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Published byRyder Messer Modified over 10 years ago
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The Right PC for You
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Building Your First PC We have done a lot of parts-ordering; I hope you checked that you had some place to plug in the monitor and the network cable Likely you will make some mistakes along the way – I still do on occasion; the last one cost me $55 for the wrong sized optical drive
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Evaluating Parts Often it is far more than price – need to keep in mind the intended use of the system PCMag.com, extremetech.com, Newegg.com are good places for information Google part(s) with “review” in the search box Read the fine print for specs and warranty info We are lucky to have Fry’s close by
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Thick Client ComTIA’s term for general-purpose SOHO system Not the best, nor the cheapest parts Start with the OS requirements Mike recommends 64-bit OS editions – why limit yourself?
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Case Not the first part I would pick Mike recommends mid-tower Lots to choose from as you have seen A rather personal choice
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Motherboard/CPU This one comes as a set since you can’t put Intel chip on AMD motherboard Try to get a modern socket; allows for expansion (for a little while) Avoid both the low-end and the high-end for most applications – price is easy way to tell Do some research on chipset – or look at the input and output ports on the motherboard Buy known brand motherboard unless you just can’t pass up the deal
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Video Often the on-board video is good enough, but make sure motherboard has x16 slot for upgrade Tomshardware.com does monthly review of video cards – cool! Most applications work just fine with mid- range video card (mid-priced)
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Monitors Personal choice – I really stay away from picking a monitor if I can Mike thinks a 20-inch widescreen is a good idea – I have not made that transition yet
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Storage Lots of space costs not very much Solid-state drives still coming down but still continue to have price gap with mechanical drives Need space for applications and data I am running just fine on 160GB drive with 62 GB free and two virtuals
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The Thin Client Designed to handle very basic applications with minimum hardware Student systems, point-of-sale Usually small in size to be unobtrusive MS Office does not demand that much from a system
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Virtualization Station Lots of RAM, hard disk space and CPU power Saves power, floor space and running around
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Graphics Workstation Primary need is for a high-quality, large monitor Ideally you want a fast, multicore 64-bit CPU and lots of RAM Big hard drive as CAD and CAM take up lots of space External drive to backup work Consider a professional graphics card ($$$)
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Audio Workstation Same fast CPU, RAM, large monitor and big hard drive; also high-quality audio interface Audio interface connects microphones and instruments Really a high-end sound card with inputs Add (expensive) high-quality speakers Control surfaces – specialized input devices
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Video Workstation Combines graphics and audio workstations Can use two monitors to track input and output Powerful CPU, lots of RAM and big hard drive(s) Professional level graphics card Similar audio interfaces and control surfaces Might even have custom keyboard set to video editing software
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Home Server As more devices move into the home, need centralized storage space Microsoft’s idea; Mac uses the cloud Media streaming, file sharing and print sharing Fast network connection and lots of storage (fault tolerant) Can use Win 7 or OS X
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More Home Server Network speed (gigabit ethernet – wired) Large hard drive to hold media – at RAID 1 RAM important to active server Network Attached Storage (NAS) for multiple drives for multiple access
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Home Theater PC Monitor, television or projector – HDMI connector on video card – HDMI to stereo receiver to television – DVI and DisplayPort support 1080p HDTV Surround sound speakers – S/PDIF to receiver Stereo receiver Home theater PC – HTPC case to look like other components Network connectivity (cable box or ethernet)
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Software for Playback Windows Media Center, XBMC or Plex “Skins” for XBMC Plex is not flashy, but free!
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Gaming PC Most games have pretty low system requirements (on the box); ported from game stations Same components, just taken to next level Future-proofing – keeping PC relevant for a few years
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Internals Mike thinks quad-core Intel best way to go; next step: AMD – either at 3GHz or better First place you want to splurge a little 4-Gig RAM is ok; only enough hard drive to store game; single monitor Graphics card is the other big-bucks item – Tomshardware.com for reviews Sound cards: 5.1-7.1 Make sure system stays cool – case fans
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Externals Speakers or headphones Monitor with 1920x1080 at 24 inches Fancy keyboard and mouse Mike likes plain black case with no windows or lights
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Big Dollars 6- or 8-core CPU; no game needs it, but future-proof NVIDIA and Scalable Link Interface; AMD and CrossFire; link up to four cards… Motherboard has to handle all this, and case and power supply 16 GB RAM, Blu-ray Disc, 7.1 sound card and Gigabit networking
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Externals Two or three monitors How about 3-D monitor (and glasses) Home theater speakers Gamepad Good chair for long hours
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Picking Parts Make sure socket on motherboard and CPU are the same size – can get embarrassing Make sure video card will fit – pretty easy with x16 slot(s) Make sure you get the right memory for the motherboard
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