give a rip about Dell either...
In the latter case, I click on a range of notebooks like the Precision and it says something like "£1,500 click here to configure and buy". So I click on it then the price jumps up to £1,700. How did that happen? What happened to my £1,500 notebook? I feel like they have just tricked me. Also, the website often never loads quite right in my browser, IE6.
And in the former case, customer service, I tried calling up to ask them why the website is trying to trick me with the prices. What a journey that was; I went through four different people who could not help and just transferred me to another department. Finally I asked the fourth woman's name and she hung up on me! Thank goodness I didn't actually buy from Dell.
WEll it wasn't replaced with a Dell. My employer bought me another dell, I didn't ask for it. I saw the invoice, they paid about $1800 for it. I paid $900 for my machine at my house, which is more powerful.
If the world is moving to notebooks (I guess I'm the last adopter to this trend)....then Dell should look to sony for ideas...Dell notebooks are heavy bricks...I like the sony's with their small form factors....well they tempt me the most.
For several years I recommended Dell's PC products due to it's mix of quality, price, performance and service, but not for some time now. They have fallen to last on the list, behind even HP and eMachines, and losing more ground with each generation.
- Who painted the big picture?
- by trialmanager March 5, 2007 12:50 AM PST
- In the Dell headquarters, I mean. In my former job, global bank, everything became dell at really low prices. But the bank had a policy: the order was submitted to dell only after grouping a minimum (huge) lot of staff needs. Some times, it took a year to fullfill a request, because when the the order lot was complete, the deparments already shifted the budget for other purposes and gave up of it.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(14 Comments)As a Dell laptop owner, I see no Dell equipment anywhere but in some big companies. On the other hand, computer retailers sell everything but Dell. Even the huge supermarkets sell everything but Dell. By everything I mean Sony, HP, Toshiba, Asus, Acer, etc. etc.
I see HP and Sony promotions and demonstrations everywhere, even in the mall corridors, side by side with the Citi bank credit card boots. I don't see Dell.
Dell is a US company, focused in the US market. Dell is not a Global Company. For us, in Europe, Dell is a untrusted and expensive pc assembler who sells stuff through a US site. Period.