Martacus
World's Greatest Warrior
The computer I built back in 2002-2003 is slowly but surely dying. The processor gave out a couple weeks ago; due to its age it was a cheap fix, but my local computer store had to replace it with a used processor. Slower than what I had, too, but it was what they had on hand and my computer is running again, albeit at a somewhat diminished capacity.
As an addendum to this, my computer had been during a direct lightning strike on our house about four years ago, so computer parts failing on me is not a surprise.
Which brings me to a something I've been trying to put off as long as possible: replacement. My computer did just fine for me for so long that I'm once again a bit out of the loop as far as building a computer is concerned.
Mainly the changes in processor technology--multiple-cores and whatnot. Is, say, a triple- or quad-core processor at a lower processing speed worth the added expense over a dual-core running at a higher speed? I don't even know what these "dual/triple/quad" -cored processors do that makes them so different from others.
Is AMD still a perfectly viable alternative to more expensive Intel, performance-wise?
I've noticed that prices have come WAY down for most other computer components lately (RAM is dirt-cheap; a 1TB hard disk costs less than a good 100GB HD did six years ago) and money is a bigger issue for me now that I've got more financial responsibilities.
What I'm really looking to build is something with a little room for gaming growth, but which can run most currently-existing games quite well. I'm looking forward to, say, Starcraft 2 whenever it's out, and I'd like to be able to play Half-Life 2 etc.
The primary questions I'm asking myself as I go through my options:
1) How much should I be looking to spend on a new processor/motherboard?
2) Would on-board graphics/sound be good enough for my needs?
3) How much RAM will I need for my system?
4)Is my current 400W power supply adequate for current systems?
5) Can I build an adequate system for under, say, $500, given that I can use some parts I still have on-hand?
6) Should I get Vista, or stick with XP for the time being? I understand there are some backwards-compatibility and user-friendliness issues, and I've already got XP Pro. New OSes are expensive and I don't have the patience to deal with Linux.
As an addendum to this, my computer had been during a direct lightning strike on our house about four years ago, so computer parts failing on me is not a surprise.
Which brings me to a something I've been trying to put off as long as possible: replacement. My computer did just fine for me for so long that I'm once again a bit out of the loop as far as building a computer is concerned.
Mainly the changes in processor technology--multiple-cores and whatnot. Is, say, a triple- or quad-core processor at a lower processing speed worth the added expense over a dual-core running at a higher speed? I don't even know what these "dual/triple/quad" -cored processors do that makes them so different from others.
Is AMD still a perfectly viable alternative to more expensive Intel, performance-wise?
I've noticed that prices have come WAY down for most other computer components lately (RAM is dirt-cheap; a 1TB hard disk costs less than a good 100GB HD did six years ago) and money is a bigger issue for me now that I've got more financial responsibilities.
What I'm really looking to build is something with a little room for gaming growth, but which can run most currently-existing games quite well. I'm looking forward to, say, Starcraft 2 whenever it's out, and I'd like to be able to play Half-Life 2 etc.
The primary questions I'm asking myself as I go through my options:
1) How much should I be looking to spend on a new processor/motherboard?
2) Would on-board graphics/sound be good enough for my needs?
3) How much RAM will I need for my system?
4)Is my current 400W power supply adequate for current systems?
5) Can I build an adequate system for under, say, $500, given that I can use some parts I still have on-hand?
6) Should I get Vista, or stick with XP for the time being? I understand there are some backwards-compatibility and user-friendliness issues, and I've already got XP Pro. New OSes are expensive and I don't have the patience to deal with Linux.