PM>> I found a local computer shop has something called
>> "Transmeta" though I have no idea what they are like.
<http://www.vanshardware.com/> has a review of the
recent "efficeon". Learn about "thermal throttling" :-)
<http://www.vanshardware.com/reviews/2004/04/040405_efficeon/040405_efficeon.htm>
Alan> ... the current upgrade path for 32bit AMD is
> completely dead. ... With a celeron you could
> upgrade later to a P4 depending on the motherboard.
But you'd still have the old (slow) RAM, and old
(slow) graphics.
For someone planning to swap the CPU later this year,
planning for Parts-is-Parts upgrade might make sense.
I always consider PiP at upgrade time, but since I
upgrade every 3 years or so, it's always the case that
too much has changed, and I build a whole new PC (and
trickle-down the old one).
Anyone buying an economy PC today, with plans to
upgrade it in 18 months, is apt to be facing then:
- DDR2 (and faster DDR2)
- PCI Express graphics
- 64-bit
Unless you have recent experience with upgrade-in-place,
and a definite component plan, just buy whatever does
the job for the least dollars. That might be a
remaindered Duron, or low-end Athlon, or last year's
P4 from your neighborhood hardware enthusiast, or even
a Celeron (suitably priced, of course).
The Microtel PCs sold web-only by SamsClub are often
an attractive deal. I used a bare-bones one to help a
neighbor rebuild after a lightning strike fried just
enough of his motherboard to make the PC unusable.
--
Regards, Bob Niland private.php?do=newpm&u=
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