My oldest son, Adan, has wanted to upgrade his computer for a long time. To be honest, I can't blame him. He has been using a P3-600MHz beast that I built back in 1998! I told him that if he saved up his money he could buy the pieces to make his own computer that would be be a good starting point for future upgrades for about $300 CDN. After about 6 months of saving he finally had enough and I started looking to see what I could get.
He isn't a big gamer so the only thing it had to run was Runescape and Flight Sim X. I did some research and it looked like a motherboard using the AMD 780G chipset would be a good starting point. This would support AMD processors all the way up to the new Phenoms but we could start with a dual core 4400+ for $72. The motherboard also has an integrated ATI HD3200 video card that is capable of decoding a Bluray stream even using a cheap Sempron CPU. The HD3200 can also use Hybrid Crossfire to connect to a HD3450 or a HD3470 if you want better gaming performance. This would still be nowhere as good as a dedicated 8800GT or other midrange gaming GPU but it would only cost an additional $75 vs $200.
So, in the end we got:
Biostar TForce TA780G M2+ AMD 780G mATX AM2 1PCI-E 2PCI SATA W/RAID Video Sound GBLAN Motherboard
AMD Athlon 64 X2 4400+ Dual Core Processor Socket AM2 Brisbane 2.3GHZ 2X512KB 65NM 65W Retail Box
Apex PC-373 ATX Mid Tower Case Black 4X5.25 1X3.5 4X3.5INT 400W W/ Front USB & Audio
Corsair Value Select PC2-5300 1X1GB DDR2-667 240PIN DIMM
I dug up an unused 250GB SATA HD and an unused copy of Vista Ultimate and in the end including shipping, taxes and insurance it cost $271. Not bad for a machine with a fair amount of upgrade potential and that also does everything that Adan wants to do right now.
Showing posts with label Home PC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Home PC. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Building a starter PC for under $300
Labels:
Home PC
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
VDI for home use?
I've got two boys at home that are constantly fighting over the use of my computer. At the moment they are young enough that they aren't playing games that need lots of computer resources. Mostly, one of them is playing games like Runescape and its Moparscape clones. The other plays some more advanced games like Flight Sim X.
After reading this blog site about building a $200 PC I got to thinking if it would be possible to build a cheap PC for the boys and have one of them use a real PC and the other use a XP virtual machine using some kind of cheap windows terminal to connect. I guess the terminal would be the key thing. If it is too expensive you might as well build another cheap PC.
I'll do some more research and post my findings.
Labels:
Home PC,
Virtualization
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