Build a better PC for under $750 USD
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Build a better PC for under $750 USD
Can you build a better PC (no case/no floppy) for under $750.00? If not, what do you think of this one? The only stipulations are that it must be PCI Express and have a DVD burner.
MSI K8N Neo4-F $88.00
AMD 64 3200+ venice core 939 $190.00
1 gig 512x2 PC3200 Corsair 2.5ms $89.50
Leadtek 6800 PCIE 256 $213.00
80 gig SATA Westen Digital $53.00
Aspire 500 watt PSU $55.00
Pioneer DVR110 $49.99
Total: $738.49
Anyone else here ever use an Aspire PSU? What do you think?
MSI K8N Neo4-F $88.00
AMD 64 3200+ venice core 939 $190.00
1 gig 512x2 PC3200 Corsair 2.5ms $89.50
Leadtek 6800 PCIE 256 $213.00
80 gig SATA Westen Digital $53.00
Aspire 500 watt PSU $55.00
Pioneer DVR110 $49.99
Total: $738.49
Anyone else here ever use an Aspire PSU? What do you think?
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- Joined: Mon Apr 17, 2000 7:00 am
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Well PCI-E has more expandability and future proof then AGP. Not to mention that according to newegg there are no AGP 6800s with 256MB of memory. Don't forget that the best 939 chipsets have PCI-E and not AGP.
As for the Aspire PSU, I have never used one and never intend to. I stick with Antec, Enermax or Thermaltake for my PSUs. I really only want quality I can trust when it comes to PSUs, because they can take a whole system down if they fuck up
As for the Aspire PSU, I have never used one and never intend to. I stick with Antec, Enermax or Thermaltake for my PSUs. I really only want quality I can trust when it comes to PSUs, because they can take a whole system down if they fuck up
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read all what i said, I said PCI-E was MORE expandable and future proof then AGP. Not that it was completely future proof, but I'd be willing to bet it is definatly more future proof then AGP.[FTF]Pyro wrote:Kills On Site wrote:Well PCI-E has more expandability and future proof then AGP
funny I heard the same thing about slot 1 and 370 might not be the same thing but my point still stands
future proof
NO
best just now
Yes
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Kills On Site wrote:
read all what i said, I said PCI-E was MORE expandable and future proof then AGP. Not that it was completely future proof, but I'd be willing to bet it is definatly more future proof then AGP.
dude I said the same thing when PCI came out and it still took 10 15 years to get rid of ISA
Once technology has been embedded it doesnt go away for a VERY long time..... decades in fact. AGP will be around for a LONG time.
80 gigs to start of aint that badDr.Gibbs wrote:Why such a small hard drive..?
maximum needed for vista will be around 4gigs leaving 70 gigs (including wastage and swap)
70 gigs is quite a lot if you only play a couple of games and download and save to cd dvd
you dont "really" need any larger than that and for around 750 dollars I dare to say you couldnt get really any better than that
although I did just build a system
amd sempron 2600+
512 meg
3d surround sound dolby 5.1
ATI generic PCI graphics card 7600
80 gig drive
DVD writer
Asus mobo
for 280 dollars
suits my needs albeit I cant run games just now.... well anything that requires dx9.0 since the graphics card only supports up to 7.0
My guess will be two generations of mobo's and cpu'smjrpes wrote:I don't think AGP will be around for a long time, at least for higher end cards. My guess is a year or two.[FTF]Pyro wrote:
AGP will be around for a LONG time.
or around 5 - 10 years, I really cant see intel or any other chipset manufacturer dropping a standard such as agp within the mobo's and as such I really cant see graphics card companies dropping it either
I don't doubt that AGP will still be on backwards compatible mobos for the foreseeable future, but I do doubt that mid to high end level graphics cards two years from now will still come with both an AGP/PCI-E option. The reasoning is that a high end card two years from now will work best only on a relatively new CPU and mobo (within the last 2-3 years), so that people who buy a high end card will most likely have a PCI-E compatible mobo to go with it already. Since its customer base will at that point be buying mainly PCI-E anyway, graphics card companies will see less and less financial reason to put in the resources to continue selling an AGP version.[FTF]Pyro wrote:My guess will be two generations of mobo's and cpu'smjrpes wrote:I don't think AGP will be around for a long time, at least for higher end cards. My guess is a year or two.[FTF]Pyro wrote:
AGP will be around for a LONG time.
or around 5 - 10 years, I really cant see intel or any other chipset manufacturer dropping a standard such as agp within the mobo's and as such I really cant see graphics card companies dropping it either
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Kills On Site wrote:Well PCI-E has more expandability and future proof then AGP. Not to mention that according to newegg there are no AGP 6800s with 256MB of memory. Don't forget that the best 939 chipsets have PCI-E and not AGP.
As for the Aspire PSU, I have never used one and never intend to. I stick with Antec, Enermax or Thermaltake for my PSUs. I really only want quality I can trust when it comes to PSUs, because they can take a whole system down if they fuck up
I've only used Antec, that's why I asked.
Re: Build a better PC for under $750 USD
Where you get these prices.. ?YourGrandpa wrote:Can you build a better PC (no case/no floppy) for under $750.00? If not, what do you think of this one? The only stipulations are that it must be PCI Express and have a DVD burner.
MSI K8N Neo4-F $88.00
AMD 64 3200+ venice core 939 $190.00
1 gig 512x2 PC3200 Corsair 2.5ms $89.50
Leadtek 6800 PCIE 256 $213.00
80 gig SATA Westen Digital $53.00
Aspire 500 watt PSU $55.00
Pioneer DVR110 $49.99
Total: $738.49
Anyone else here ever use an Aspire PSU? What do you think?
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Thanks, Mr. Wizard. I suppose I'll be glad I bought a PCI-E board now, when in five years I'll be upgrading to a 128-bit 32X PCI-E videocard that if it even ran on the current boards it would run slowly.Kills On Site wrote:Well PCI-E has more expandability and future proof
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Re: Build a better PC for under $750 USD
Newegg..Dek wrote:Where you get these prices.. ?YourGrandpa wrote:Can you build a better PC (no case/no floppy) for under $750.00? If not, what do you think of this one? The only stipulations are that it must be PCI Express and have a DVD burner.
MSI K8N Neo4-F $88.00
AMD 64 3200+ venice core 939 $190.00
1 gig 512x2 PC3200 Corsair 2.5ms $89.50
Leadtek 6800 PCIE 256 $213.00
80 gig SATA Westen Digital $53.00
Aspire 500 watt PSU $55.00
Pioneer DVR110 $49.99
Total: $738.49
Anyone else here ever use an Aspire PSU? What do you think?
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- Posts: 10074
- Joined: Mon Apr 17, 2000 7:00 am
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- Posts: 10074
- Joined: Mon Apr 17, 2000 7:00 am
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6820145440Dek wrote:got a part number on that mem? I can't find it that cheap..
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