Since you seem more worried than I initially thought:
I’ve not heard of any of these major brands breaking soon after purchase. And, while I’ve heard of bad service, it’s not that bad, just annoying. And, finally, if something went wrong and Acer wouldn’t/couldn’t help, PCs are one of the most user repairable devices out there, or could be fixed by a third party.
You’re computer will probably be fine. The only thing I was checking on was how easily it could be upgraded.
Probably just light in hardware features, like mic and cam — my low-end Dell Latitude didn.t have them either. I’d worry about the durability of high-use hardware like keyboard and USB ports… I’ve been running a Acer optical mouse now for 4 years and it’s fine. Bought is for $2 out of a cannibalized box.
You have effectively opened three different threads about one thing (selecting and buying a new computer). I’m not going to try merging the threads since that is likely to create an incomprehensible jumbled mess, but for future reference, we would appreciate it if you did not open multiple threads for essentially the same topic or a continuation of the same topic.
Thanks, and I hope you enjoy your new computer.
Edited by PuzzleGal to add:
I was moving the posts as engineer_comp_geek wrote. The next several posts were originally in a topic named something like, “what are the best brands of computers”.
I agree with Bippity. You seem to be fishing for reassurance about something you’ve already done, or are otherwise being disingenuous. The reality is that there’s a vast spectrum of quality among major computer brands, and it changes with time and with different models. Dell for example has both business and consumer lines, and both high ends and low ends in both, and all are different. You’re in the best position to know whether the specific computer you have was a good buy, and any advice anyone can give about what to buy in the future is purely conjectural. And the option of building your own may also be a good one – it all depends. Trying to address this OP seems like a waste of time.
I’d imagine it depends a lot on the characeristics you most want in a computer.
I’ve owned about 18 computers, all of them Apple Macs. Folks who fault them tend to emphasize their lack of expansion (which isn’t anywhere near as limited as reputed) and for a long time the use of components other than the mainstream ones used in PCs, but now Macs are PCs (at least until the M1 chip takes over the whole line at any rate) and can run Intel Linux distros and MS Windows on the same basis as their competitors. Their primary advantage of Macs in my opinion is that the computer you buy can be your primary computer for up to a decade; they tend to be engineered with longevity in mind. You may still find the range of options at purchase point to be more narrow than you want though.
It’s got an SSD but only 512GB. If it were mine, I would add a storage drive or three, but I tend to do a lot of storage-heavy things, and that’s a really easy, cheap upgrade.
That’s such a light demand on a computer that almost any brand, any model would be adequate.
I hope you’ll be very happy web surfing with yours. And not worry about it.
You sound like my senior “beginning computer” students, who are very intelligent and capable, until they’re confronted with a PC. Then their brain kind of shuts off and they get scared.
But it does seem like there’s some fear involved, if you’re asking this after you’ve bought one. It’s like “I’ve got a new car! But I’ve heard they get into accidents. If I need a new car in ten years, what should I get next?”
I hope you can get used to your new toy, and either learn more about it… or be so immersed with what’s happening on the screen that you don’t even think about what kind of box you’re looking at it with.
I actually have most of them upstairs in my “computer museum”, in running order and networked. A few on the list of 18 were replacements for each other as boards fried (or in one case got ruined in a thunderstorm) but each model has one viable bootable incarnation with the classic/preserved HD contents, with the exception of my System 6 LC which is sidelined for the time being.
My dad’s even cheaper computer mentioned it, as does a similar model (with a 91). And I don’t just mean on Amazon: I didn’t find the spec mentioned anywhere the computer was listed.
It was just weird, something I’ve never seen before.