Good guide. It sums up what I think are the only two things that you need to know to build a computer:
1) You know all the parts are compatible.
2) You know where everything plugs in.
In the article you mention
AMD improved the cooler retention module at the same time, but many coolers are cross-compatible.
I was under the impression that most coolers were
not cross-compatible.
A new AMD socket has been launched, and with it a new mounting bracket, it renders a lot of well known heatsinks useless, we’ve compiled an extensive list of those which still fit the new AM2 platform out of the box. Essential read for those looking to upgrade.
LINKAGE
Also, the BTX compairson picture is either typed wrong or it has been deleted from your server.
Now to the good,
😀
I like how it explained the different sockets, though I wish you would have been a bit more forceful to say that you should *not* buy an old-socket motherboard as that severly limits the upgrade path, and not just of a CPU, but entire parts including the GPU (old sockets primarily used AGP) or the hard drive (IDE is dying).
A good clean layout and the transistions between different parts of the article were good.
I wish you expanded a bit more BTX, but most people don't buy it, and few motherboards are available. If any, they are the value-segment. Also on BTX motherboards: Beware, you cannot install a dual-slot coler as it will interfere with the I/O ports. I learned the hard way.
Great review and keep at it!
~Ibrahim~