Thanks for the tips so far guys! Keep em coming. My eyes are opening.
As for sound (re harddrives etc), it's really not an issue for me. If I can hear my hardware then my music/game volume clearly isn't high enough.
And $5000 isn't a totally iron-clad cap. Alas, I have no sense of perspective when it comes to Fallout 3. Tips for saving money are still appreciated, though, and will get due consideration.
You should know that one reason I'm suggesting such high requirements is because it's hard to get XP these days, and if you get stuck with Vista, you need a lot more hardware to do the same thing at the same speed.
#1 There's no real point getting an extreme processor unless you're overclocking.. well not really... and if you burnt it out could you replace it?
#3 Raptors are okay if you have money to burn but the present terabyte offerings are pretty damn quick and far more cost effective.. as for RAID I think Anandtech reviewed it and found little performance gain for a desktop. The main thing is to put your games on a different harddrive. Perhaps one raptor and one TB drive? Oh and keep your eyes open for the Velociraptor. Larger (320GB) and 30% quicker than a raptor 150GB.
#4 Memory. If you go for DDR3 then spend a LOT of money otherwise it's just a label. DDR2 however, you can get decent speed for less cash these days.
The extreme processors have their multiplier unbound which increases the overclocking potential. Not overclocking them seems a waste and to be honest, it's not the processor speed which will inhibit game performance.I wasn't suggesting he overclock it, but there don't seem to be any other quad-core processors that go very fast. They all seem really slow at 2.66GHz or 2.40GHz. The EE has 3.0GHz, and that's ultimately why I selected it... you have to go down to a dual-core in order to get 3.0GHz otherwise.
The Velociraptor is due out soon, I think it's available on pre order about now though.That might be useful. I was looking at the Velociraptor myself in a review, but it didn't appear to be out yet. The main thing I was considering is that he really wants this in particular for playing one specific game with such a fast computer that he can react more quickly than his opponents even while running everything at full settings, and not as much general storage.
The extreme processors have their multiplier unbound which increases the overclocking potential.
It's not the processor speed which will inhibit game performance.
Oh I wouldn't recommend overclocking unless I didn't like the person and thought they would stuff it up.. or if they're especially irritating..Yup, but often they are also the processors that are at the maximum of what is currently possible, so they have much less "headroom" to go up, as compared to overclocking a processor that is much slower up to that speed. And really, why deal with the potential instabilities and other things that can go along with overclocking, if you can afford the best anyway. (unless you can't stop tweaking things like me).
I'd say almost any of the Core 2 Duo's out there will be pretty much equal as far as game performance goes, because games are much more heavily tied to the graphics card. (Unless you have a really terrible processor, but that wouldn't happen with any of what's been suggested.)
The extreme processors have their multiplier unbound which increases the overclocking potential. Not overclocking them seems a waste and to be honest, it's not the processor speed which will inhibit game performance.
The Velociraptor is due out soon, I think it's available on pre order about now though.
As for performance, it'll make no difference to most in game speeds only load times. I have two Samsung 500Gbs and not only are they quick enough to keep pace with Crysis but also a darn sight quieter than a vibrating raptor![]()
Mine's a 2.4 and I can't say that a score of 5.8 on Vista is slow. Plus how much do you pay to get that 5% difference which you may notice sometimes? It's inefficient.If they made a regular quad-core without an unlocked multiplier at anywhere near same speed, I would have suggested that.
So, what's your suggestion? Go down to dual-core for better speed, or stick with a sluggish regular Q6XXX processor which won't go higher than 2.66GHz? My father unfortunately got me a Q6600 @ 2.40GHz (which I didn't ask him to), and it doesn't even run most applications as quickly as my old E6600 with a 2.66GHz processor. So you can't tell me processor speed doesn't make a difference. I even notice it on boot time, application start time, even while waiting for areas to load in games. Perhaps I'm just so impatient that I notice performance differences that would elude most people.
My storage drive is getting close to half full and I don't load drives more than half full because it makes them incredibly sluggish. Even Raptors don't survive well unless you take care of them. My friends prize raptor went through HDtach and came out lower than ATA100!! Super advertised speed is NOT a guarantee of actual performance. That why half of the reviewers state specifically that they are synthetic benchmarks and not real world results.Well in that case, he should probably look out for them in case he needs the speed. But if he doesn't get a Raptor, he should at least get a drive with a larger buffer and the best SATA connection available. Basically, I'm saying don't go too cheap for bigger storage. I honestly have never been able to use more than 60% of a 200GB drive, and that was when I was incredibly lazy about cleaning it up for several years. The drive died before I even got close to it's capacity. You're probably right about RAID, although it still might improve performance slightly.
It's about bottlenecks not centres of excellence. A fast processor is playing with itself half the time unless your OS is configured correctly, your motherboard can keep up, you have fast enough memory, a fast enough optimised hard drive etc etc etc.You're discounting the performance impact of all these things individually as negligable, but I want you to consider something... taken together, won't they make a bigger impact and result in a less powerful system where you can't do things quite as well or quickly?
Because you're not advising on the best components. Have a look at SSD drives and then tell me how cheap and slow your raptor really is. It's a question of everything in moderation.And you still haven't answered my main question... why is everyone's mind so focused on "best deals" rather than "best quality" or "best performance"? It's like you're all internally assured that that's the most important thing.
Mine's a 2.4 and I can't say that a score of 5.8 on Vista is slow. Plus how much do you pay to get that 5% difference which you may notice sometimes? It's inefficient.
Get a processor with a high FSB and relax is my motto.
It's about bottlenecks not centres of excellence. A fast processor is playing with itself half the time unless your OS is configured correctly, your motherboard can keep up, you have fast enough memory, a fast enough optimised hard drive etc etc etc.
You get more bang for your buck (a whole truck load more) by paying attention to what services you're running and defragging your drive than you will tacking on a high speed processor to a dog of a system.
Because you're not advising on the best components. Have a look at SSD drives and then tell me how cheap and slow your raptor really is. It's a question of everything in moderation.
Personally I never start looking at components until I've chosen a motherboard, the most often overlooked component. After that I'm more concerned with the power supply than I am what hard drive I buy. Get one of the first two wrong and you're just throwing money down a pit.
800 ain't bad... 900 does seem to be obviously faster though. If you've got Corsair you should be able to just add about .1 of a volt and set it to 900 though. Not that I'd suggest such lightly.. not when OCZ1150mhz is sooo cheap.Well, it's possible that something else is configured badly on it... my guess is that it's that 800MHz DDR2.
That sounds right, then. I've always been careful to shut down unneeded services and such when running an intensive application. I even kept a K6-2 accessing the internet well enough with Flash on a regular basis by configuring it to run Firefox as it's shell automatically instead of Explorer. It just seems like I have a lot less control in Vista.
Now there you're probably bang on. Memory speed is crucial. As is latency... but I'm not getting into that debate (no not even if you're really argumentativeI do still think that getting fast memory and a good video card is important, though. Probably more important than a fast processor, considering how fast all of them are these days.
And a stable enough power feed so it doesn't drop half a volt suddenly and make the whole thing go unstable!Well, yes. You have to make sure everything is compatible with the motherboard you've chosen, and that it's well-designed enough to do everything you want. And without a good power supply, you could fry components, or not have enough capacity to do what you want.
Well if commercially available is 600 quid approx for about 64Gb then yes they are. Oh and yes they are quick.. I'd bet Xtreme Systems has had several on test for a while now... they're addicts!!SSD drives... I've heard about them, but I haven't seen any consumer-level models. Some of those would bring you close to the performance of running your whole system out of a RAM drive rather than on a Hard Drive. Yeah, who wouldn't want one of those?
You? Argue? I hadn't noticedI know I argue a lot, but that's because I find it harder to learn unless I argue. If I didn't respect you, I'd dismiss you without arguing.
800 ain't bad... 900 does seem to be obviously faster though. If you've got Corsair you should be able to just add about .1 of a volt and set it to 900 though. Not that I'd suggest such lightly.. not when OCZ1150mhz is sooo cheap.
Less control in Vista? Nah *snigger*... I figure that Vista is more enthusiast level. It took me about two weeks to firstly figure out that I needed to unlock the admin account and secondly to find out how
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Now there you're probably bang on. Memory speed is crucial. As is latency... but I'm not getting into that debate (no not even if you're really argumentative).
Basically I'd advise getting the fastest memory with the tightest timings. In that order I prioritise them, right or wrong... who knows.
And a stable enough power feed so it doesn't drop half a volt suddenly and make the whole thing go unstable!
Aero is nice, I used it, and the memory it uses is negligible. What you probably haven't done is allow the new cache system to get used to you. Try to suffer for a couple of months without doing the IT equivalent of root canal surgery and see how it goes.That's probably right... I've already managed to disable UAC. I just haven't figured out how to get rid of all those start-up services, or whether the performance gain I get from disabling Aero is worth it. It seems so to me, but my father insists that Aero adds important features, and seemed frustrated that I wanted to disable it. I honestly haven't found anything other than transparent windows and flip-3d, which seem pretty superfluous.
Then I'll swiftly change my opinion lest you get boredWhat if I agree with you?![]()
I think memory timings/latency are important as well. Whether I bought memory or not would be related to that. Unfortunately, my father picked out old 800MHz gaming memory, when after looking I realized that DDR2 goes higher than that, and even has better timings these days. That explains why everything else in my system is 5.9, but my memory is only 5.0, and I'm annoyed with the performance.
Hmm I think that's a nice toy. Bit redundant though isn't it? You can get expensive surge protectors to do that.... or just a decent power supply.Yes. Some people say you even need a UPS thing with a battery to create "clean" power in order to protect the computer from typical energy spikes that wouldn't have affected older ones. What do you think of that?
Aero is nice, I used it, and the memory it uses is negligible. What you probably haven't done is allow the new cache system to get used to you. Try to suffer for a couple of months without doing the IT equivalent of root canal surgery and see how it goes.
Hmm I think that's a nice toy. Bit redundant though isn't it? You can get expensive surge protectors to do that.... or just a decent power supply.
That would be hard. I don't really tend to use my computer the same way consistently enough for anything to "get used" to me. I'm rather different from the average computer user. I think I enjoy configuring a computer more than I enjoy using it.In fact, if I were expected to just use a computer without configuring/messing with it, I'd probably get bored. I'm always trying to make it do something or other as well as it can.
It's rather strange... I'm content to do everything else in life the same way fairly consistently, but I would get irritated if I had to do that on my computer.
That's what I thought, too. I see all kinds of power regulation stuff inside a power supply, so it seems to me that the processor should be safe with or without an external UPS cleaning up "dirty" power.
I honestly have never been able to use more than 60% of a 200GB drive, and that was when I was incredibly lazy about cleaning it up for several years. The drive died before I even got close to it's capacity.
If they made a regular quad-core without an unlocked multiplier at anywhere near same speed, I would have suggested that.
So, what's your suggestion? Go down to dual-core for better speed, or stick with a sluggish regular Q6XXX processor which won't go higher than 2.66GHz? My father unfortunately got me a Q6600 @ 2.40GHz (which I didn't ask him to), and it doesn't even run most applications as quickly as my old E6600 with a 2.66GHz processor. So you can't tell me processor speed doesn't make a difference. I even notice it on boot time, application start time, even while waiting for areas to load in games. Perhaps I'm just so impatient that I notice performance differences that would elude most people.
Well in that case, he should probably look out for them in case he needs the speed. But if he doesn't get a Raptor, he should at least get a drive with a larger buffer and the best SATA connection available. Basically, I'm saying don't go too cheap for bigger storage.
I honestly have never been able to use more than 60% of a 200GB drive, and that was when I was incredibly lazy about cleaning it up for several years.
Wow...I'm pushing 1.5TB currently. Then again, I've got at least 25000 songs ripped in in FLAC, along with my entire movie collection, plus ISO's of various operating systems and software.
You're discounting the performance impact of all these things individually as negligable, but I want you to consider something... taken together, won't they make a bigger impact and result in a less powerful system where you can't do things quite as well or quickly?
The idea is to reduce costs in areas where you won't have any major impact, even when combined together.
And you still haven't answered my main question... why is everyone's mind so focused on "best deals" rather than "best quality" or "best performance"? It's like you're all internally assured that that's the most important thing.
Because most people don't enjoy spending money to get nothing worthwhile in return? Getting the best of everything sounds nice, but when one notch down from the absolute best does the same thing, and as far as you can tell, just as well....and costs half the price, why wouldn't you get it instead?
Also, on an unrelated note, I suggest checking out Sisoft Sandra Lite for some more in depth computer benchmarks.