Model: Dell Precision 3440
Type: SFF
Supports 10th Gen Processors
2 x NVME Slot
1 x WiFi Slot
4 x DDR4 RAM Slot
3 x SATA ports
1 x PCIE 16x Slot
1 x PCIE 4x Slot
Yes, but will be brand new and will be available by 15th of July.
Currently i have not seen any 1L 10th gen or higher with PCIE slots like the P330/M920(q/x) series, so if you want more than 1 nic in 1L currently your only options are 8th/9th gen Tiny PCs like these:
Maybe you can change the way the pricing is displayed. When one starts with a price of 9,999 and then for anything usable, the price is 23,299/-, it leaves a sour taste in the mouth. Expectations are set with seeing the original price and anything beyond doesn’t feel the best.
Same thing happens with Asus’s estore. It says starts from 70,000 and anything in stock is 1,10,000 or above. I don’t even visit that website anymore.
You can probably start with the price of full mini PC and reduce the price if someone doesn’t want something.
You can take the feedback as you like or maybe run an experiment on what type of consumers you get on your website. Maybe, they don’t think the same as I do.
Ok. Thanks for the suggestion. I will see what others have to say about it.
The base pricing is for the barebones for those that just want the system without any cpu storage or ram.. etc and build up the system to the config they want.
It will be a lot of additional work to maintain a separate product with each specific configs with its pricing.
The title of the product is not variable it doesn’t/cannot change with what config you have selected e.g. if i am selling HP 400 g9 with i5 12500t in the title because i will have to specify the cpu, ram and ssd etc in the title, then when a user goes into change i5 to an i3… suddenly the title becomes invalid and at the backend and in the invoice etc it will create confusion as to what was actually ordered.
Title need not change just like customizing on Lenovo’s website. One is still buying HP 400 g9.
The expectations are set when one first sees the price. We all know that the price is going to be higher if I buy a higher spec. But, the base price listed should be something that works out of the box. You can reduce the price if someone doesn’t want something just like Dell/Lenovo do sometimes. Most people are not going to buy a mini PC without a processor from you, so I think most people will feel a little bummed out when they see the actual price (which is more than twice the original price in most cases).
May be the initial landing page can open by showing the minimum possible config like i3,4G,128/256G and say ’ starting from “xx,xxx” '.
The confusion is because we can buy barebones and a specced pc under the same product. I wouldn’t be surprised if some regular folks miss the component selection, buys a barebone pc and later complain back that they expected a full mini pc at that price.
Based on the % sales expected for barebones, if its not much may be you can let users delete the individual components and purchase barebones under the same product or if they are significant then have just the barebones one as a separate product category.
May be you can make two listings, ready-to-go and barebones? Use words like Full PC and Build Your PC or something like that? I agree with what @@codwapeace and @@pa1 said!