
| Part | Vendor | Product | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Case | Cooler Master | Storm Sniper | $130 |
| Motherboard | Asus | P7P55D-E | $167 |
| CPU | Intel | Core i5 75 0 | $200 |
| Videocard | Sapphire | Radeon HD 5870 | $400 |
| Memory | Patriot | 2x 2GB DDR3 (PGS34G1333ELK) | $113 |
| Solid-State Drive | Intel | X25-M 80GB | $225 |
| Hard Drive | Seagate | 7200.12 1TB | $90 |
| Power Supply | Corsair | CMPSU-650HX (650W) | $133 |
| Optical Drive | Samsung | SH-S223 | $31 |
| Operating System | Microsoft | Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit | $99 |
| Total | $1,588* |
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I have what would be the AMD equivalent of this. I built it three weeks ago. It cost about the same. It also runs anything.
Building a computer isn't as hard as I thought it would be. It's quite satisfying. It's like Lego but if you screw up your out some money.
Cooler Master's drive installation system is great. I have the HAF 922 and it has the same thing. It's quick and not too difficult.
That said, are there any good suggestions for a non-gaming machine in a considerably lower price range? I don't PC game anymore (though maybe I would if I built a rig more suited for it) but I would like a machine that boots fairly quickly and is able to open and run fairly average programs well. The most intensive programs I run are Photoshop and AutoCad and only to goof around in anymore. Primarily I use my PC for simple web browsing and Netflix streaming as well as mass storage of my music and movies (recently ripped all my DVDs to this PC).
This computer has had some odd quirks for some time and as of yet I haven't been able to root out the cause of some of it's issues. I've been looking for an excuse to build my own but I wonder, for general use is it even really worth it to build my own or would I be just as well served buying a prebuilt unit? The experience would be fun but this question is more about the actual cost.
It's not difficult at all. The scariest part is either putting in the processor (Especially with AMD where the pins are on the chip so if they bend you're toast) or booting it up and seeing if it POSTs. Seeing a machine you built for the first time come to life is magical.
Actually, I think that gesture is built into the motherboard nowadays, so I guess your okay.
If you don't make a blood sacrifice, your system won't POST. I accidentally cut my index finger open on the backplate thingy that you put on the back of the case for the mobo.
A tiny little Acer Aspire Revo sounds perfect for your needs, but beware this is a very basic computer, it'll run 1080p video just fine thanks to the nVidia Ion GPU but it might have some problems with Photoshop. However, for most basic tasks the Revo is perfect.
I bought one for a second Linux desktop and it works really well, Blender and GIMP are fairly usable and boot times are pretty good. I'm not sure about Windows performance since I installed Linux as soon as I got it.
Cheaper single core Atom processor ($199) :
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16883103228&cm_re=revo-_-83-103-228-_-Product
More expensive dual core Atom processor ($329):
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16883103235&cm_re=revo-_-83-103-235-_-Product
When I do build one though, I'm totally coming back to this video and watching it again. It made everything seem simple.
Also my friend has the Sniper. It is awesome.
what program did you use.
nice video will very helpful
http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/buyers-guide/2010/04/13/pc-hardware-buyer-s-guide-april-2010/1
I also would suggest the Samsung Spinpoint F3 over Seagate. My favorite case right now is the Antec P-183 (insanely easy to work with, dense, quiet, and cable routing). My previous two cases were Lian-Li but I don't think they make anything to compelling anymore for the price they ask.
This is the best tested.com guide yet, I've always been a fan of no nonsense guides.I think you guys should write one for LCD monitors. Perusing the great LCD suggestion thread on anandtech.com has its charm and all, but I think you guys could do better and help a lot of people out with choosing the right panel type.
@phunk_king: For what you described, I'd say buy a cheap quad core (Intel or AMD, doesn't matter), load it up with 4GB of memory, and if you want to really turbocharge your app load times, splurge on the SSD. You should be able to build a barebones machine that does what you want for $500, $800 if you really splurge. We'll do more builds later. I think the next one will be some sort of server or living room PC.
@deviouslaw: If you're not overclocking, aftermarket coolers are just cosmetic. I don't really like doing things just for show, and we were really squeezing the definition of $1500 to get the SSD and the 5870 in. The current-gen Intel coolers are solid, they're just not particularly sexy.