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Posted: 1/15/2006 6:30:43 PM EDT
my home computer is dying.
I've been putting off building a new one, but this is the second time I haven't been able to get it to boot up.. (MB is not recognizing the IDE devices) It's about time I guess, i'm running a AMD 1.3 gig Athlon that I build oh, about 4 years ago. any suggestions? I'm wanting to run a S939 AMD and most likely an ASUS MB any one got any insight to share as embark on this journey? thanks. |
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But the best you can afford.
I just built a system on AMD's Athlon 64 3700+ |
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my suggestion. don't use cheap parts. if your not going to build it yourself, don't get a Dell especially. find a local computer store, have them build it for you.
this is what i do all day long |
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What are you using for an OS? I am looking at building one myself. |
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Xp Pro all the way. |
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Just about a year ago I built up my current system with my tax refund. I went with an Athlon 64 3200 (90Nm) on a DFI motherboard and a gig of ram. Still runs great, just loaded the Windows XP pro X64 bit edition and it is still running like a champ. If I get a refund this year I may go dual core and add another gig of ram.
If you decide to go dual core make sure you get an OS that can handle it, Win XP home and the like only recognize one CPU. You will need Pro, or Pro X64, or another multi core compatible OS. The motherboard and chipset you go with will depend on what you already have that you want to include, ie Video card. Mine is PCI Express with an Nforce 4 pro chipset. If you still want to use the AGP vid card make sure whatever board has AGP (it's one or the other). Since you are going to get a 939 pin chip (and you should), make sure the Mother board has a current BIOS that supports Dual Core if you go with a single. Get a power supply that will dish out enough power for later when you upgrade. |
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Here is your setup.
AMD opteron 165 dual core CPU 2 GB Geil Ram geforce 7800GT/Evga mobo combo whatever HDD you want whatever DVD RW drive and then a Fortron source PSU good and resonably cheap about 1200 dollars in all for a kickass overclockable PC if you have questions PM me Jeff |
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btw, get your stuff, especially the OS, from a place like mwave.com. Not a local shop or a big box store. You WILL save a bunch of money buying from a reputable dealer online.
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www.newegg.com
Is a nice place to shop by the way. Low prices and a rock solid return/RMA policy. |
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I wont ever touch Geil RAM again.... |
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currently running XPpro
looking at Xppro x64 (I have contacts at M$ and we'll see what else I can get) definetly building myself. |
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I too, am in the process of researching what system I wish to assemble. Thus far, I have it narrowed down to the following:
AMD Athlon 64 FX57 or a FX60 dual core, DFI Lanparty UT RDX200 CF-DR CrossFire Mobo, 4 gigs of DDR400 2x Radeon X850xt YMMV. |
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Normal XP Pro..... I wont go to a 64bit OS till it gets more main stream.. Drivers, apps, games and so on..... |
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1st of all ... is there a reason you are against geil. also, AILapua, Why get so much Ram with such low end vid cards (2 gens back) and why not get an opteron 175 which is much more overclockable than the A64 FX60s
Jeff |
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Tried it once in a PC. RMA'd twice, 3rd time I told em to keep the Geil and I went Corsair. Best move I have made. |
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It is a full native 64 bit OS built off the Server 2003 kernel. It was actually released about 6 months ago, but driver support sucked bad. I got it from work and now the sriver support is close to regular XP, but not perfect. Some things you need to consider before jumping into the 64 bit arena: Do I have any use for Native 64 bit programs yet? So far a couple of games have come out with 64 bit coding as a free upgrade, Half Life 2 is one of them. I have am anti virus that is 64 bit and is free for individual private use as well. The OS will run just about anything 32 bit just fine as well so no worries, but drivers and Anti-virus need to be 64 bit. No networking issues with my regular XP Pro PC in the other room. I really wouldn't advise buying it for home use, Later versions of Windows (Vista) will do the same. I got mine for free so that is why I have it. |
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Start with this advice from Daniel Bernstein.
From there, upgrade the individual components to suit your needs. I like to upgrade the video card significantly from what DJB specs, and I like to bump up the hard drive capacity a bit, preferably with a RAID setup. ZipZoomFly, Newegg, and Tigerdirect have all proven to be good sources in the past. I'm tired of the "Rebate Shuffle", so Tigerdirect is falling off of my list rapidly. Jim |
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Really? My GeIL (2x1gb DDR400 PC3200 w/ heatspreaders) works wonderfully... ran Memtest86, no problems... I'll be buying GeIL again soon, 2 more sticks to upgrade to 4gb. |
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Driver Support for XP Pro x64 still sucks balls. I have had XP Pro x64 for almost 5 months, and I still have no drivers for printers, and I am using modified XP x32 drivers for other hardware.
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xp 64bit sucks ass.
2 sets of binary's is sooooo nt 3.51 and its friggin annoying driver support sucks. the os is buggy, M$ is firesaleing it because its crap, its cheaper than normal xp because its a substandard products. Just use XP pro, chances are you'll never have more than 4gb or ram, let alone need to address it in windows. If you want a 64bit desktop os, try Suse10 x64. |
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Fixed |
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+1 Windows XP x64 is rock solid but driver support is just not there yet, the average user is better off sticking with regular XP Pro. |
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BULLSHIT... Windows x64 is rock solid... the only thing lacking is drivers support for all products and that will come. 64 bit Linux works fine but there is even less than you can do with it than Windows x64 |
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Wierd timing. I've spent a better part of the day looking at building one.
I'm leaning to dual core x64. Built to my wants, looks like about $1100 from here |
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If you can billd your own... more bang for the buck. |
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I reccomend Corsair RAM, it has worked great in all the systems I have put it in.
My current system (for the last 2 years or so) is a duel Opteron with a gig of Kingston ECC. It's been time to upgrade for a while but I can't stop spending money on guns and ammo. |
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Maybe things have changed since I tried XP64 almost a year ago, but it was a steaming pile of crap, and was soon replaced by regular XP. Everyone I have ever spoken to that has tried XP64 has agreed with me. Even hardcore windows zelots. I'm not going to start an os holywar, but dont feed me that "you cant do anything in linux bullshit" Linux is just as equil as desktop os as Windows, if you think otherwise you have never really used linux as a desktop os. |
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i run 64bit fedora core 4 on my amd 3000+ system. no virus's no spyware. no homepage hijacks. no wallpaper hijacks. works good for internet, email, wordprocessing. only disadvantges. is movies, and audio doesn't always work. depends on system config
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That's a BUDGET PC??? Very nice! |
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when i build my new one, it will definately be a dual core 64bit chip. Though if you get a 64bit chip you might as well fork over the money for the 64bit OS
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If what you want is reliability from a ROCK SOLID OS in 64 bit then the only solution is to go down to the Apple store and buy a Mac. A 64bit OS is nothing new there.
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Yes,,, but new Macs are switching to Intel, and the OS on them is not 64-bit. (-I think....)
------ As far as Windows/Linux/PC goes--the better CPU's (AMD) are all 64-bit, but there's still not much advantage to paying for or running 64-bit Windows. Very few programs benefit from it at the moment, and many 64-bit drivers still aren't working as well as the 32-bit drivers do. I have no idea what (if any) Linux programs benefit under 64-bit operation. Linux programs in general tend to be rather lightweight anyway. But anyway--"64 bits" is really mostly salesmanship anyway, no matter if you get Apple, Windows or Linux. It will not privide any great speed increase and most software does not need anywhere near the RAM addressing that 64 bits provides. ~ |
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You are correct on all fronts. The new intel macs are 32bit, but the g5's are infact 64bit, and will be arround for a while, nomatter what Apple marketing thinks. The whole thing is 98% of desktop users won't be addressing more than 64bits of memory, unless ofcouse they are doing some massive video or raw image editing, then I guess you would call those power users are they arent going to be building their own desktops either. There are plenty of linux apps that make use of large memory foot prints, but they are unarguably not desktop applications. |
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Compared to my home rig, that one is very much a budget machine |
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That was spec out with the parts I want. I'm still looking though. |
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64-bit is kind of premature right now unless you run Linux. XP64 will be good when they put out drivers and apps, but for most people with an x86-64 processor they will find that they are hindered by it now. However that doesn't mean you shouldn't get one because soon enough it will get more support.
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64bit CPU is faster than 32bit CPU's hands down. |
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Interesting theory but it goes into 32-bit mode when it's processing 32-bit code (such as XP Pro).
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Yes, but 64bit CPU's ARE faster then 32-bit CPU's... Benchmarks and tests have proven it. |
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+1 |
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Find and post a reputable source for this information, I expect that such a source will be comparing 32bit and 64bit of the same clockspeed, fsb, caches, etc... |
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I dont need to. I know there faster first hand. (I went from a 32bit to a 64bit). Also, go look online anyplace. 64bit wins in beanchmarks period. |
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I think what he meant was that back when the two companies (AMD and Intel) were both producing 32 and 64-bit chips that ran at the same speeds--the 64's were faster... but the 64's had various other improvements as well.
And now, all the faster CPU's from both companies are 64-bit anyway. Matter of fact, at my favorite online supplier (Mwave) they have five different families of AMD and Intel chips--and only the cheapest/slowest family of each is still 32-bit.... ~ |
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As I said, I dont need to. I have seen it first hand. But since it seems ill have to do it for you, give me a bit. |
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Do yourself a favor and stop before you look even more poorly informed… if that is possible. If you actually understood what you were talking about you would know clock speed became irrelevant the day AMD released the Athlon 64 chips… Athlon 64 bit chips run faster than Intel chips that are clocked faster… It is not even arguable at this point. There is no need for him to go back and dig up 2 year old benchmarks because you live in a 2 year old time warp. |
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Just because you cant afford to upgrade, doesnt mean you should hate on a superior technology www.neoseeker.com/Articles/Hardware/Reviews/amd64-4000/ www.pcstats.com/articleview.cfm?articleID=1665 www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,112603,00.asp |
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