build your own cost benies
Actually, I think that you CAN save quite a bit with a build your own system. What I did was ask a friend who was already producing music with Cakewalk (as a hobby, but pretty good stuff) what he used. He said he got his system from Gateway and gave me the specs. I also looked at Gateway's "musician's special" which was supposedly optimised for home recording. I looked at the specs, and went through a search on wholesaler computer sites like
www.TigerDirect.com and also looked for specific components on Ebay, and I basically matched what Gateway offered.
I built this machine for $450:
**Albatron KX400+ Pro Motherboard (5PCI, 1 AGP, 3 DDR Ram slots)
TigerDirect
**AMD Athlon XP 1700 processor
TigerDirect
**Maxtor 40gb 7200 rpm ATA133 IDE hard drive
TigerDirect
**ThermalTake Volcano CPU heatsink/fan
TigerDirect
**ATX tower case w/ 350w power supply (beige)
TigerDirect
**Creative Audigy soundcard
Ebay
**Galaxy GeForce2 MX200 64mb video card
Ebay
**256mb DDR PC2100 SDRAM
Ebay
Gateway's machine came with a CDR drive, and Windows XP. Nothing else they offered would be of any value to me. If you have Windows installed on another machine, and you DO NOT use that machine anymore, it is legal to install Windows on the new machine under the same license. I plan on getting a CDR drive, but a better one than what would have been on the Gateway box.
Gateway's price: $1200
The rig I built isn't top of the line, but it will be plenty for using Cakewalk in a home environment, hobby type situation. If you are going from a 533mz with 64mb Ram, it will be a HUGE difference.
As far as software goes, I think most of the software you get with a package system is fluff, and usually worthless. How often do you get any use out that stuff? Almost 100% of the software I actually use, I buy seperately, or its a free download, that I can easily install again on the new machine.