1. PC Or Business Computer - InfoBarrel
One Of The First Computers
Credit: Wikimedia Commons: (== Summary == One of the first personal computers. The photo is
modified version of this: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Science_museum_025.jpg ==
Licensing == PD-self Category:Apple II )
Can you use a PC? Do you need business one? You will need to figure out your requirements for
your business. A personal one for the home is only slightly less powerful than a business one, and
most now days could just as easily be used in most enterprises. If you decide your needs and
requirements, and if they match a home PC brand, then it makes sense to save money and use the
personal one. It is not the original use you but whether it can meet your business requirements.
Needs To Handle Commercial Software
Whatever one you choose will need to handle business level software, or it is not of much use to
you. You need the right desktop for the right job. For online business you will need a desktop that
is able to do the work load of your requirements. Lean toward Intel on your computing with the dual
or quad-core processors. Of course cost factors in as well. Try to get the least expensive that still
meets all your business needs.
2. Must Handle Accounting And Payroll Software
Business computers mostly handle email, access to the Internet, and accounting and payroll
software. The real problem is not against personal computers, but can the computer handle the
extra requirements that business software places on it. Most computing problems are not caused by
hardware, but by software problems. Therefore you will want to also know in advance what the
software is that you need and what are the requirements of it.
Same Hardware In Both
Business software will not automatically come with any computer whether business or personal. You
will want to have your software already lined up and then get a computer than is fast and can handle
the software. This is just the opposite buying strategy of most people who buy and computer than
buy the software hoping the computer can play it.
Don't Take The Cheapest
Do not just look for the cheapest, rather look for one that meets your software and work
requirements, and then look at the prices. The one that meets your needs, and reliability issues, is
the best one for ninja newbie training you. Once you have the requirements met, you want reliability
in the PC and manufacturer. Looking into Consumer Reports is of help in this.
Choose What Works
Just remember what I have already said, both types have the same basic hardware. The issue is one
of reliability, and being able to handle software.
Video On The Subject
Upgrading to a dual or quad processer