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Besides... it'd be fun to build a computer.
Besides... it'd be fun to build a computer.
Because I am also looking for a system I can modify as I see fit, that will have the capacity for further upgrades, etc.
I fell into the 'standard bulk spec' trap previously - that's why I have a 350W power supply, two internal bays, and a lot of crap I neither need nor want on the system.
Of course, I'm more educated now...![]()
Personally, I disagree. My assumption is that if your demands can be satisfied by a 2.5 year old pc (since you buy new only every 3 years), then there is no reason why you need the best right now.I'm a big advocate of buying as big as you can, once every three years, rather than buying lesser parts all the time for that 3 years.
Personally, I disagree. My assumption is that if your demands can be satisfied by a 2.5 year old pc (since you buy new only every 3 years), then there is no reason why you need the best right now.
As they say, at the top you pay double for a 10% performance increase. Comparing (Dutch prices, but you'll get the idea) € 120 for a A64 3000+ with € 800 for a A64 FX57, the difference will get you roughly a 50% performance increase. So if the FX57 will last you 3 years, the 3000+ will do for 2 years. Obviously, the latter is far better value for money.
Right now, I would take a 3000+ or 3200+ if the price difference is small. An Epox or Gigabyte motherboard. In my experience they deliver good quality without too many bells and whistles, for a fairly low price. ASUS is good but more expensive, and I feel MSI saves some on quality to provide more features. One 512MB memory stick now, another one as soon as possible.
All together: € 300 here, I expect some $ 300 in the US.
Of course, you'd still need a graphics card and the rest of the internals.
If you wait awhile, get an AM2 socket with cheap CPU and DDRII. Keep an eye on the market, and buy a faster CPU when AMD's next socket is introduced. I'm no fan of CPU upgrades, but I expect that jump 'll be worth it.
That rather depends on how demanding your usage is. But if a 3000+ will last you about a year, then an FX57 definately won't last more than two - make that one and a half. CPU performance goes up very fast over time. Compared to that, the difference between low and high end models is fairly modest.If it's for a gaming PC a 3000+ would give it about a year, year and a half of usage before it got to the point of needing to upgrade again, also worth looking at how much cache is on it as that can be a limiting factor.