peacecup wrote: I doubt many home users in Italy spend 500-1000 Euros for home espresso equipment.
You'd be right, as most of the coffee made in the home is out of a moka pot. The other influencing factor is the ubiquity of espresso available, and the habit for Italians, and most Europeans, to go out and get something rather than keep it in the house. Most European refrigerators are not much larger than what we'd expect to see in the mini-bar of a decent hotel. When I lived there, it wasn't more'n a few minutes walk to the post office, the bakery, the candy store, the butcher, the grocer, church, medical care, the drugstore, the shoe store, you name it.
It really isn't an orange to orange comparison.
And speaking of the handle side of the PF, I'd suggest that the noobs get into something that won't need too much faking it. I've made baristi (and an Italian actor that does impressions of a certain Catholic Priest on Saturday Nights...) espresso and cappuccini with a Krups 963 and had them be amazed at the results. Was it 'real espresso? I dunno, but it regularly beat anything I'd ever gotten from anything with a mermaid on the door in front of it. It required that I push the K93 beyond design parameters (but not safety parameters) and learn my own technique. While I could get it to do something that so closely resembled espresso as to be nearly indistinguishable from what came out of my Silvia at the same time, and do it for under $100 with used kit, I'm not sure that I would suggest that this cat send all of his friends searching the internet for used kit to hurt in the name of coffee.
While your answers are effectively correct, their use in the stated application by the OP isn't really workable.