Vinen
God is dead
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Gaming / Glorified facebook machine. I've been using an Asus G73 for the past few years.What are you mostly doing with it? Gaming? Photo/video/sound editing? Glorified Facebook machine? Media center?
Gaming / Glorified facebook machine. I've been using an Asus G73 for the past few years.What are you mostly doing with it? Gaming? Photo/video/sound editing? Glorified Facebook machine? Media center?
This hasn't even been slightly true for a while.I only went with 1 8GB DIMM on the RAM because I personally value having the extra free slots for later expansion over the very, very minor performance gain of using 2 4GB modules. For gaming, you'd see less than a 1% performance difference with 2 4GB modules compared to 1 8GB module, and it wastes an extra expansion slot for adding more later.
Thanks!, this is a good starting point for me.Building completely from scratch, I'd probably do something like this:
PCPartPicker part list/Price breakdown by merchant/Benchmarks
CPU:Intel Core i5-4670K 3.4GHz Quad-Core Processor($225.99 @ NCIX US)
Motherboard:ASRock Z87 Extreme4 ATX LGA1150 Motherboard($134.99 @ Newegg)
Memory:Crucial Ballistix Sport 8GB (1 x 8GB) DDR3-1600 Memory($66.99 @ Microcenter)
Storage:Samsung 840 EVO 250GB 2.5" Solid State Disk($169.99 @ B&H)
Storage:Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive($59.98 @ OutletPC)
Video Card:PNY GeForce GTX 770 2GB Video Card($314.99 @ Amazon)
Case:Corsair 200R ATX Mid Tower Case($59.99 @ Microcenter)
Power Supply:SeaSonic G 550W 80+ Gold Certified Semi-Modular ATX Power Supply($85.99 @ Amazon)
Operating System:Microsoft Windows 8 (OEM) (64-bit)($97.98 @ OutletPC)
Total:$1216.89
(Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available.)
(Generated by PCPartPicker 2014-01-17 15:22 EST-0500)
A couple notes:
I only went with 1 8GB DIMM on the RAM because I personally value having the extra free slots for later expansion over the very, very minor performance gain of using 2 4GB modules. For gaming, you'd see less than a 1% performance difference with 2 4GB modules compared to 1 8GB module, and it wastes an extra expansion slot for adding more later.
I threw on the 1TB HD just in case you didn't have any HDs you could pull from a previous computer to use for storage. Since you have a good sized SSD on this build for the OS and multiple game installs, your extra drives don't really need to be anything special or overly fast, they're just there for bulk storage of media or old games.
You also don't necessarily need to pay $100 for Windows 8, theres links in this thread a few pages back on how to get legit Win 8 keys for like $10-$20. That could save you some money.
I didn't include any peripherals like keyboards or mice because those are always completely personal preference. Everyone likes different stuff there.
If you have a bigger budget, or need to stick to a smaller one, let me know and I can through out some more ideas.
You will see almost no performance difference in games between a single RAM module and dual-channel (2) modules in gaming performance unless you are using your integrated intel graphics.This hasn't even been slightly true for a while.
Cool, thanks. I'm guessing I'd be better bumping up the PSU since I want the option of another graphics card?I have no idea what the conversion rate is for pounds to dollars, but take my above build, slap an i7 in it instead of an i5, bump it up to 16GB of RAM, and you're set for everything you just asked for (gaming and video rendering). Might need some more HD storage too assuming you don't have drives you can salvage from your current PC
I agree with this, a lot actually. I once WAY overspent on a video card. When I first got it, it was overkill for any games I was playing anyway and by 2 generations, when all that extra power was actually being used, the newest ~mid-range cards were better. I would have saved a decent hunk of money buying a good mid-range card, and then another one 2 years later.I'm not 100% sold on the 780ti, it's just so damn expensive. I know it would still be within your budget but I've never been a fan of spending $700 on a video card...