Seriously - if an extra 8G of ram is making you spend a grand more for hardware, you need to spend some more time researching the field.
I tend to ask people I trust, and nobody has advised me to go and get this C= product. If you buy a computer once every four years, what is the point on staying up-to-date? Thanks for the links. Actually, I have a pile of RAM laying around, but it's all different speeds and what-not. I really should turn it over to the IT department, I have absolutely no use for it.
Wow, one person was willing to buy the Amiga Mini!
Just in the nick of time, they managed to lose the sale by ducking a legitimate question.
@vexar Don't feel to bad, they can't answer your question, because they haven't made one yet. Your only fortunate they didn't delete your post for daring to challenge them. Xerxes is probably facing a ban from the site for his heresy.
@Optimus, to be fair, they did say they "imagined" it would run Blu-Ray just fine. Couldn't be bothered to go and test basic hardware functionality, and they admitted it. See, in my job, we spend time analyzing both what was said and what was not said by an individual or organization. The CTO for my division would have answered something to the effect of:
"All our products are tested and guaranteed to operate according to specifications. We do not warranty the behavior of specific software products which are not part of Commodore OS Vision, however if you run into concerns with the hardware or our operating system, you may log a Technical Support Request."
It is a solid, powerful response. If I pried for testing data, I would have expected the response of:
"Our testing process is a proprietary operation of our business, and we do not disseminate this information to the public. Our work complies with regulations for our industry and records of our testing results are held by managing regulatory groups."
What I now know is that the CTO for Commodore had a rough week, he's angry about something, he can't filter himself, and he really hasn't tested the products very much, but was reckless enough to admit it. Can you imagine the CTO of Dell saying this sort of thing?
So, here's a fun thing to ask anyone with an existing Commodore USA system: was there a UL, CSA, and FCC sticker on the box somewhere? Those would be the organizations that would test the soundness of the hardware, dissolving my gripping concerns about power consumption.