At the beginning and end of the money categories, you should have the "Word Processor" and the "Supercomputer", which would be the cheapest and the most expensive computers. Unlike the other categories, the "Word Processor" shouldn't have both an Intel and AMD model, just the one that's the cheapest.
Supercomputer may be like $5000+, and I have a lil word processor cooked up right here for $337.91 : https://secure.newegg.com/NewVersion/WishList/MySavedWishDetail.asp?ID=4756685
It's $199.93 without keyboard, mouse, and speakers. This should run XP and MS office. (But nothing else, unless you have Sim Farm or Red Alert or something like that.)
There should be a sticky post at the top of this page with the grid of wish lists on it.
Also, I think there should be money categories above $1500, because I would definitely use this to get a computer, except my budget was $2500. I think you should have
| Comps | Word Processor | $500 | $700 | $1000 | $1200 | $1500 | $1700 | $2000 | $2200 | $2500 | Super Computer |
| AMD |
| Intel | The grid of wish lists goes in here, maybe as little "X"s or something that link to the shared list.
| Monitors | Economy pick | Mid-Range | High-End |
| LCD |
| CRT |
| Keybd/mouse | Economy pick | Mid-Range | High-End |
On this one, you could have the speaker/keybd./mouse pack under "economy", and individual gaming parts under "high end".
| Speakers | Economy pick | Mid-Range | High-End |
That makes a total of 21 computer wish lists, plus three monthly picks for monitors, input devices, and speakers. I hope that grid comes out OK. I should have used HTML...
Not trying to steal your thunder, but just throwing the idea out there...
-BlueFlame