JohnJSal
Active Member
My guess is the first step would be to choose the CPU you want, then narrow down the mobo selection to the ones that support it. But where do you go from here? How do you continue to narrow it down?
I think one reason I get a little confused is because I don't know if it's the chipset itself that you should be choosing, or if it's the actual physical structure of the mobo (and what it supports) that matters more.
Just trying to get a general idea of how to go about it. Maybe narrowing it by brand is another good way (e.g. Asus). These are my two scenarios, if it helps to be more specific:
1. For myself, I want to build a nice, fairly high-performance PC for gaming, but nothing intense. It would include Core 2 Duo E6850, nVidia GeForce 8800GT, 2GB RAM, probably a 500GB HD, etc.
2. For my parents, something very mainstream. Whatever the cheapst Core 2 Duo CPU is, probably integrated graphics (although I'd like to choose a mobo that has a graphics slot, just in case), integrated sound, 2GB RAM, etc.
Thanks.
I think one reason I get a little confused is because I don't know if it's the chipset itself that you should be choosing, or if it's the actual physical structure of the mobo (and what it supports) that matters more.
Just trying to get a general idea of how to go about it. Maybe narrowing it by brand is another good way (e.g. Asus). These are my two scenarios, if it helps to be more specific:
1. For myself, I want to build a nice, fairly high-performance PC for gaming, but nothing intense. It would include Core 2 Duo E6850, nVidia GeForce 8800GT, 2GB RAM, probably a 500GB HD, etc.
2. For my parents, something very mainstream. Whatever the cheapst Core 2 Duo CPU is, probably integrated graphics (although I'd like to choose a mobo that has a graphics slot, just in case), integrated sound, 2GB RAM, etc.
Thanks.