PC Week 
  Monday, August 4, 1997 
  Vol. 14, No. 33 
  Dell NT Workstation Hits Low Price Point  Gruener, James 
    Dell Computer Corp. officially entered the exploding Windows NT  personal workstation market last week with its first workstation that  features the Pentium II processor--a move that should lower prices in  the market for some users. 
    Called the WorkStation 400, the NT personal workstation will have  single or dual Pentium II chips with speeds of 266MHz or 300MHz. It will 
  be targeted at mechanical CAD, financial services and software  development markets. 
    The company plans to take the success of its direct sales model, used  in the server and desktop arenas, to workstation customers. Dell is  planning to offer an in-house 24-by-7 technical support staff for  customer inquiries and has worked with selected workstation graphics  application vendors to make sure the vendors' software will be  compatible with its workstations. 
    "The biggest thing that sets Dell apart is its prices," said Joey  Lamb, a network administrator for Pioneer Military Lending Inc., of  Kansas City, Mo., which recently purchased two WorkStation 400s. "I did  some rather extensive research [and] found that no one really had a  large enough advantage for me to choose them [over Dell]." 
    The new systems have 64MB to 512MB of error correction code memory;  standard 2GB, 4GB or 9GB Ultra Wide SCSI hard drives; integrated 3Com  Corp. 10/100M-bps Fast Ethernet networking; 16-bit sound; two Universal  Serial Bus ports; and a 12/24 variable-speed CD-ROM drive. 
    Analysts suggest that Dell will likely become the vendor of choice for  second-round customers. Its entrance into the NT personal workstation  market may trigger a change, insofar as the market will look more like  the PC market, having five vendors with significant market shares  jockeying for position. 
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