In reply to a
post by Anonymous:
Hi guys,
Have been away for a while hence the silence. I was going to have a look at the dell suggestions but most the comments here seem to suggest those pcs are not good enough. I am now thinking of contacting a local pc shop to compare.
Will you guys be able to come up with a list of components for the system if I should go down that route.
Thanks
Lots of RAM, decent CPU, large HDD. Pretty much what's been discussed already. Are Dell's good enough? If going for a pre-build, yes in my opinion. You get what you pay for, and you pay more for any pre-build system.
If self-build, then it's less expensive in some ways (operating system and other software (MS Office) can be expensive), and you should end up with a made to measure PC, however you also have no 'PC' warranty. Your warranty is parts-specific, so many points of contact, and can you trust your mate to bail you out if things go wrong? Does he have the spare kit to test and diagnose your kit? If so, then fine.
Just my opinion, but I wouldn't waste much time with SSD, as you want GB rather than speed. Many of the big HDDs have decent cache sizes, so they will be fast enough for your needs. There might be a reasonable argument for C: being SSD and data on another large drive, but I most of the people I speak to n SSDs aren't impressed enough (yet), due to the slow down factors. It's a speed/capacity/price balance that isn't favourable enough compared to standard HDDs, although the rising price of the latter does make SSDs more favourable at present. You could get a 1TB drive with 64MB cache for the price of a 120GB SSD.
Quad core CPU or better is pretty much all I recommend. Plenty of cache on the CPU is a good thing.
RAM should be 8GB or more, and in as few sticks as possible. It's preferable not to max out the motherboard mem slots from my experience, so two sticks in a four slot mobo is the way to go, but you might find that 4 x 4GB is better than 2 x 4GB if you need more than 8GB. Some motherboards don't care for all slots in use and problems have occurred in the past. If it's triple channel, then 3 x 4GB seems the best way to go (12GB).
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