Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips (
More info?)
Thanks all. I have built my own before and for others. I agree with
everything you are saying. I guess I also feel like the rest of
you-things are always changing. I realize Intel is a bit behind and
their roadmap looks a little shaky. I was not aware of the DDR-II
though. I do know there is a move toward BTX and new cases, cooling
and PCI-Express for all boards rather than just the video board.
I guess I rather not go thru the hassle of building with a limited
warranty even if I have a 3rd party build one at a local store. I
checked a few sotres out. 1 year warranty and that is it. 90 days on
some other barebones systems.
Is there a motherboard (I do read Extreme Tech and the like) that has
PCI Express and perhaps could handle DDR-II?
How far away is BTX and does it make much of a difference?
And finally if you had to buy a system in what order would you rank
the manufactureers, their components, and their support? I put Dell
last for support these days and have not been impressed by the systems
I have seen my friends and other purchase of recent (except laptops
perhaps).
Sony seemed to surprse me with a decent machine. HP I tend to like.
Gateway is cheap in dollars and not sure about the insides. Compaq
(Part of HP as we all know) is not too too bad....I have a Compaq
Deskpro that is quite old and it is faster than some other machiens I
have seen and is only a PIII 800mhz. Faster than my boyfriends that I
upgraded to 900MHZ, some RAM and same hard drive with 8mb cache. Old
PC100 memory.
Thanks, Patty
Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@ezrs.com> wrote in message news:<r9-dndsvwJ7y7DTcRVn-gg@rogers.com>...
> Patty Amas wrote:
> > It is Thanksgiving and I see a lot of desktop computers at Best Buy
> > and the like with pretty much Pentium 3.0ghz only on the shelves. I am
> > excluding AMD at this time.
>
> Yes, the Intel P4 3.0Ghz is actually now a pretty decent "entry-level
> performance machine" these days. It's kind of funny, but Intel is having
> selling its processors these days, and it has some huge inventory issues
> now.
>
> > Do you think that the stores and Intel are trying to get rid of 3.0ghz
> > units for the next wave of perhaps 3.2 on the shelves since the 3.8
> > came out recently?
>
> No, it's a bit more complicated than that. Intel's next generation chips
> will not be any faster than its current generation chips in terms of
> frequency -- 3.8Ghz will likely be as fast it will ever get from now on.
> Intel is now distinguishing its chips by differences in bus speed and
> cache size. So if you get a 3.0Ghz P4 right now, your next performance
> upgrade might be another 3.0Ghz P4! However, your next 3.0Ghz P4 might
> have twice the cache as the current one, or it might have a faster bus
> speed than the current.
>
> > I see some decent deals out there but rather wait until I see a range
> > of processors on the shelves without having to do a special order with
> > the stores.
>
> Intel is only able to produce lots of 3.0Ghz and 3.2Ghz processors
> nowadays. Anything above that like 3.4, 3.6, or 3.8Ghz are rare and hard
> for them to produce. You'll be waiting a long time to find "a range of
> processors" from them. Pick up what you can today, there's not much
> beyond this.
>
> > I have ruled out Dell (do not want to argue about this) due to their
> > poor support system in place. I tend to favor the HP, Sony line.
> > Gateway perhaps if I need to save some money. Compaq perhaps these
> > days.
>
> I'd suggest checking into non-brandnames like the boxes made and sold at
> the local computer stores. They are much more configurable than the
> brandname boxes. Like for example when you go to a Best Buy (or a Future
> Shop here in Canada), you are pretty much limited to what you're seeing
> on the shelf in front of you. At a local computer store, you can build
> up your system from its basic setup to any decent configuration you
> like; for example, you can upgrade the video card, the hard drive, the
> memory, the CPU, the motherboard, the audio, whatever. And they can
> build these systems much cheaper than what you get at Best Buy usually.
>
> Yousuf Khan