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Computerworld Minute | |
Have you ever consider buying a Synera PC? If you thought Synera was some off-brand PC maker, think again. It's the name of a computer made by Packard Bell NEC.
Syneras are assembled from salvaged parts from returned PCs and are sold online at Packard Bell's PC Factory Outlet. A recent offering was a 333-MHz AMD-K6-2 system for $660. It included 64MB of memory, a 10GB hard drive, a CD-ROM, a modem, and a 90-day extendable warranty (but not monitor).
Gateway sells refurbished notebooks and desktop PCs. Compaq offers refurbished PCs online and though its Compaq Works outlet in Houston, Texas. Hewlett-Packard's Internet-based HP Shopping Village sells refurbished Pavilions, printers, and monitors.
Most of what Hewlett-Packard sells as refurbished are return items that can't be sold as new. "We usually are just trying to recoup cost and make a small profit," says Ray Aldrich, Hewlett-Packard spokesperson.
One disadvantage to this approach is that most manufacturers' refurbished stock changes constantly with the ebb and flow of overstock and returns. A system you like in the morning might be gone in the afternoon. Another drawback is that discounts on remanufactured models are sometimes only 10 to 20 percent, compared to used equipment, which sells at 50 to 60 percent of its original cost.
"It's not like buying used," Kouyoumjian says. Computers that are refurbished are taken apart, cleaned, checked for reliability, repaired (if necessary), and reassembled.
Pre-Owned Electronics' largest customers are schools, companies, and government agencies where price is a huge concern and cutting-edge technology is not. The refurbished computers it sells mostly come from major company upgrades or lease returns.
Analysts can't agree on the impact that plummeting PC prices, narrowing profit margins, and shorter computer life cycles have had on this market.
According to International Data Corporation, sales of used PCs are expected to grow from 5.5 million in 1997 to 11.2 million in 2002.
But Kevin Knox, an analyst with Stamford, Connecticut-based Gartner Group, says PC prices that have dipped into the nadir will crimp refurbished sales. "Why buy used or refurbished? Reasons to buy [refurbished PCs] shrink every time computer prices dip a little lower."
IDC analyst Christine Arrington counters that as prices drop, vendors of used PCs pay less. And as PC life cycles get shorter, the push to replace systems increases.
Even so, sub-$500 PC makers like eMachines and upstarts like Microworkz, which bundle PCs with Internet service packages, are sure to take a toll on the secondhand market.
Consider ReCompute's $356 deal for a Dell Optiplex XMT. The PC ships with a Pentium-90 processor and comes with 24MB of memory, a 720MB hard drive, a 8X CD-ROM drive, a 56-kilobits-per-second modem, Windows 95, and a one-year hardware warranty.
Then consider Microworkz $299 Webzter Jr., which is powered by a 300-MHz Cyrix chip and includes Windows 98, 32MB of memory, a 3.2GB hard drive, and a modem (but no floppy drive). The package includes a year of unlimited Internet access and a one-year hardware warranty.
ReCompute's owner Brian Kushner has adopted an "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em" attitude. The company is drifting slowly away from selling remanufactured PCs only. ReCompute is now working with Prodigy Internet to bundle two years of Internet access with a remanufactured PC for $39.95 a month. After two years the PC is yours. A monitor isn't included and systems range from Pentium-90 to Pentium-133 systems, Kushner says.
Buying a refurbished PC is a lot like buying a year-old car. The previous owner takes the largest hit in the depreciation of value. But unlike the case with used cars, the PC hasn't been dated by wear and tear. Instead, technical advances make the largest impact on a system's worth. When you buy a refurbished PC you may not get the latest software, such as Windows 98, for example.
PC prices continue to freefall
March 23, 1999
Top 10 home PCs
January 19, 1999
New lives for old PCs
(PC World Online)
School + Computer + Donation = Tax Break
(PC World Online)
Recycled PCs pose Y2K challenge
(Computerworld)
New lives for PCs and people
(PC World Online)
Micron and Gateway offer dollars for your old PC
(PC World Online)
Crank up your old PC to 366 MHz
(PC World Online)
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Pre-Owned Electronics, Inc.
Packard Bell PC Factory Outlet
ReCompute
Rumarson Technologies
HP Refurbished Equipment
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