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  2. 7 Costco Computer Deals To Shop This Fall - AOL

    www.aol.com/7-costco-computer-deals-shop...

    This beast of a computer got the same Intel processor and NVIDIA graphics card as the desktop above. It has also a giant 18-inch screen, which runs at 240Hz — that means super smooth gameplay.

  3. Ultra-low-cost personal computer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultra-low-cost_personal...

    An ultra-low-cost personal computer (ULCPC) is an inexpensive personal computer such as a netbook or a nettop.It is most often used by Microsoft to define a class of computers that are eligible for special licensing and discounts.

  4. NLX (form factor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NLX_(form_factor)

    NLX (short for New Low Profile eXtended) was a form factor proposed by Intel and developed jointly with IBM, DEC, and other vendors for low profile, low cost, mass-marketed retail PCs. Release 1.2 was finalized in March 1997 and release 1.8 was finalized in April 1999.

  5. Lenovo Essential desktops - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenovo_Essential_Desktops

    Desktop Review listed the pros of the desktop as the good 20-inch display with a resolution of 1600x900, the 3.5 inch hard disk drive, and the optional discrete graphics. [2] The cons were listed as the keyboard, and the standard single core Intel Atom 230 1.6 GHz processor. [2] The desktop's dimensions were 19.05 x 14.12 x 3.28 inches. [2]

  6. ThinkCentre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ThinkCentre

    In March 2009, two small, low-cost desktops were announced by Lenovo: the ThinkCentre A58 and the ThinkCentre M58e. [20] The A58 desktop was designed for small and medium businesses, while the M58e was designed for medium-sized and large enterprises. [20] The desktops were made available in both tower and small form-factor versions. [20]

  7. Home computer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_computer

    In 1987, longtime small computer maker Zenith introduced a low-cost PC they called the EaZy PC. [ 50 ] [ 51 ] This was positioned as an "appliance" computer much like the original Apple Macintosh: turnkey startup, built-in monochrome video monitor, and lacking expansion slots, requiring proprietary add-ons available only from Zenith, but ...

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