Don wrote:
> Can you specialists giveme some advice please. I'm in the UK.
>
> Is the advice I've been given any good? Suggested I go from my old
> slow system to a new system based on Intel. Proposed system seems
> overkill. Opinions please.
>
>
> REQUIREMENT:
> I use my system for home use with a lot of personal office-like
> activity (I'm retired).
>
> I want to have reasonably good audio editing for good quality voice
> recording of meetings. Want low system noise where possible.
>
> Would like FEATURES (like lots of USB and on-board functions to save
> buying plugins) but I don't need tons of outright POWER.
>
>
> PRICE:
> I can't fund expensive equipment so I try and buy for value rather
> than leading edge technology. My current system was bought as middle
> to trailing edge technology and has got more out of date since then!
>
>
> CURRENT SYSTEM:
> (a) AMD Duron cpu at 1800 MHz. Real 1800 MHz (approx sub-Athlon 2100+)
> (b) Syntax mobo based on Via 266a chipset with 768 MB SD-RAM.
> (c) 17 inch CRT which I will keep and re-use.
> (d) four to seven hard drives (mix of SATA/PATA) using PCI adapters
>
>
> PROPOSED SYSTEM (PC shop suggestion: total £450 inc VAT)
> (1) Intel Core 2 Duo E4500 processor (£77)
> (2) very recent Asus mobo (£89)
> 3 PCI, 6 SATA, 10 USB, 2 Fwire, 8ch sound, 4D chII-1066 memory
> (3) 4 GB memory Crucial/Kingston (£60)
> (4) graphics card (£30)
> (5) sound blaster X-Fi Xtreme PCI 8ch (£33)
> (6) hard drive for booting only (£30)
> (7) DVD-RW £22
> (8) decent case/PSU = Antec Sonata (£92)
> (9) usual ancillary things: fan, webcam, KVM switch, mouse/keybd
>
> ------------
>
> Bit fast isn't it? And probably a huge jump.
>
> It's too expensive. Any ideas where I can trim the cost back a bit.
>
> Was told Intel cpu's have currently stolen a lead on AMD. Also that
> Intel mobos were no longer significantly more costly than AMD mobos.
> True enough?
>
> Decent mobo can provide integrated function which is more costly to
> add later so I don't want to pare this back to a "skeleton" mobo.
>
> Decent case and PSU save endless trouble but is the Antec Sonata with
> PSU good value? I don't like it's glossy front flap (remove), only 2
> front USB and no front fan.
>
OK, I'll throw one together.
Based on this chart, I'll go from Intel E4500 to AMD 5600+. $117 versus $69
http://www.xbitlabs.com/images/cpu/d...ice-perf-1.png
Motherboard Asus M3A78-EM $66
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813131324
HDMI/DVI/VGA/DisplayPort (graphics options)
PS/2 (keyboard)
ESATA (high speed external disk)
RJ-45 (Ethernet)
6 USB (4 on backplate)
8 channel audio (six connectors)
S/PDIF (TOSLink digital audio)
1394 (Firewire - for camcorder ?)
2 PCI slots.
PCI Express x16 (future graphics upgrade)
PCI Express x1 (successor to PCI)
One con for the product - no accessories to speak of.
http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/13-131-324-S05?$S640W$
You might have to pick up some adapters for USB later, if
you want more rear USB connectors than are provided.
http://estore.asus.com/images/14-000500020.JPG
The case is the other area you could shave off a few pounds.
I'd suggest buying one without power supply. (Mainly, because
for some bargain cases, the power supply is just adding to your
local landfill.) Then, you can select a power supply separately,
picked for what you consider the loading is going to be.
The above should be a pretty low power system. If you don't
install a separate video card, use the integrated video,
even a 350W supply would be enough. The 5600+ processor is
65W, the motherboard plus RAM about 50W, so there really
isn't a lot of power consumption.
HTH,
Paul