Ok I Am Going To Try Building My Own

computer stupid

New Member
OK, lets start with uses. general web surfing email stuff. Gaming, COD Halo type of games. Would like to be able to play most any game. ipod downloads CD burning. Burning movies would be nice????

The budget would be nice around 1500.00 That would leave me about 500.00 for a large monitor. If you know of the best place to purchase one of those that would be helpful also.

OK what else do you need to know??????????:confused:
 
I would recommend looking at one of two processors for your system:

Intel Core 2 Duo E8400 Wolfdale Dual-Core Processor. Currently $230 at NewEgg.com

Intel Core 2 Duo E6750 Conroe Dual-Core Processor. Currently $190 at NewEgg.com

I wish I could afford one of these.
 
ok, i'll give this a wack for you.

Processor: E8400-230
Mother Board: p35-$90 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128059
Memory: G-Skill 2GB 800-$47 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820231098
Video Card: EVGA 8800GT-$240 or $480 for SLI (2 of them) http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130318
Power supply: OCZ 700wat(supports SLI)-$110 after MIR http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817341002
Hard Drive: WD 500GB-$100 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822136178
Case: Antec 900-$110 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811129021
Monitor: LG 22 inch-$360 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824005097
then a couple burners which run about 100 bucks for a pair.

total: $1187 or $1427 if you get the SLI 8800 GT's

just my 2 cents ;)
good luck with your new rig :)
 
the 8800 GTS may be a little more expensive but its gives about 10% performance increase, and a much better fan, and its a little more overclockable. It may be 30 dollars more, but its a much better card.
 
Well if your only going to play games like cod and halo u could get excellent performance with a hd2600 in crossfire. Both card together would only run you 140$.And also do you really need a quad core???
 
Windows XP is the best for gaming. And the games you named arn't dx10 so no need for vista. And you can always duel boot ( means you can have 2 OS )

i hoped that help with choosing your OS.
 
Windows XP is the best for gaming. And the games you named arn't dx10 so no need for vista. And you can always dual boot ( means you can have 2 OS )

i hoped that help with choosing your OS.
the E8400 is a dual core if that is what u where talking about
Fixed these for you....yes Im anal about spelling.
 
I'd like to expel a few myths to the OP at this point in time since he is a new first time system builder

1) SLI and Crossfire are pointless and a waste of money, don't bother. Parallel processing modes do not distribute jobs, they just create more bandwidth, and your overall performance increase will be nil to very little and in some cases it performs less if it isn't coded for it.

2) RAID 0 - again another pointless technology that gamers like to use. RAID only really help with pure throughput of data. It does not increase your FPS or anything else, and it makes your system way less stable. Don't bother, just get a nice high speed hard drive like a Raptor.

3) When people say that one video card gives a 10% performance increase over another it is extremely subjective and benchmarks never reflect real world performance. Always go for the best product for your dollar in my opinion because in your build you may only get a 5% increase, or it could be 15% or whatever. So, my advice is always get the best for your dollar.

4) DX10 is not needed and it actually performs worse. The plus side to DX 10 is that it looks a bit prettier, this is just an FYI.

5) 64 bit OS system drivers suck, just a warning

6) Dual core versus Quad core - this is hard to say. Not everything fully supports 4 cores, however a quad core should technically multi task a lot better over a dual core. This is subjective and would require some research. I think one of the better processors at the moment for the dollar is the Q6600 by intel.

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819115017

7) Don't ever go cheap on a powersupply or motherboard and this goes back to buying the best for your dollar as well. Your motherboard is the backbone of your system and your Power supply supplies power. Cheap power supplies can cause performance issues, burn out and damage your system.

8) Always get a 2nd opinion. Google is your friend. Research your products, and read user reviews. A lot of times the idiots that buy from newegg.com will give a product a bad review for the dumbest reasons. Like the return policy wasn't that good, or they didn't like the size of the card, or it didn't over clock that well. If you don't over clock then why would that matter to you?

9) Don't bother over clocking, again this is highly misunderstood and doesn't really raise performance. Sure you can pump more data through your processor but you can also create bottle necks and lessen the stability of your system over all. Its like putting NOS in a car, those engine blocks aren't bullet proof and if you run it all the time there is bound to be a malfunction. Stable systems are generally ran at factory clock speed, because they are designed to execute instruction sets at the most optimal possible speed, with zero to a very small rate of failure. Increasing the speed increases the rate of failure. Also, over clocked RAM and the like are marketing schemes. Benchmarks do not reflect real world performance and remember always get the best product for your dollar.

10) This is the most important thing...Don't be afraid to ask dumb questions. Everyone has to learn at some point and you are better off just asking than blindly going through trying to figure something out.

Good luck
 
you myswell go with just a cheap 8800 for the moment because some places will offer the ability to return them when the new 9000 series when(if) they come out
 
Great points, tlarkin, even though my rig serves as a good example of what you *wouldn't* do. :)

Considering your budget, this is what I would buy:

Processor: E8400.

It's the best dual-core currently available. For your purposes, you probably don't need a quad-core.

Motherboard: Gigabyte X38.

PCI-E 2.0 support and this board natively supports the E8400 processor.

Video Card: Radeon HD 3870 X2.

It's the best video card on the market. This card would probably be best for the 1920x1200 montior resolution you plan to run. Great price, too, IMO.

If that's too expensive, get the Radeon 3870. That's the single core model.

Memory: 2GB Ballistix DDR2 800 CL4.

The RAM have LEDs. I think that's pretty cool. Crucial makes great RAM as well. If the lights aren't your style, get the Corsair XMS2.

Hard Drive 1: 250GB Western Digital.

Install your operating system, games and programs on this drive.

Hard Drive 2: Samsung 500GB.

Use this drive for additional storage. Most importantly, you would want to backup your system partition to this drive. We can tell you how to do that if you're unfamiliar with that type of operation.

Optical Drive: Asus.

Power Supply: If you want the Radeon 3870 X2, get the 750W Quad Silencer. If you get the single core model, I'd recommend the 700W OCZ Gametream.

Operating System:

For gaming, many believe that XP is the better OS. Get either XP or Vista. Both are good, in my opinion.

This is optional: Media Card/Floppy reader.

24" monitor: Dell or pick from this list. I've read the Dell model is the "best," but I've never owned a 24" monitor. You want something with a high contrast ratio and low response time (in milliseconds).

Case: This is a matter of personal preference. For mid-towers, choose from this list. Look at this list for full-towers.

You want a case that provides great cooling and easy installation.
 
Excellent point tlarken. I especially loved "and your Power supply supplies power". All joking aside though, very good Post :)
 
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