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Meg A. Byte, a pseudonym for technology writer, educator, and educational technology consultant Constance Bleiler, is Education World's technology expert.

Paul Coyan's response to From Stone Age to Information Age

"I'm the kind of guy who always wants the latest, greatest, cutting edge technology I can get my hands on. Although I have a rocket of a Gateway in my home network, I also have an e-machine I bought on clearance. I would pit my e-machine with its Celeron 600 against my Gateway with its Pentium III 600 any day of the week! For $20, I bumped up the e-machine's RAM from 32 MEGs to 128 MEGs. For $5 more, I added a network card that runs 10/100 Ethernet as fast as my Gateway. This two-year-old e-machine runs Win XP and Office XP flawlessly, handles our DSL Internet like a champ, and delivers consistently with any and all multimedia graphics-intensive programs and games my teen son can throw at it! Bottom line, e-machines are expandable. About $20 worth of RAM and a $5 NIC made the size of the hard drive (10 gig in mine -- more than enough to store the usual software found in classrooms) a moot point; its storage limitations are only limited by the school's server and its hard drive. So before you shoot down those "pet rocks" for schools, you might want to remember that the total cost of my e-machine was $479.00 and my Gateway was $3,200.00. Everyone I know who bought an e-machine used the money they saved to buy their first ten new programs to run on it. (BTW, new e-machines start at $549.00 and come with -- at least -- Celeron 850s, 128 meg of RAM, 20 gig hard drives, and DVD-ROMs.)