March 4, 1999
Used-PC Bargains Add Appeal to Life in the Slow Lane
By ANNE EISENBERG
In an age when you can't be too rich or too thin or have too much
RAM, is there any reason to buy a secondhand computer, one of those
early wood-burning Pentiums?
Photo credit:
Janet Durrans for The New York Times
Photo caption:
Computer resellers have grown rapidly. At Computer Renaissance, in
Norwalk, Conn., Ken Barten cleaned monitors.
_________________________________________________________________
There could well be, if you use a computer for simple tasks like
word processing and e-mail and are willing to sacrifice a few
megahertz to save money.
The new generation of used machines will suit many people's daily
computer needs, some industry experts say. They predict that
secondhand personal computers could have substantial appeal for
computer buyers in 1999.
"A year and a half ago, most of the machines hitting the used
market were 486's -- a bit slow for many applications," said
Christine Arrington, an analyst at the International Data
Corporation, a research business specializing in technology that is
based in Framingham, Mass. "Now used machines -- low-end Pentiums
or comparable Macs -- can handle applications like Internet
connections and some spreadsheets that are very attractive to
buyers."
Even the older 486's are adequate for e-mail and word processing,
although they often cannot run Windows 95 or 98. Ms. Arrington, who
prepared a research report on secondhand PC sales for her company,
estimated that more than 6.4 million used PC's were shipped in
1998, mainly to small businesses and offices, local governments and
school systems. In 1999, that number is very likely to be well over
7.4 million, and by 2000, 8.1 million, Ms. Arrington said. The
figures included Apple Macintosh computers.
Ms. Arrington said she saw an increasing number of individual
consumers joining the mix of schools, businesses and government
offices buying used computers.
"As prices continue to drop, vendors of used PC's will pay less,
making the costs very attractive to the home market," Ms. Arrington
said, citing the growth of computer resellers like Computer
Renaissance, based in Minneapolis. Computer Renaissance is a
franchise operation that buys and sells new and used computers from
240 stores in the United States and Canada. Eighty of them were
added in 1998 and another 80 are expected in 1999, said Richard B.
Brill, a company spokesman.
_________________________________________________________________
USED COMPUTERS
Here are some of the many sites on the Web selling computers that are
not new: the refurbished, the remanufactured, the pre-owned and the
plain old used.
Datatech Remarketing :www.datatech-rmkt.com
Specializes in reconditioned Macs and other Apple products. Six-month
guarantee. (800) 281-3661.
Recompute : www.re-compute.com
Offers upgraded used computer systems manufactured by Dell, Compaq,
I.B.M. and Hewlett Packard, among others. Systems are typically
acquired after corporate leases expire, said Brian Kushner, chief
executive of the company. One-year limited warranties.
Used Computer Exchange : www.edeal.com
Person-to-person auction. The seller pays the fee. The site offers
free evaluations of current market prices for PC's and Macs.
The Used Computer Mall : www.usedcomputer.com.
Includes free classified ads for buying and selling computer
equipment; lists computer equipment auctions, shows, swap meets and
manufacturers' phone numbers.
Excess Quality New and Used Computers : www.qnuc.com
Specializes in used and refurbished computers. The owner, Joe
Ventimiglia, said he sold about 30 systems a week. "There are lots of
jobs that you don't need all the bells and whistles for," he said.
Onsale : www.onsale.com
This auction site includes refurbished computers.
Onsale's listings are also at Yahoo (auctions.yahoo.com).
Ebay : www.ebay.com
This auction site offers Macs, PC's, peripherals and software. The
seller pays the fee.
_________________________________________________________________
Relatively powerful used desktop systems may be bought these days
for as little as $300 -- a low-cost solution to the problem of two
children fighting over who can use the computer. Owners can even
buy home network technology -- wired or wireless -- and link the
computers, eliminating the need for such extras as a second printer
or a second Internet account. Experts say consumers are safest if
they stick to a low-end Pentium, 75 megahertz or faster, with 16
megabytes of RAM and a hard drive of 810 megabytes or more.
"Networking has been a growing application for pre-owned
computers," said Brian Kushner, chairman and chief executive of
Recompute, an online company that sells new and used PC's to
companies, schools and homes. "Six months ago, we had no sales of
network cards to individual consumers. Now about 5 percent of the
individual consumers who buy from us want them."
Of course, this is in a market in which new computers can cost as
little as $500 and some businesses are offering new computers free
to schools or individual consumers if they are willing to provide
personal information and accept advertising on their desktops.
Ms. Arrington said she believed that the home market would continue
to grow despite the plummeting prices of new PC's. "The drop in
prices may tighten the market, but it won't kill it -- not until we
see a sub-$99 machine," Ms. Arrington said.
At Computer Options in Raleigh, N.C., where 90 percent of the
business is in used computers, the shop has been so busy that
Annette Freeman, the owner, recently moved to a bigger location in
a shopping center to double her floor space.
A browser in her shop on a recent Saturday afternoon, Steve
Richards of Raleigh, said over the telephone that he bought a used
computer last year that he thought had been a good deal. "It's like
buying a car," he said.
"You can buy a brand-new car, or wait a year or two and get roughly
the same sort of functions, but far more cheaply. You don't always
have to have the top of the line."
Len Schiefer, who lives in Ridgewood, Queens, echoed that
philosophy. He bought a powerful computer for $300 last year,
buying it not from a shop or online but from a friend who wanted a
fancier system.
While the bulk of used computer sales tracked by analysts are for
desktop models, used portable computers are also popular choices
for equipping college students or people who are road warriors only
occasionally and need an inexpensive way to check their e-mail
while traveling.
James McQuivey, a senior analyst at Forrester Research, based in
Cambridge, Mass., said portable computers could be a good buy. "You
can get a good machine that's a year or two old, but nicely loaded,
for half the price of a new one -- or even less," he said.
"New laptops are expensive," said Alex Wong, manager of USPC, a
shop in New York City. "If you have only $500 to spend, you can't
afford a new one. After we've paid $2,500 for a laptop and rented
it for 18 months, we can sell it to you for $500 to $600."
Despite the lure of possible savings, it takes nerve to buy a used
computer, as many consumers accustomed to the comforts of extensive
warranties, technical support and preloaded software realize.
Photo credit:
Janet Durrans for The New York Times
Photo caption:
Benno Schapira is the owner of Computer Renaissance in Norwalk, Conn.
_________________________________________________________________
Even the language of used computers can be confusing.
"Pre-owned" is easy enough, but "reconditioned," "refurbished,"
"resold," "remanufactured" and even "recomputed" may require some
defining.
" 'Refurbished' usually means that the computer went back to the
original manufacturer, perhaps because it was defective," explained
Phillip Lemmonds, president of Datatech Remarketing, an online
company. "At Datatech we do the fix-up work ourselves -- the
equipment doesn't go back to Apple.
So our computers are 'reconditioned' rather than 'refurbished.' "
Kushner, of Recompute, said: "We upgrade the pre-owned personal
computer systems that we sell. We use the terms 'remanufactured'
and 'recomputed' to show that we have reconfigured, rebuilt and
upgraded the system."
At the least, buying a machine that is a few years old means that
the inevitable bugs in the hardware and software may actually have
been detected and fixed.
If a new system is going to fail, it tends to fail in the first 90
days, said Joe Ventimiglia, owner of Excess Quality New and Used
Computers in Campbell, Calif. "After that, failures are usually
much farther out," he said.
On the other hand, new software is made for new computers, and an
older PC might be unable to run common current programs -- or to
handle documents from others -- like e-mail attachments, for
example -- if they are written with those current programs. Buyers
of secondhand computers can guard against fly-by-night operators by
checking to see if a business is licensed. They can also ask for
warranties. Most shops offer warranties of 30 days to a year on
used computers.
Those who do not need the comfort of a corner shop can try the
Internet. David A. Karp, author of "Windows 98 Annoyances"
(O'Reilly & Associates, 1998), developed an online computer swap
site but pointed out that such sites posed inherent difficulties
for some users.
"People don't like to send money to someone they've never met," he
said.
Still, Karp estimated that among the 195,000 visitors to his site,
www.creativelement.com, several thousand had completed sales.
"I put up my modem for $50 -- why not? -- and I had three people
who wanted it in three days."
The bravest shoppers can try online auction sites like Onsale or
Ebay. Many computer manufacturers sell their refurbished and
discontinued merchandise online. Other sites specialize in a
particular type of used computer, like laptops or Macs. The true
experts can scour computer hardware shows, flea markets and swap
meets.
Datatech Remarketing concentrates solely on secondhand Apples and
Macs. "We open them up, blow the dust out, test the components,
reload the operating system, put them back together, clean the case
-- and sell them," Lemmonds said.
He added that he had benefited from overkill in the computer
industry -- the stream of new machines laden with more memory,
speed and storage than the average user needs. "Why do most people
need a six-gig hard drive?" he said. "I have a 500-meg hard drive,
and it does all that I want it to."
Because comparison shopping for used computers is difficult --
there are so many different configurations -- many users make a
list of desired features and check market prices through computer
magazines and online appraisal services like the Used Computer
Exchange (www.edeal.com)
and the American Computer Exchange (www.amcoex.com>. The bible for
used computer prices is the Orion Computer Blue Book, $129 an
issue, published quarterly.
Many used computer shops carry the book and use it as a basis for
their pricing (it can be ordered online at www.usedcomputer.com
).
Shopping for a used computer takes its toll in time and energy.
According to the small print in many software licensing agreements
-- those from Microsoft, for instance -- owners may transfer their
license to use the software as part of a sale but cannot keep any
copies and must relinquish any entitlement to free upgrades as well
as to all earlier versions.
Many owners will not do this. Those who buy a used computer from
such people will legally need to reformat the hard drive and
install new software if the software on the machine is registered
to the original owner.
For the novice, the best choice may be a corner store or Internet
site that offers some initial advice and technical support along
with the used machine.
Copyright 1999 The New York Times Company
VICUG-L is the Visually Impaired Computer User Group List.
To join or leave the list, send a message to
[log in to unmask] In the body of the message, simply type
"subscribe vicug-l" or "unsubscribe vicug-l" without the quotations.
VICUG-L is archived on the World Wide Web at
http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/vicug-l.html
|