G
Guest
Guest
Archived from groups: alt.comp.hardware.pc-homebuilt (More info?)
I am going to be assembling a new computer shortly. What makes it
hard
is I use it for a wide variety of uses.
1. Microsoft Office (mostly Word and Excel)
2. Design and Graphics-I also do a lot of photo editing with Adobe
Photoshop. I use the Adobe suite as well as Dreamweaver for
web
page development. Also for work I create DVD's so use
Pinnacle
Studio.
3. Multimedia-I want a system that is the ultimate multimedia
computer
since I do the video and graphics work and I want it to be HDTV
ready meaning I'll be able to get a high definition drive for
it, play video from the computer onto a HDTV, record video from
satellite TV, etc.
4. Gaming-I want it to be a good gaming computer and be able to play
the latest games.
Other Questions:
AMD vs. Intel: I read for gaming AMD is best (likely the Athlon 64)
and for video/graphics Intel is best (dual core). It seems for my use
Intel may be best but yet for gaming will I suffer that much by not
going with AMD? I can imagine Intel cost more as well. With Longhorn
coming out next year though being 64 bit would it be better to be
with
a 64 bit chip rather than dual core which I believe is 32 bit? Or am
I
better off going with the new chip from AMD which is both 64 bit and
Dual Core?
Heat Issue: I know someone who has both a Pentium 4 and a Athlon XP
and the Athlon seems to run far hotter than the P4. he has fans on
both and both seem to be operating fine but does this usually create
any problems?
Which brand of motherboard: In the past I have always gone with ASUS.
Is this one of the best to get?
I know for this I will get a good PCI Express card such as geforce.
As
well probably a good surround sound high definition card such as the
Soundblaster Audigy unless the sound is built into the motherboard.
the problem I find is I want a computer that just about covers every
use. I know I will have more questions to ask later such as what
case
to go with, what specific sound card, for memory I assume DDR2 is
best,
and what graphics card but this is a start.
I am going to be assembling a new computer shortly. What makes it
hard
is I use it for a wide variety of uses.
1. Microsoft Office (mostly Word and Excel)
2. Design and Graphics-I also do a lot of photo editing with Adobe
Photoshop. I use the Adobe suite as well as Dreamweaver for
web
page development. Also for work I create DVD's so use
Pinnacle
Studio.
3. Multimedia-I want a system that is the ultimate multimedia
computer
since I do the video and graphics work and I want it to be HDTV
ready meaning I'll be able to get a high definition drive for
it, play video from the computer onto a HDTV, record video from
satellite TV, etc.
4. Gaming-I want it to be a good gaming computer and be able to play
the latest games.
Other Questions:
AMD vs. Intel: I read for gaming AMD is best (likely the Athlon 64)
and for video/graphics Intel is best (dual core). It seems for my use
Intel may be best but yet for gaming will I suffer that much by not
going with AMD? I can imagine Intel cost more as well. With Longhorn
coming out next year though being 64 bit would it be better to be
with
a 64 bit chip rather than dual core which I believe is 32 bit? Or am
I
better off going with the new chip from AMD which is both 64 bit and
Dual Core?
Heat Issue: I know someone who has both a Pentium 4 and a Athlon XP
and the Athlon seems to run far hotter than the P4. he has fans on
both and both seem to be operating fine but does this usually create
any problems?
Which brand of motherboard: In the past I have always gone with ASUS.
Is this one of the best to get?
I know for this I will get a good PCI Express card such as geforce.
As
well probably a good surround sound high definition card such as the
Soundblaster Audigy unless the sound is built into the motherboard.
the problem I find is I want a computer that just about covers every
use. I know I will have more questions to ask later such as what
case
to go with, what specific sound card, for memory I assume DDR2 is
best,
and what graphics card but this is a start.