Custom Gaming rig - Any good?

Psh, why not all 3?
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Acer Aspire 5610
OS
Windows 7 Professional, Windows Longhorn 4074
CPU
Intel Centrino Duo T2350 @ 1.87 GHz
Motherboard
Acer Grapevine
Memory
1GB (2x 512MB DDR2 400Mz)
Graphics Card(s)
Intel Integrated 945GM Chipset
Sound Card
On-Board RealTek HD Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Generic PnP Monitor
Screen Resolution
1280x800
Hard Drives
160GB SATA HD
PSU
Generic PSU
Case
Acer Aspire 5610 Standard Case (U.S. Version)
Cooling
Air
Keyboard
Built-In / Random Logitech wireless keyboard
Mouse
Synaptics Touchpad / Logitech Click! optical mouse.
Internet Speed
2.57 Mbps Download / 0.29 Mbps Upload / 57ms Ping
Other Info
I call it the craptop.
It depends on what you are using the server for ....

Typical home servers are used for file access, multimedia storage, and print services. You do not need an i7 for that. In fact, a simple, low-end C2D would do just fine. What you need there is I/O -- gigabit ethernet, maybe even dual connections so you can "team" to the router.

Now if you are doing rendering or major database work on a server or if you are using it for a high-volume web server, you need to re-think the configuration.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
home brew
OS
Win.7.Ult.x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 970
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-X58-UD5
Memory
12GB (6x2GB) OCZ Platinum DDR3 1600
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GV-R485MC-1GH, ATI 4850, 1GB GDDR3, passive cooler
Sound Card
(on-board) Speakers - Klipsch ProMedia 2.1
Monitor(s) Displays
2x Dell U2410 (H-IPS)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200
Hard Drives
System = Intel 320 160GB SSD --
Data = 2x WD2002FAEX, RAID1 (ICH10R) --
Backup = 5x WD20EARS (eSata port) --
Add'l Storage = 8x WD20EARS, RAID6 (Adaptec 5805)
PSU
PCP&C S75QB
Case
Lian Li PC-V2010B + EX-H34 expansion HD cage
Cooling
Xigmatek HDT-1283 heatsink & bracket + Scythe S-Flex SFF21E
Keyboard
Das Keyboard Professional, Logitech UltraX
Mouse
Logitech G400
Internet Speed
6.85 Mb/s down, 0.35 Mb/s up (typical)
Other Info
Pioneer DVR-217DBK burner --
stock Lian Li case fans + BS-06 PCI 140mm exhaust (all set on 'low')
Sometimes I do a little bit of Dedicated Server, I can find a way to use 100GB's fast, and I want a fast, new, and overclockable CPU. And from what I've read, the 920 is the exact same thing as the rest of the line, only with a slower clock speed.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Acer Aspire 5610
OS
Windows 7 Professional, Windows Longhorn 4074
CPU
Intel Centrino Duo T2350 @ 1.87 GHz
Motherboard
Acer Grapevine
Memory
1GB (2x 512MB DDR2 400Mz)
Graphics Card(s)
Intel Integrated 945GM Chipset
Sound Card
On-Board RealTek HD Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Generic PnP Monitor
Screen Resolution
1280x800
Hard Drives
160GB SATA HD
PSU
Generic PSU
Case
Acer Aspire 5610 Standard Case (U.S. Version)
Cooling
Air
Keyboard
Built-In / Random Logitech wireless keyboard
Mouse
Synaptics Touchpad / Logitech Click! optical mouse.
Internet Speed
2.57 Mbps Download / 0.29 Mbps Upload / 57ms Ping
Other Info
I call it the craptop.
The difference between the i7-920 and the mid-line models is only in speed. The high-end version has a faster channel between cores. Regardless, for the things you are likely to be doing, unless you are rendering 3D wire frames or serious AutoCad or ripping and recoding a serious amount of video, you'd be hard-put to tell the difference between i7 and i5.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
home brew
OS
Win.7.Ult.x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 970
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-X58-UD5
Memory
12GB (6x2GB) OCZ Platinum DDR3 1600
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GV-R485MC-1GH, ATI 4850, 1GB GDDR3, passive cooler
Sound Card
(on-board) Speakers - Klipsch ProMedia 2.1
Monitor(s) Displays
2x Dell U2410 (H-IPS)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200
Hard Drives
System = Intel 320 160GB SSD --
Data = 2x WD2002FAEX, RAID1 (ICH10R) --
Backup = 5x WD20EARS (eSata port) --
Add'l Storage = 8x WD20EARS, RAID6 (Adaptec 5805)
PSU
PCP&C S75QB
Case
Lian Li PC-V2010B + EX-H34 expansion HD cage
Cooling
Xigmatek HDT-1283 heatsink & bracket + Scythe S-Flex SFF21E
Keyboard
Das Keyboard Professional, Logitech UltraX
Mouse
Logitech G400
Internet Speed
6.85 Mb/s down, 0.35 Mb/s up (typical)
Other Info
Pioneer DVR-217DBK burner --
stock Lian Li case fans + BS-06 PCI 140mm exhaust (all set on 'low')
Sometimes I use Autodesk Inventor. I've filled up my 1GB of RAM so quickly with that...
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Acer Aspire 5610
OS
Windows 7 Professional, Windows Longhorn 4074
CPU
Intel Centrino Duo T2350 @ 1.87 GHz
Motherboard
Acer Grapevine
Memory
1GB (2x 512MB DDR2 400Mz)
Graphics Card(s)
Intel Integrated 945GM Chipset
Sound Card
On-Board RealTek HD Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Generic PnP Monitor
Screen Resolution
1280x800
Hard Drives
160GB SATA HD
PSU
Generic PSU
Case
Acer Aspire 5610 Standard Case (U.S. Version)
Cooling
Air
Keyboard
Built-In / Random Logitech wireless keyboard
Mouse
Synaptics Touchpad / Logitech Click! optical mouse.
Internet Speed
2.57 Mbps Download / 0.29 Mbps Upload / 57ms Ping
Other Info
I call it the craptop.
What other applications do you use?
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
home brew
OS
Win.7.Ult.x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 970
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-X58-UD5
Memory
12GB (6x2GB) OCZ Platinum DDR3 1600
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GV-R485MC-1GH, ATI 4850, 1GB GDDR3, passive cooler
Sound Card
(on-board) Speakers - Klipsch ProMedia 2.1
Monitor(s) Displays
2x Dell U2410 (H-IPS)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200
Hard Drives
System = Intel 320 160GB SSD --
Data = 2x WD2002FAEX, RAID1 (ICH10R) --
Backup = 5x WD20EARS (eSata port) --
Add'l Storage = 8x WD20EARS, RAID6 (Adaptec 5805)
PSU
PCP&C S75QB
Case
Lian Li PC-V2010B + EX-H34 expansion HD cage
Cooling
Xigmatek HDT-1283 heatsink & bracket + Scythe S-Flex SFF21E
Keyboard
Das Keyboard Professional, Logitech UltraX
Mouse
Logitech G400
Internet Speed
6.85 Mb/s down, 0.35 Mb/s up (typical)
Other Info
Pioneer DVR-217DBK burner --
stock Lian Li case fans + BS-06 PCI 140mm exhaust (all set on 'low')
Lol, sorry man, sorry, i'm really sorry i fcked u up just now...BTW, I'm 15 here....
But seriously which machine can't do word?????????? O.O the craptop or what?
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
Windows 7 32-bit; no 64 coz its a P4 478
CPU
Pentium 4 3.00 GHZ HT Socket 478 :(
Motherboard
MSI PM8M-V
Memory
1 GB Kingston DDR-400
Graphics Card(s)
HIS X1650 PRO AGP :(
Sound Card
Intergrated Realtek AC'97
Monitor(s) Displays
17" CRT :(
Screen Resolution
Native: 1027*768 MAX: 1280*1024 :(
Hard Drives
80 GB Maxtor
500 GB Seagate (7200.11)(T.T its now RMA)
Here's a list of the things I wish I could run:

TF2
CS:S (Something other than cs_crackhouse)
HL2 (6fps max on my craptop)
Autodesk Inventor
Autodesk Maya (plan on learning it)
Adobe Photoshop
Microsoft Word (It just will not work on this thing for some reason!)


Things I plan on buying to run on this build:

Autodesk Maya (plan on learning it)
Crysis
Fallout 3
Portal
Halo 2
HL2: E1
HL2: E2
HL2: E3 (Come out already!)
L4D
Windows 7 Home Premium (Waiting for RTM, at the moment)
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Acer Aspire 5610
OS
Windows 7 Professional, Windows Longhorn 4074
CPU
Intel Centrino Duo T2350 @ 1.87 GHz
Motherboard
Acer Grapevine
Memory
1GB (2x 512MB DDR2 400Mz)
Graphics Card(s)
Intel Integrated 945GM Chipset
Sound Card
On-Board RealTek HD Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Generic PnP Monitor
Screen Resolution
1280x800
Hard Drives
160GB SATA HD
PSU
Generic PSU
Case
Acer Aspire 5610 Standard Case (U.S. Version)
Cooling
Air
Keyboard
Built-In / Random Logitech wireless keyboard
Mouse
Synaptics Touchpad / Logitech Click! optical mouse.
Internet Speed
2.57 Mbps Download / 0.29 Mbps Upload / 57ms Ping
Other Info
I call it the craptop.
The craptop. Something always happens when I try to use it! Like I'll get a random error, a BSoD, Power failure. Nothing goes wrong when I use one of the Macs...

I hate Apple because my computer sucks :D
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Acer Aspire 5610
OS
Windows 7 Professional, Windows Longhorn 4074
CPU
Intel Centrino Duo T2350 @ 1.87 GHz
Motherboard
Acer Grapevine
Memory
1GB (2x 512MB DDR2 400Mz)
Graphics Card(s)
Intel Integrated 945GM Chipset
Sound Card
On-Board RealTek HD Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Generic PnP Monitor
Screen Resolution
1280x800
Hard Drives
160GB SATA HD
PSU
Generic PSU
Case
Acer Aspire 5610 Standard Case (U.S. Version)
Cooling
Air
Keyboard
Built-In / Random Logitech wireless keyboard
Mouse
Synaptics Touchpad / Logitech Click! optical mouse.
Internet Speed
2.57 Mbps Download / 0.29 Mbps Upload / 57ms Ping
Other Info
I call it the craptop.
For all practical purposes, Office applications don't care what kind of computer they run on -- as long as it runs properly. Any low-end, dual-core processor with 2~3GB of available ram will do an excellent job. This applies to internet and browsing functions, also.

Games have in the past been single-core oriented, placing demands on the graphics system, not the CPU. To a great extent, that's still true. Even Crysis, one of the most demanding games available, runs best on a very fast dual-core machine as opposed to a slower quad-core machine. Ignoring the graphics subsystem, and using a flawed analogy, gaming needs horsepower (speed), not torque (multi-core) from its CPU. In truth, for a gaming machine, you are better off looking at one of the high-end (meaning high speed) AMD dual-core CPUs than at any of the Intel chips. Then pair it with the most honkingly-powerful, turbo-charged graphics card you can afford.

Engineering (AutoDesk's heavy hitters), scientific (serious physics, atmospheric modeling, etc), video editing (Adobe Premier), image & file rendering (DVD ripping & conversion to .avi/.mkv), and file compression/decompression (WinRAR, 7-zip, etc) need torque. Speed and workspace (memory/ram) don't hurt, either, but torque is king. Here is where the i7 shines, but the i5 is no slouch here, either.

Any build is a balance of the various parts. None is perfect for every application -- even monster workstations like my own aren't perfect. Mine is a mediocre gaming machine and serious overkill for office apps and internet/browser usage.

Given that you are in high school and will probably use the machine for 3.5-to-5 years, upgrading some of its parts at about midway its life, and given that you are interested in some of the heavy applications as well as some of the more resource-hungry games, my best advice to you is to look for a higher-speed processor and worry less about cores or memory channels.

  • CPU: (horsepower vs torque) go for a faster i5 (or one of the faster, new AMD CPUs) as opposed to the higher torque at the expense of speed i7-920
  • RAM: (workspace) 4-or-8GB with the i5 or AMD; 3-or-6-or-12GB with the i7
  • GPU: (turbocharge those games) spend what you can afford; CPU doesn't help you here
  • HDD: (storage)
    • OS & Apps on the fastest drive you can afford, SSD, VelociRaptor or Caviar Black, in that order. Don't bother with RAID-0, it's usually a waste unless you can similarly soup up everything else.
    • Primary data storage on Caviar Black
    • Secondary data storage (and/or backup) on Caviar Green
Typical system as described, 450-500 watt PSU using single-GPU AMD/ATI graphics card, add 100 watts if using a 2nd GPU. Add 50 watts per GPU if using nVidia graphics card(s).
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
home brew
OS
Win.7.Ult.x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 970
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-X58-UD5
Memory
12GB (6x2GB) OCZ Platinum DDR3 1600
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GV-R485MC-1GH, ATI 4850, 1GB GDDR3, passive cooler
Sound Card
(on-board) Speakers - Klipsch ProMedia 2.1
Monitor(s) Displays
2x Dell U2410 (H-IPS)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200
Hard Drives
System = Intel 320 160GB SSD --
Data = 2x WD2002FAEX, RAID1 (ICH10R) --
Backup = 5x WD20EARS (eSata port) --
Add'l Storage = 8x WD20EARS, RAID6 (Adaptec 5805)
PSU
PCP&C S75QB
Case
Lian Li PC-V2010B + EX-H34 expansion HD cage
Cooling
Xigmatek HDT-1283 heatsink & bracket + Scythe S-Flex SFF21E
Keyboard
Das Keyboard Professional, Logitech UltraX
Mouse
Logitech G400
Internet Speed
6.85 Mb/s down, 0.35 Mb/s up (typical)
Other Info
Pioneer DVR-217DBK burner --
stock Lian Li case fans + BS-06 PCI 140mm exhaust (all set on 'low')
Well, although you hate the craptop, I would suggest you to re-romat it with 7/XP.... Coz even my dad's almost antique laptop (P4 1.6 Ghz, 256 MB RAM) does Office 03 fine...
I think your OS is screwed (or perhaps the installation)....
I know, I know, you may not want to waste time backing up, etc. and flushing down the old OS, etc.... So then get a new computer would be GREAT! Like the guy above me said, gaming in future WILL USE Quads; not dual core or triple core would be excellent for gaming... But since your doing some really advanced work, you may just grab the i5 than wasting time and money with Core i7, Core 2 * and AMD Phenom 2 * system today....
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
Windows 7 32-bit; no 64 coz its a P4 478
CPU
Pentium 4 3.00 GHZ HT Socket 478 :(
Motherboard
MSI PM8M-V
Memory
1 GB Kingston DDR-400
Graphics Card(s)
HIS X1650 PRO AGP :(
Sound Card
Intergrated Realtek AC'97
Monitor(s) Displays
17" CRT :(
Screen Resolution
Native: 1027*768 MAX: 1280*1024 :(
Hard Drives
80 GB Maxtor
500 GB Seagate (7200.11)(T.T its now RMA)

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Dual Boot : Windows 7 7264 X64/Windows Vista Ultimate
CPU
AMD Athlon 64 X2 Dual Core 5000+
Motherboard
Gigabyte MA78GM-S2H
Memory
4x 1GB OCZ Platinum 800MHZ
Graphics Card(s)
Radeon HD3200 On Board
Sound Card
On Board
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell 2208WFP
Screen Resolution
1680 x 1050
Hard Drives
Western Digital Caviar blue 320GB
PSU
Corsair HX620W
Case
CM Storm Scout
Cooling
Foxconn Stock Heatsink
Keyboard
Keysonic Wireless
Internet Speed
8MB
He's talking about buying in September, not now. It is really too soon to pin down the actual product choices. There will be a number of new products released over the course of the summer and early fall, including new video boards, motherboards and CPUs. Moreover, prices will change, considering the economy, most likely, downward.

But it is a really good idea to flesh out a well-balanced 'concept' of what he wants his computer to be. That way, when the time comes, it's much easier to select products that match the overall plan.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
home brew
OS
Win.7.Ult.x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 970
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-X58-UD5
Memory
12GB (6x2GB) OCZ Platinum DDR3 1600
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GV-R485MC-1GH, ATI 4850, 1GB GDDR3, passive cooler
Sound Card
(on-board) Speakers - Klipsch ProMedia 2.1
Monitor(s) Displays
2x Dell U2410 (H-IPS)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200
Hard Drives
System = Intel 320 160GB SSD --
Data = 2x WD2002FAEX, RAID1 (ICH10R) --
Backup = 5x WD20EARS (eSata port) --
Add'l Storage = 8x WD20EARS, RAID6 (Adaptec 5805)
PSU
PCP&C S75QB
Case
Lian Li PC-V2010B + EX-H34 expansion HD cage
Cooling
Xigmatek HDT-1283 heatsink & bracket + Scythe S-Flex SFF21E
Keyboard
Das Keyboard Professional, Logitech UltraX
Mouse
Logitech G400
Internet Speed
6.85 Mb/s down, 0.35 Mb/s up (typical)
Other Info
Pioneer DVR-217DBK burner --
stock Lian Li case fans + BS-06 PCI 140mm exhaust (all set on 'low')
im starting my 1st gaming rig build just now,nothing spedtacular but i have most of my parts picked out but after 5 days looking around i still cant even make my mind up on a case lol.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Dual Boot : Windows 7 7264 X64/Windows Vista Ultimate
CPU
AMD Athlon 64 X2 Dual Core 5000+
Motherboard
Gigabyte MA78GM-S2H
Memory
4x 1GB OCZ Platinum 800MHZ
Graphics Card(s)
Radeon HD3200 On Board
Sound Card
On Board
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell 2208WFP
Screen Resolution
1680 x 1050
Hard Drives
Western Digital Caviar blue 320GB
PSU
Corsair HX620W
Case
CM Storm Scout
Cooling
Foxconn Stock Heatsink
Keyboard
Keysonic Wireless
Internet Speed
8MB
im starting my 1st gaming rig build just now,nothing spedtacular but i have most of my parts picked out but after 5 days looking around i still cant even make my mind up on a case lol.
I build about 40 computers a year (been rolling my own since '92 - 17 years). I've pretty much settled on three brands, unless a client really wants something else. All three are top quality. I pick the model based on what needs to go inside and whether the case will be re-used for future builds. I avoid "front doors" like the plague. I seldom use case windows, although a few of my clients have requested them. Above all, avoid gimmicks. Multi-LEDs are your enemy. (They'll annoy the h-e-double-hocky-sticks out of you after the first few weeks.)

The three brand are Antec, Lian-Li and Silverstone.

I've never been disappointed in their quality.

There are certainly many other brands with quality product. I just haven't seen the need to go for them.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
home brew
OS
Win.7.Ult.x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 970
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-X58-UD5
Memory
12GB (6x2GB) OCZ Platinum DDR3 1600
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GV-R485MC-1GH, ATI 4850, 1GB GDDR3, passive cooler
Sound Card
(on-board) Speakers - Klipsch ProMedia 2.1
Monitor(s) Displays
2x Dell U2410 (H-IPS)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200
Hard Drives
System = Intel 320 160GB SSD --
Data = 2x WD2002FAEX, RAID1 (ICH10R) --
Backup = 5x WD20EARS (eSata port) --
Add'l Storage = 8x WD20EARS, RAID6 (Adaptec 5805)
PSU
PCP&C S75QB
Case
Lian Li PC-V2010B + EX-H34 expansion HD cage
Cooling
Xigmatek HDT-1283 heatsink & bracket + Scythe S-Flex SFF21E
Keyboard
Das Keyboard Professional, Logitech UltraX
Mouse
Logitech G400
Internet Speed
6.85 Mb/s down, 0.35 Mb/s up (typical)
Other Info
Pioneer DVR-217DBK burner --
stock Lian Li case fans + BS-06 PCI 140mm exhaust (all set on 'low')
I build about 40 computers a year (been rolling my own since '92 - 17 years). I've pretty much settled on three brands, unless a client really wants something else. All three are top quality. I pick the model based on what needs to go inside and whether the case will be re-used for future builds. I avoid "front doors" like the plague. I seldom use case windows, although a few of my clients have requested them. Above all, avoid gimmicks. Multi-LEDs are your enemy. (They'll annoy the h-e-double-hocky-sticks out of you after the first few weeks.)

The three brand are Antec, Lian-Li and Silverstone.

I've never been disappointed in their quality.

There are certainly many other brands with quality product. I just haven't seen the need to go for them.

my only problem with lian li and silverstone are the price of em, i really dont wanna go too pricey on a case, atm i have £200 which i plan on buying a psu and case with,psu im going with is the Corsair TX650W which is roughly £75 which leaves me with £115 for a case and £10 for shipping.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Dual Boot : Windows 7 7264 X64/Windows Vista Ultimate
CPU
AMD Athlon 64 X2 Dual Core 5000+
Motherboard
Gigabyte MA78GM-S2H
Memory
4x 1GB OCZ Platinum 800MHZ
Graphics Card(s)
Radeon HD3200 On Board
Sound Card
On Board
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell 2208WFP
Screen Resolution
1680 x 1050
Hard Drives
Western Digital Caviar blue 320GB
PSU
Corsair HX620W
Case
CM Storm Scout
Cooling
Foxconn Stock Heatsink
Keyboard
Keysonic Wireless
Internet Speed
8MB
For all practical purposes, Office applications don't care what kind of computer they run on -- as long as it runs properly. Any low-end, dual-core processor with 2~3GB of available ram will do an excellent job. This applies to internet and browsing functions, also.

Games have in the past been single-core oriented, placing demands on the graphics system, not the CPU. To a great extent, that's still true. Even Crysis, one of the most demanding games available, runs best on a very fast dual-core machine as opposed to a slower quad-core machine. Ignoring the graphics subsystem, and using a flawed analogy, gaming needs horsepower (speed), not torque (multi-core) from its CPU. In truth, for a gaming machine, you are better off looking at one of the high-end (meaning high speed) AMD dual-core CPUs than at any of the Intel chips. Then pair it with the most honkingly-powerful, turbo-charged graphics card you can afford.

Engineering (AutoDesk's heavy hitters), scientific (serious physics, atmospheric modeling, etc), video editing (Adobe Premier), image & file rendering (DVD ripping & conversion to .avi/.mkv), and file compression/decompression (WinRAR, 7-zip, etc) need torque. Speed and workspace (memory/ram) don't hurt, either, but torque is king. Here is where the i7 shines, but the i5 is no slouch here, either.

Any build is a balance of the various parts. None is perfect for every application -- even monster workstations like my own aren't perfect. Mine is a mediocre gaming machine and serious overkill for office apps and internet/browser usage.

Given that you are in high school and will probably use the machine for 3.5-to-5 years, upgrading some of its parts at about midway its life, and given that you are interested in some of the heavy applications as well as some of the more resource-hungry games, my best advice to you is to look for a higher-speed processor and worry less about cores or memory channels.

  • CPU: (horsepower vs torque) go for a faster i5 (or one of the faster, new AMD CPUs) as opposed to the higher torque at the expense of speed i7-920
  • RAM: (workspace) 4-or-8GB with the i5 or AMD; 3-or-6-or-12GB with the i7
  • GPU: (turbocharge those games) spend what you can afford; CPU doesn't help you here
  • HDD: (storage)
    • OS & Apps on the fastest drive you can afford, SSD, VelociRaptor or Caviar Black, in that order. Don't bother with RAID-0, it's usually a waste unless you can similarly soup up everything else.
    • Primary data storage on Caviar Black
    • Secondary data storage (and/or backup) on Caviar Green
Typical system as described, 450-500 watt PSU using single-GPU AMD/ATI graphics card, add 100 watts if using a 2nd GPU. Add 50 watts per GPU if using nVidia graphics card(s).


weh said:
I build about 40 computers a year (been rolling my own since '92 - 17 years). I've pretty much settled on three brands, unless a client really wants something else. All three are top quality. I pick the model based on what needs to go inside and whether the case will be re-used for future builds. I avoid "front doors" like the plague. I seldom use case windows, although a few of my clients have requested them. Above all, avoid gimmicks. Multi-LEDs are your enemy. (They'll annoy the h-e-double-hocky-sticks out of you after the first few weeks.)

The three brand are Antec, Lian-Li and Silverstone.

I've never been disappointed in their quality.

There are certainly many other brands with quality product. I just haven't seen the need to go for them.

After reading these two messages, I'm going to go with an AMD Phenom II (955, since it's fast, and cheap [as far as I know]), and look into a 4870x2...

Does anyone have any info about that "Dragon" platform thing that AMD does? I can't wrap my mind around that. Or get any info on it b/c you can never just look up anything any more...
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Acer Aspire 5610
OS
Windows 7 Professional, Windows Longhorn 4074
CPU
Intel Centrino Duo T2350 @ 1.87 GHz
Motherboard
Acer Grapevine
Memory
1GB (2x 512MB DDR2 400Mz)
Graphics Card(s)
Intel Integrated 945GM Chipset
Sound Card
On-Board RealTek HD Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Generic PnP Monitor
Screen Resolution
1280x800
Hard Drives
160GB SATA HD
PSU
Generic PSU
Case
Acer Aspire 5610 Standard Case (U.S. Version)
Cooling
Air
Keyboard
Built-In / Random Logitech wireless keyboard
Mouse
Synaptics Touchpad / Logitech Click! optical mouse.
Internet Speed
2.57 Mbps Download / 0.29 Mbps Upload / 57ms Ping
Other Info
I call it the craptop.
I just wanted to say that having a powerful gaming computer does not necessarily equate to a loud machine even if it is air cooled. Sure during gaming my video cards get cranked up but the noise from my speakers is more than enough to drown that out.

120 mm fans are the way to go basically.
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 x64 Pro
CPU
Intel 990X
Motherboard
Asus P6T Deluxe V2
Memory
CORSAIR XMS3 6GB SDRAM DDR3 1600 (7-7-7-20)
Graphics Card(s)
2 x BFG 285 GTX OCXs in SLI
Sound Card
X-fi Elite Pro
Monitor(s) Displays
HP LP 3065
Screen Resolution
2560 x 1600
Hard Drives
2 x 150 gb Velociraptors RAID 0
PSU
PC Power & Cooling 750W
Case
CM Stacker 832
Cooling
Stock cooler
Keyboard
Saitek Eclipse II
Mouse
Logitech MX Revolution
Does anyone have any info about that "Dragon" platform thing that AMD does? I can't wrap my mind around that. Or get any info on it b/c you can never just look up anything any more...
Essentially, leaving out the marketing hype, it's motherboards based on the 790FX (no built-in graphics) and 790GX (built-in HD 3300 graphics) chipsets and video boards based on the HD 4870 and HD 4890 GPUs along with the Phenom II Quad-Core CPUs.

As to your choice of the HD 4870 X2, the dual GPU helps in some games and not so much in others. Were I you, I'd go for the more powerful (and less expensive) HD 4890 (single GPU). Then, later, add a 2nd HD 4890 if you really want to add the complexity of CrossFire to the system. But don't set anything in stone, yet. There are rumors of HD 5xxx GPUs on the horizon.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
home brew
OS
Win.7.Ult.x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 970
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-X58-UD5
Memory
12GB (6x2GB) OCZ Platinum DDR3 1600
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GV-R485MC-1GH, ATI 4850, 1GB GDDR3, passive cooler
Sound Card
(on-board) Speakers - Klipsch ProMedia 2.1
Monitor(s) Displays
2x Dell U2410 (H-IPS)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200
Hard Drives
System = Intel 320 160GB SSD --
Data = 2x WD2002FAEX, RAID1 (ICH10R) --
Backup = 5x WD20EARS (eSata port) --
Add'l Storage = 8x WD20EARS, RAID6 (Adaptec 5805)
PSU
PCP&C S75QB
Case
Lian Li PC-V2010B + EX-H34 expansion HD cage
Cooling
Xigmatek HDT-1283 heatsink & bracket + Scythe S-Flex SFF21E
Keyboard
Das Keyboard Professional, Logitech UltraX
Mouse
Logitech G400
Internet Speed
6.85 Mb/s down, 0.35 Mb/s up (typical)
Other Info
Pioneer DVR-217DBK burner --
stock Lian Li case fans + BS-06 PCI 140mm exhaust (all set on 'low')
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