Jon Tydda
Jon.Tydda at alcontrol.co.uk
Tue Oct 19 11:11:22 CDT 2004
Good advice Mark, but I've found that if you upgrade the motherboard, you nearly always have to upgrade the processor and RAM at the same time, due to speed or compatibility issues (it it doesn't fit the slots or something)... I'd take it on the chin and do it all at once if possible, then you only have to open it up once, and won't be putting it off while you do something else, then something else comes along... you know how it is. Jon -----Original Message----- From: Mitsules, Mark S. (Newport News) [mailto:Mark.Mitsules at ngc.com] Sent: 19 October 2004 17:06 To: Discussion of Hardware and Software issues Subject: RE: [dba-Tech] Desktop recommendation Others have made fine suggestions. If you are considering building it yourself, may I suggest the following... It is a combination of hardware that should give you decent performance at a reasonable price, plus put you in a position of being able to upgrade the processor in the future. Prices were taken from Pricewatch. You can probably expect to add a certain percentage to account for shipping and choosing alternate dealers. Out of the following, I'd probably suggest upgrading the motherboard first. $100 -AMD Athlon XP 3000+ Barton 2.167 GHz 512K Cache 400FSB OEM $ 60 -80.0GB EIDE HDD Western Digital 7,200RPM 8MB Cache $115 -1GB PC3200 DDR Memory 400MHz $ 45 -Biostar/Amptron M7NCD, NVIDIA nForce2, Audio, Video, LAN (This is a decent chipset, but you can get better Motherboards) $ 35 -ATX Mid Tower Case + 400W P4/AMD PW. 11bay. Fit all Micro and ATX MB. Extra Mid Case Front USB2.0 and audio. thermal disp. and lights (selectable). Aluminum clr. Screwless for cards. ____ $355 -Grand Total Mark -----Original Message----- From: Joseph O'Connell [mailto:joconnell at indy.rr.com] Sent: Tuesday, October 19, 2004 9:45 AM To: Discussion of Hardware and Software issues Subject: [dba-Tech] Desktop recommendation I am looking for hardware suggestions and comments. My primary development PC just lost its hard drive. The boot sector is bad so I cannot reformat it. The PC is about 4 years old, so instead of replacing the hard drive, I started lookin for "deals" on new computers. Office Depot has an emachine for $370 that includes: Celeron D Processor 330 (2.66GHz) 256MB DDR PC2700 memory 60 GB hard drive DVD-ROM/CD-RW 8-in-1 memory card reader 17" flat screen monitor For $100 the system can be upgraded to include Celeron D340 Processor (2.93GHz) 512 MB memory DVD-ROM and CD-RW >From the Intel web site, I learned that the processor includes 256KB L2 cache and 533 MHz Front Side Bus. Although this is not the fastest computer, it is quite a step up from the HP Pavillion 733GHz Pentium that it will be replacing. Does anyone have experience with emachine? What is the difference between Celeron and Pentium processors? This seems like a terrific deal, am I missing something? The operating system is Windows XP Home. I will replace it with Windows 2003 Terminal Server. Any suggestions on how to configure the hard drive? Multiple partitions? If yes, what should each contain? All suggestions/comments/ideas are greatly appreciated. Joe O'Connell _______________________________________________ dba-Tech mailing list dba-Tech at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/dba-tech Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com _______________________________________________ dba-Tech mailing list dba-Tech at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/dba-tech Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com The information in this e-mail is confidential and may also be legally privileged. The contents are intended for recipient only and are subject to the legal notice available on request from : webmaster at alcontrol.co.uk ALcontrol Laboratories is a trading division of ALcontrol UK Limited. Registered Office: Templeborough House, Mill Close, Rotherham, S60 1BZ. Registered in England and Wales No 4057291