Go for it. You won't regret it.
I have three PC's at home which are linked via a server in my hall to my university for me to access the stuff I need out of hours. I also have another PC that's linked to a government computer network as I do a bit of moonlighting for government agencies.
For technical reasons, these networks have restricted some of the freedom I'd like on the internet due to powerful antivirus and firewall protection that cannot be disabled.
In March, I started looking for a new fairly powerful PC that I could connect to Tiscali Broadband, my own ISP. I spoke to quite a few IT technicians at uni, who told me to steer clear of many of the most famous makes such as Dell and Acer. They had all heard of and had good experiences with PC Specialist. This was good enough for me so I went ahead and built my own system using the system builder online.
I can't remember all the spec, but I know the system I bought uses an 3.2 GHz AMD 6400+ dual core chip, an Epsilon 900w PSU, a "heat-pump" heatsink device for the CPU, a Nvidia GForce 8600 1024 mHz graphics card, ASUSTek M3A motherboard, 4096 MB top-speed Corsair memory, 2X500GB HDD, Realtec sound Card, 52 card memory card reader, 2 Lightscribe DVD RW Dual Layer drives, Asus wireless adapter card, TV card, firewire Ports, 10 USB2 sockets, upgraded wired keyboard ( I detest wireless keyboards and mice!), wired optical mouse, speakers, 19 inch upgraded LCD monitor (more pixels) and a silver aluminium Trigon case (hinged RH side only).
The installed software included MS Office 2007 trial - I didn't need this as I bought a two disc set of Office 2007 Professional Plus for around �40 from an educational supplier, which retails at over �400 from the likes of PC World ( Office 2007 student edition is rubbish compared to it and more costly when bought from PC World). Other software included LG video player, the latest version of Nero, sound