| Fortune 
 May 25, 1998
 
 SECTION: TECHNO FILE/INFOTECH/AGONY OF DEFEAT; Pg. 158
 LENGTH: 296 words
 HEADLINE:  Dell  Delivers; HP Eats Crow
 BYLINE: David Kirkpatrick
 Dell  Computer, the pride of Austin, Texas, and the envy of the personal
 computer world, just got a little more enviable. In our last issue, we explained
 the  Dell  miracle in detail and reported that some competitors were still
 unimpressed. Jim McDonnell, Hewlett-Packard's marketing boss for PCs, insisted
 in the cover story that his company can deliver a machine to a customer faster
 than  Dell,  even though HP ships through a reseller. He dared us to conduct a
 test. "Try it," he said. "Buy a  Dell.  See how long it takes you to get one. I
 guarantee it will take at least a week. If it doesn't, I'll pay for it."   We did. It didn't. He owes us.
 
 On Friday night, April 17, we got on the Internet, logged on to
 www. dell. com, and ordered up a state-of-the-art screamer with one of Intel's
 just-released 400 megahertz microprocessors. This baby has 64 megabytes of RAM,
 a 6.4-gigabyte hard drive, and a 17-inch monitor, among other features. It costs
 only $ 2,399. We did not opt for overnight delivery (an extra $ 30). And to
 ensure that  Dell  wouldn't recognize an order from FORTUNE and give us special
 treatment, I had the machine sent to my home. It arrived the afternoon of
 Wednesday, April 22.
 
 McDonnell is relatively gracious in defeat, but he's not even considering
 backing down. "Every once in a while the moons line up," he concedes. "But as
 far as corporate customers go, I stand by my comments." He was willing to pay
 up, too, but we decided to let him off the hook, figuring that the appearance of
 this article was a high enough price to pay. Besides, Hewlett-Packard has
 absolutely nothing to be ashamed of. The latest data from research firms
 Dataquest and IDC show that HP remains the fastest-growing major PC maker on the
 planet.
 
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