Building a 'High Performance' Windows 7 PC

I would certainly recommend going larger than a 32GB SSD drive for Windows. I wouldn't personally go smaller than a 128GB drive. The Windows install itself for 64-bit will be approaching 9GB and you are going to want a good number of your applications installed to the drive as well.

With regards to RAM...more isn't necessarily better. So unless you really have something that is going to chew up RAM (like running lots of virtual machines), 6GB (triple channel) and 8GB (dual channel) should suffice for just about everything.

With regards to processors, the entry level Core i7's are not terribly expensive and performance wise they are the way to go. My box currently has a Q9550 Quad Core in it and it performs great.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self-Built in July 2009
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Q9550 2.83Ghz OC'd to 3.40Ghz
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3R rev. 1.1, F12 BIOS
Memory
8GB G.Skill PI DDR2-800, 4-4-4-12 timings
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA 1280MB Nvidia GeForce GTX570
Sound Card
Realtek ALC899A 8 channel onboard audio
Monitor(s) Displays
23" Acer x233H
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Intel X25-M 80GB Gen 2 SSD
Western Digital 1TB Caviar Black, 32MB cache. WD1001FALS
PSU
Corsair 620HX modular
Case
Antec P182
Cooling
stock
Keyboard
ABS M1 Mechanical
Mouse
Logitech G9 Laser Mouse
Internet Speed
15/2 cable modem
Other Info
Windows and Linux enthusiast. Logitech G35 Headset.

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
sunfowerggs
OS
win98
CPU
sunfowerggs
Motherboard
sunfowerggs
Memory
sunfowerggs
Graphics Card(s)
sunfowerggs
Sound Card
sunfowerggs
Monitor(s) Displays
sunfowerggs
Hard Drives
sunfowerggs
PSU
sunfowerggs
Case
sunfowerggs
Cooling
sunfowerggs
With Windows 7 release candidate just around the corner, the other day I was asked to spec out a high performance PC suitable for Windows 7 64-bit, This system would also be a great Vista system.

Note: Just to clarify that this is a “high performance” PC, and not a “sky’s the limit, money no object” system. I am therefore choosing parts that offer the best bang for the buck at the high end, and not the very best, bleeding edge components.

Here’s the spec I came up with

Building a "High Performance" Windows 7 PC | Hardware 2.0 | ZDNet.com

Be careful! High performance PC's and modern Operating Systems don't equate to great performance. Keep in mind Vista / Windows 7 "intelligently" wants to fill all of your RAM with applications you might want to run later on.

But isn't that poor use of RAM you ask? Well not according to the Microsoft engineers / zealots who insist "Free RAM is wasted RAM". All I can say is research this yourself. Don't take my word or so-called "experts" on these forums as 'gospel'.

Just keep in mind the majority of the professional IT community in Academia, Federal and State governments stayed away from deploying Vista and possibly even Windows 7 due to the above performance crippling technologies.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell 8400
OS
Windows XP Professional
CPU
3.4Ghz HT
Motherboard
Dell
Memory
3.3GB
Graphics Card(s)
ATI X800 XT 256Mb
Sound Card
Sound Blaster
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung
Get off the 'RAM' soap-box will you please, Spazzie.

You've stated your opinions, others have stated theirs - how about just leaving it alone for now mate?
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Systems by SmartEyeball
OS
8 Pro x64
CPU
i7 3770K 4.6GHz
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z77 WS
Memory
16GB G.Skill Trident X 2666mhz
Graphics Card(s)
x2 EVGA 780 Ti Superclocked SLI
Sound Card
SB X-FI Surround 5.1 PRO USB / ATH-AD900 Headphones
Monitor(s) Displays
x3 Dell U2410 / 58" Samsung
Screen Resolution
5760*1200/ 1920*1200
Hard Drives
2x Intel 520 240GB (RAID 0) * 2x WD Caviar Blacks 2TB (RAID 0) * 2TB WD Caviar Black * Sony Optirac DVD
PSU
Silverstone Strider Evolution 1200W
Case
Thermaltake Level 10 GT Snow Edition
Cooling
Noctua NH-D14
Keyboard
Topre Realforce // Ducky Shine MX Black // Filco Ninja TKL
Mouse
Thermaltake Theron (Highly Recommended) + Razer Imperator
Antivirus
MSE
Browser
IE, FF, WaterFox
Other Info
GT Extreme V2 Sim Racing Cockpit + 40" LCD and K/B Mouse stand ▼
Fanatec CSR Elite Wheel + Clubsport V1 Pedals + CSR shifter/7G-H ▼Saitek X52 Pro ▼ TrackIR 5 Pro
Buttkicker v2 Seat Rumbler with Dedicated 5.1 and Sub Woofer attached to frame ▼
=
Bloody Big Grin
Be careful! High performance PC's and modern Operating Systems don't equate to great performance. Keep in mind Vista / Windows 7 "intelligently" wants to fill all of your RAM with applications you might want to run later on.

But isn't that poor use of RAM you ask? Well not according to the Microsoft engineers / zealots who insist "Free RAM is wasted RAM". All I can say is research this yourself. Don't take my word or so-called "experts" on these forums as 'gospel'.

Just keep in mind the majority of the professional IT community in Academia, Federal and State governments stayed away from deploying Vista and possibly even Windows 7 due to the above performance crippling technologies.

i have been running seven from the pre betas on to the rtm and have not had all my ram used so where do you get the idea win7 fills the ram ?????

cheers brad
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
my own build
OS
xp/vista/win7/win8/10 tech preview
CPU
PHENOM II X4 Quad Core 965 Black Edition CPU, 3.40 GHz
Motherboard
GA-MA790FXT-UD5P
Memory
G.Skill 8GB (4x XMS3 2GB) PC-12800 (1600MHz
Graphics Card(s)
nvidia 9500 gt
Sound Card
on board
Monitor(s) Displays
T231H / X243H ACER
Screen Resolution
1980/1080
Hard Drives
Hitachi 500 samsung1terabyte wd 750
PSU
550 watt
Case
cooler master
Cooling
stock
Keyboard
microsoft
Mouse
logitech
Internet Speed
20000 dl 1020 ul exetel
Other Info
booting xp32 2x dual pci-e digital tv tuners
xp pro v 1xusb2 digital tv tuner
vista ultimate 64
win7 64 win8 64
Be careful! High performance PC's and modern Operating Systems don't equate to great performance. Keep in mind Vista / Windows 7 "intelligently" wants to fill all of your RAM with applications you might want to run later on.

But isn't that poor use of RAM you ask? Well not according to the Microsoft engineers / zealots who insist "Free RAM is wasted RAM". All I can say is research this yourself. Don't take my word or so-called "experts" on these forums as 'gospel'.

Just keep in mind the majority of the professional IT community in Academia, Federal and State governments stayed away from deploying Vista and possibly even Windows 7 due to the above performance crippling technologies.

You need to get off your high-horse mate. I'm was running Windows 7 on a laptop with 768MB of RAM and there was no performance lag for what I needed it for. I even had Adobe Photoshop CS4 running smoothly.

Windows 7 manages RAM better than any other OS, and moves/allocates it where it is needed. Why does everything have to be a RAM issue with you?
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Compaq Desktop
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
AMD Sempron Dual Core
Memory
3GB
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce 6150SE nForce 430
Screen Resolution
1024x768
Hard Drives
150GB Sata
Be careful! High performance PC's and modern Operating Systems don't equate to great performance. Keep in mind Vista / Windows 7 "intelligently" wants to fill all of your RAM with applications you might want to run later on.

But isn't that poor use of RAM you ask? Well not according to the Microsoft engineers / zealots who insist "Free RAM is wasted RAM". All I can say is research this yourself. Don't take my word or so-called "experts" on these forums as 'gospel'.

Just keep in mind the majority of the professional IT community in Academia, Federal and State governments stayed away from deploying Vista and possibly even Windows 7 due to the above performance crippling technologies.

Well, to test these theories and see exactly for myself how Windows 7 stacked up against Windows XP, I performed a slew of tests with my handy stopwatch and some real world things that I do regularly.

I posted my results in this thread;
http://www.sevenforums.com/performa...peed-tests-xp-sp2-vs-win7-ultimate-32bit.html

As everybody here can plainly see. Experience with Windows 7 while performing no tweaking whatsoever, performed on par and better in some areas than Windows XP with the tests that I threw at it.

So I challenge those who disagree (spazzie...I'm talking to you), to take the time to perform some quantitative tests of their own to prove their statements....rather than just sit back and use slow adoption rates of businesses, schools and governments to adopt something new as conclusive evidence.

I've worked in some of these businesses and the reasons for slow adoption for Vista were 1). costs of licensing new software that didn't provide features deemed critical for business use 2). needing some machine upgrades to handle new OS requirements 3). having to re-create images already built on other OS's to deploy. 4). learning curve and training required to get users up to proficient levels with something new.

Of these reasons, the older machines isn't that much of an issue anymore as machines have been upgraded over the past few years and will work good with Windows 7. In addition, Windows 7 performs better than Windows Vista on lower-end hardware...so even the holdouts shouldn't have much of a problem anymore.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self-Built in July 2009
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Q9550 2.83Ghz OC'd to 3.40Ghz
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3R rev. 1.1, F12 BIOS
Memory
8GB G.Skill PI DDR2-800, 4-4-4-12 timings
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA 1280MB Nvidia GeForce GTX570
Sound Card
Realtek ALC899A 8 channel onboard audio
Monitor(s) Displays
23" Acer x233H
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Intel X25-M 80GB Gen 2 SSD
Western Digital 1TB Caviar Black, 32MB cache. WD1001FALS
PSU
Corsair 620HX modular
Case
Antec P182
Cooling
stock
Keyboard
ABS M1 Mechanical
Mouse
Logitech G9 Laser Mouse
Internet Speed
15/2 cable modem
Other Info
Windows and Linux enthusiast. Logitech G35 Headset.
I Run the Q9550 with 8Gb of RAM ... She flies. All I need now is a SSD (Solid State Hard Drive) for additional performance

I doubt you will ever get performance from a SSD drive in Windows 7 as the OS overheads cause contention between the users workload and the resources it wants to claim (basically everything).

One great example we use here at work to test Windows 7 readiness for the corporate environment is this:

Open Windows 7 Explorer and start a copy process of several large files in the background. While this is happening, ALT-TAB to your foreground apps and perform a few daily activities ... open up control panel, explorer, browse the web.

Note how unresponsive your own foreground applications become since Windows 7 will cause RAM contention as it aggressively uses all available RAM for its file operations.

In Windows XP this does not occur! Its just another reason to stay with XP unfortunately. :huh:
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell 8400
OS
Windows XP Professional
CPU
3.4Ghz HT
Motherboard
Dell
Memory
3.3GB
Graphics Card(s)
ATI X800 XT 256Mb
Sound Card
Sound Blaster
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung
spazzie

Just wondering if you ran those subjective tests as pparks suggested.

Ken
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP Pavillion dv-7 1005 Tx
OS
Win 8 Release candidate 8400
CPU
[email protected]
Memory
4 gigs
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia 9600M
Sound Card
HD built-in
Monitor(s) Displays
17" Wxga
Screen Resolution
1440x900
Cooling
none
Internet Speed
45Mb down 5Mb up
Well, to test these theories and see exactly for myself how Windows 7 stacked up against Windows XP, I performed a slew of tests with my handy stopwatch and some real world things that I do regularly.


So I challenge those who disagree (spazzie...I'm talking to you), to take the time to perform some quantitative tests of their own to prove their statements....rather than just sit back and use slow adoption rates of businesses, schools and governments to adopt something new as conclusive evidence.

Well at this stage of my testing, XP is providing myself, the user with a superior computing experience.

I can click on the Word 2007 shortcut and it opens within 4 seconds (not sure how you got 20 seconds???). After opening/closing word, other office apps open in around 2 seconds (pretty much instantly). So great performance on a SATA 7200RPM disk as you would expect less all the RAM overheads of Vista/Win7.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell 8400
OS
Windows XP Professional
CPU
3.4Ghz HT
Motherboard
Dell
Memory
3.3GB
Graphics Card(s)
ATI X800 XT 256Mb
Sound Card
Sound Blaster
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung
spazzie

Just wondering if you ran those subjective tests as pparks suggested.

Ken

I've completed the XP testing so far Ken, Windows 7 up next.

Even in 2009, Windows XP SP3 plus a slew of post SP hotfixes / updates such as IE8 continues to amaze and provides the user with a highly responsive computing experience.

I've yet to find likewise with Vista/Windows 7 given all the disk/ram contention / demands between the user and OS.

Quality testing takes time, so hopefully within the next few days I'll upload when time permits.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell 8400
OS
Windows XP Professional
CPU
3.4Ghz HT
Motherboard
Dell
Memory
3.3GB
Graphics Card(s)
ATI X800 XT 256Mb
Sound Card
Sound Blaster
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung
I doubt you will ever get performance from a SSD drive in Windows 7 as the OS overheads cause contention between the users workload and the resources it wants to claim (basically everything).

One great example we use here at work to test Windows 7 readiness for the corporate environment is this:

Open Windows 7 Explorer and start a copy process of several large files in the background. While this is happening, ALT-TAB to your foreground apps and perform a few daily activities ... open up control panel, explorer, browse the web.

Note how unresponsive your own foreground applications become since Windows 7 will cause RAM contention as it aggressively uses all available RAM for its file operations.

In Windows XP this does not occur! Its just another reason to stay with XP unfortunately. :huh:

I've used W7 with a normal HDD and SSD and I've seen major performance gains with a Solid State Drive on W7. Booting W7 is considerably faster and opening Word 2007 takes 1 second (or less).
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7
CPU
Q6600 G0 @ 3.0ghz
Motherboard
Asus Maximus Formula
Memory
Mushkin Redline 4gb
Graphics Card(s)
XFX 4890
Sound Card
Onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
NEC MultiSync LCD 1850x
Screen Resolution
1280x1024
Hard Drives
WD Raptor
PSU
Corsair 750w
Case
CM690
Cooling
Air
I doubt you will ever get performance from a SSD drive in Windows 7 as the OS overheads cause contention between the users workload and the resources it wants to claim (basically everything).
Huh...the performance of the SSD is basically no seek times. There can be a large gain...however many SSD drives suffer from a stuttering problem when running the OS...but that is the technology and not the OS.

Open Windows 7 Explorer and start a copy process of several large files in the background. While this is happening, ALT-TAB to your foreground apps and perform a few daily activities ... open up control panel, explorer, browse the web.
Alright, I just tried this on my Windows 7 box. I started copying a couple of virtual machines. 4 files at approx 14GB. I was easily able to move all over the box to any running foreground app. Surfing the web was just fine. I have no idea why this has ground your corporate machines to a halt.

Even in 2009, Windows XP SP3 plus a slew of post SP hotfixes / updates such as IE8 continues to amaze and provides the user with a highly responsive computing experience.
Well, I would hope that 8 years after release, with modern computing power having increased so dramatically, that Windows XP would be fast. To expect otherwise, would be just downright silly.

Quality testing takes time, so hopefully within the next few days I'll upload when time permits.
I'm anxiously looking forward to these test results. I'm certainly hoping you weren't taking a shot at my testing procedures since I knocked them out rather rapidly.

Any chance, you could tell me the exact tests that you are performing on Windows XP..so that I could test similarly against my hardware to compare our results?
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self-Built in July 2009
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Q9550 2.83Ghz OC'd to 3.40Ghz
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3R rev. 1.1, F12 BIOS
Memory
8GB G.Skill PI DDR2-800, 4-4-4-12 timings
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA 1280MB Nvidia GeForce GTX570
Sound Card
Realtek ALC899A 8 channel onboard audio
Monitor(s) Displays
23" Acer x233H
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Intel X25-M 80GB Gen 2 SSD
Western Digital 1TB Caviar Black, 32MB cache. WD1001FALS
PSU
Corsair 620HX modular
Case
Antec P182
Cooling
stock
Keyboard
ABS M1 Mechanical
Mouse
Logitech G9 Laser Mouse
Internet Speed
15/2 cable modem
Other Info
Windows and Linux enthusiast. Logitech G35 Headset.
Well at this stage of my testing, XP is providing myself, the user with a superior computing experience.

I can click on the Word 2007 shortcut and it opens within 4 seconds (not sure how you got 20 seconds???).

Go back and read what I tested. No, better yet, I will provide it here for you.

Test 4: Time to Open Excel, PowerPoint, Publisher, Word and Access
Windows XP SP2: 20 seconds
Windows 7 Ultimate: 17 seconds

So, what I did was open the entire office suite in 20 seconds on XP and 17 seconds on Windows 7. So, I clicked on Excel, got an empty spreadsheet, hit minimize, clicked on PowerPoint, got a blank presentation screen, minimized it, clicked on Publisher, got a blank publishing document, minimized it, clicked on Word, got a blank document, minimized it, clicked on Access, got to the blank database window. I did ALL of that in 20 seconds on XP and even faster on Windows 7...at 17 seconds.


And as far as your comment,
XP is providing myself, the user with a superior computing experience.
That isn't telling us anything whatsoever. Without some type of quantitative measure documenting exactly how one is performing over the other, these types of comments are simply not useful. Sorry.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self-Built in July 2009
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Q9550 2.83Ghz OC'd to 3.40Ghz
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3R rev. 1.1, F12 BIOS
Memory
8GB G.Skill PI DDR2-800, 4-4-4-12 timings
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA 1280MB Nvidia GeForce GTX570
Sound Card
Realtek ALC899A 8 channel onboard audio
Monitor(s) Displays
23" Acer x233H
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Intel X25-M 80GB Gen 2 SSD
Western Digital 1TB Caviar Black, 32MB cache. WD1001FALS
PSU
Corsair 620HX modular
Case
Antec P182
Cooling
stock
Keyboard
ABS M1 Mechanical
Mouse
Logitech G9 Laser Mouse
Internet Speed
15/2 cable modem
Other Info
Windows and Linux enthusiast. Logitech G35 Headset.
Huh...the performance of the SSD is basically no seek times. There can be a large gain...however many SSD drives suffer from a stuttering problem when running the OS...but that is the technology and not the OS.


Alright, I just tried this on my Windows 7 box. I started copying a couple of virtual machines. 4 files at approx 14GB. I was easily able to move all over the box to any running foreground app. Surfing the web was just fine. I have no idea why this has ground your corporate machines to a halt.

Well, I would hope that 8 years after release, with modern computing power having increased so dramatically, that Windows XP would be fast. To expect otherwise, would be just downright silly.

I'm anxiously looking forward to these test results. I'm certainly hoping you weren't taking a shot at my testing procedures since I knocked them out rather rapidly.

Any chance, you could tell me the exact tests that you are performing on Windows XP..so that I could test similarly against my hardware to compare our results?

I'll post my Windows XP Professional results first because I'll need to rebuild the PC to a Windows 7 box (or I may dual boot) and then test.

I'm using your initial testing plus a few others. Due to differences in machine specs, everyone's experience will be their own unique experience so it will be difficult to gauge a baseline.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell 8400
OS
Windows XP Professional
CPU
3.4Ghz HT
Motherboard
Dell
Memory
3.3GB
Graphics Card(s)
ATI X800 XT 256Mb
Sound Card
Sound Blaster
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung
I'll post my Windows XP Professional results first because I'll need to rebuild the PC to a Windows 7 box (or I may dual boot) and then test.

I'm using your initial testing plus a few others. Due to differences in machine specs, everyone's experience will be their own unique experience so it will be difficult to gauge a baseline.


Spazzie

My experience will be very similar to yours as I just put win 7 7100 on a dell 8400 with ati, 756 ram and a tiny 40 gig HD
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP Pavillion dv-7 1005 Tx
OS
Win 8 Release candidate 8400
CPU
[email protected]
Memory
4 gigs
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia 9600M
Sound Card
HD built-in
Monitor(s) Displays
17" Wxga
Screen Resolution
1440x900
Cooling
none
Internet Speed
45Mb down 5Mb up
Due to differences in machine specs, everyone's experience will be their own unique experience so it will be difficult to gauge a baseline.
This is a very true statement. However, you can walk away with some generalities that are going to be applicable.

For example, if you load Windows XP to a very low end box (256MB RAM, celeron processor, 40GB IDE hard drive, crappy onboard video), and find that apps load pretty slow, the machine boots rather slow and overall performance is pretty bad....obviously you aren't going to want to install anything more robust or else things are just going to get slower.

At this point, you options are to deal with the older OS and the lack of newer functionality, or upgrade the hardware. And the choice on which is more appropriate isn't always an easy decision either and sometimes it's more obvious. For example, once Microsoft no longer provides critical security updates for Windows XP..you wouldn't really want to run a business and jeopardize your clients, revenue or employees by sticking with it. To do so, would make you look rather foolish in the event of a problem. Fortunately, Microsoft supports their OS's for an insanely long period of time...therefore this hardware would almost certainly be retired prior to losing complete support for the product. And efficiency and functionality gains from a modern $500 PC, would easily cover the cost.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self-Built in July 2009
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Q9550 2.83Ghz OC'd to 3.40Ghz
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3R rev. 1.1, F12 BIOS
Memory
8GB G.Skill PI DDR2-800, 4-4-4-12 timings
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA 1280MB Nvidia GeForce GTX570
Sound Card
Realtek ALC899A 8 channel onboard audio
Monitor(s) Displays
23" Acer x233H
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Intel X25-M 80GB Gen 2 SSD
Western Digital 1TB Caviar Black, 32MB cache. WD1001FALS
PSU
Corsair 620HX modular
Case
Antec P182
Cooling
stock
Keyboard
ABS M1 Mechanical
Mouse
Logitech G9 Laser Mouse
Internet Speed
15/2 cable modem
Other Info
Windows and Linux enthusiast. Logitech G35 Headset.
The way I see it, the topic in this thread has NOTHING to do with Win7 versus XP so it appears to me like somebody let somebody else change the topic of this thread to something it was never meant to be. Otherwise known as trolling.

In my opinion the person who changed the topic to his own rediculous and very incorrectly informed agenda should be warned against doing this and then banned if they don't stop.

Or maybe I'm reading the rules incorrectly but I do not see how building a high performance Windows7 PC has anything to with Windows XP.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home built
OS
Windows 7 Ult, Windows 8.1 Pro,
CPU
Q9650-4.275GHz, E8600 4.5GHz, E6750-3.8GHz
Motherboard
Evga 780i FTW
Memory
G.Skill PC2 9600 1200Mhz 5 5 5 15 2T
Graphics Card(s)
GTX480
Sound Card
Asus Xonar D2
Monitor(s) Displays
HannsG
Screen Resolution
1680X1050
Hard Drives
GSkill Phoenix Pro 120GB SSD
PSU
ThermalTake Toughpower 1000Watt modular
Case
ThermalTake XaserV
Cooling
Xigmatek S1283
Keyboard
Logitech G15
Mouse
Logitech G9
Internet Speed
T1
...In my opinion the person who changed the topic to his own rediculous and very incorrectly informed agenda should be warned against doing this and then banned if they don't stop...
pparks and zag are trying very hard to educate the spazzie. spazzie continues to pop into any discussion of Win7 performance, design, use, et cetera, and begins to mechanically spew misinformation regarding Windows memory management. I admire my peers tenacity and do not envy their chosen mission. For those familiar with this ongoing struggle, at times, it seems as if spazzie is about to make progress. And then slips. This slippage may be related to molecular half-life, it may be rooted in a lack of capacity, or it may be simple trollage.

As it permeates across multiple threads, I am certain that forum management has reviewed this issue. Having wondered why the struggle is allowed to continue, I conclude that the powers that be have an interest in at least two things: How far and how deep will zag and pparks endeavor (we all benefit from their harvest), and how civil will the struggle remain. Sometimes, I think spazzie is, in reality, one of the management team. This not an unreasonable assumption, as it is difficult to remain so uninformed in the presence of so much advanced knowledge.

Every class has a worst student, and even that one deserves the opportunity to advance to their full potential. Every help desk has a best and worst tech.
 
Yes, the topic did get a little off track. The original thread was about building a high performance PC...and there was commentary during the thread that even a high end PC might not perform as well as it should with modern day operating systems. So, it's a bit of a troll like post, but not entirely.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self-Built in July 2009
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Q9550 2.83Ghz OC'd to 3.40Ghz
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3R rev. 1.1, F12 BIOS
Memory
8GB G.Skill PI DDR2-800, 4-4-4-12 timings
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA 1280MB Nvidia GeForce GTX570
Sound Card
Realtek ALC899A 8 channel onboard audio
Monitor(s) Displays
23" Acer x233H
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Intel X25-M 80GB Gen 2 SSD
Western Digital 1TB Caviar Black, 32MB cache. WD1001FALS
PSU
Corsair 620HX modular
Case
Antec P182
Cooling
stock
Keyboard
ABS M1 Mechanical
Mouse
Logitech G9 Laser Mouse
Internet Speed
15/2 cable modem
Other Info
Windows and Linux enthusiast. Logitech G35 Headset.
Back
Top