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But
2. Even if there was a glut, what is the labor cost of maintaining older, crash-prone machines with failing hard drives, CD drives, monitors, everything?
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Re: But
I still see tons of auctions on eBay that say the equipment came from a failed dot com, downsizing telecom, or somesuch. Plus every time I look at DoveBid there's a major trashed technology company being liquidated (today, 360Networks, for all your long haul fiber needs, tomorrow, NextCard, for all your random computer hardware needs).
I actually just bought a Sun from one of those auctions. I would've bought a new one from Sun (at 10x the price, and about 2x the performance), but there was such an ample used supply there was no need.
As to the cost of maintaining older equipment, the equipment I've seen people pick up are higher quality than the new stuff they would've bought otherwise. For instance, we'll pick up a used Cisco switch rather than a new Netgear one. The Cisco switches are actually easier for our network admins to monitor and maintain.
What's more, in the past I saw a good deal of untouched equipment for sale.. Stuff the liquidated firm hadn't even opened yet. That supply seems to have pretty much dried up though.
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