A Persistent Problem

"I bought a Dell PC for my wife and was horrified at the amount of time she wasted killing never-say-die Craplets," says supercomputer specialist Lee Higbie of Fairbanks, Alaska. He adds, "I've heard that Dell now allows a no-trialware installation...without that option, I wouldn't consider Dell again."
We discovered that Dell does indeed allow PC purchasers to opt out of a lot of third-party extras when we recently bought a couple of Inspiron 530 desktops online. The computers arrived with far fewer non-Windows extras on them than the Dell-supplied Inspiron 531 we initially tested (for a comparison, click on the screen-shot thumbnail at left). To achieve that relative state of cleanliness, however, we had to carefully uncheck a lot of boxes as we went through Dell's lengthy customization wizard. Because we made no special effort to order gunk-free systems from the other vendors, we decided to keep the Inspiron 531 on our chart.
It's worth noting that some preloaded programs are quite convenient. Many people use Acrobat Reader, or the Roxio or Nero CD/DVD-burning software that comes with some systems. But most such extras are not so worthwhile.
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