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Revision of New Computer from Sun, 29/08/2010 - 11:26

Microman's picture

Hey Guys,

My current Ubuntu machine is an ancient POS with an 800MHz Pentium 3, a no name graphics card, 512MB RAM (I filled the slots with 128MB PC133MHz), and a 40GB HDD. It usually works for web browsing and programming microcontrollers, but sometimes it randomly quits stuff, the display will crash to terminal, the whole computer will lock up, or it gets really slow. It runs Ubuntu 9.10 rather well for such an ancient thing.

I have won in a science and technology competition with: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NCOk9EB47ys, and have some money to spend. I want to bring that device to market, so want to spend as little on a computer as I can. I don’t need a gaming machine, as I already have one. I just want a basic computer good for web browsing, and running windows 7. Personally, I wish I never tried Ubuntu / Linux. Why? I love using Linux, but find with the things I want to do (iTunes for my iPod, Microchip’s MPLAB, and PCB design) all need windows. A possibility is to run a VM Player, which would be fine if my computer could actually run it.

So, I need help choosing a low cost (Really, I would like to spend less than NZ$1000). I have a huge 17” CRT monitor, but would like to replace it with a 17” LCD. This is providing it stays in the budget. I have a logitech mouse and keyboard, so I don’t need to replace those. USB ports are essential. I regularly fill my 7 port powered hub (I have a lot of development tools that use the USB). I am quite capable of building a machine, downloading and installing drivers. I am not capable of selecting parts that will work well together.

Help?

Cheers,

MM

Comments

Fuzz's picture

Some components

Cool. I’ve rarely had problems with Linux, but have only put it on a few systems at work. Ubuntu seems fairly tolerant. The things you’d probably want some advice from someone like Ltmon / Kazashi / n0mad are probably graphics card and motherboard. The rest it’s fairly safe to pick what suits the budget rather than worrying about compatibility.

Few examples:
(Prices will be a little higher – these are all AUD, but all from a shop that’s not the cheapest).

CPU: i5 3.2ghz – $217. Lots of cheaper i3’s, and core2 duo’s too.
RAM: 4GB Corsair RAM $158 (again, cheaper brands, cheaper prices)
DVD Burner: $32
HD: 500GB seagate $58
Monitor: 19” samsung $170

$635. Leaves a bit of spare money capacity for the video card and motherboard.

Source: http://ijk.com.au/branch/ijk/

Microman's picture

Request

If I were to post links to parts, would anyone be willing to check them for me? I’ll have a quick go with the parts from a place I trust, and see how I come up.

I know for Ubuntu, it is NVidea all the way. That just happens to be my preference too :-)

ltmon's picture

Linux alternatives...

Congrats on the win. I think with some creativity you can get a very fast computer for under $1k: it won’t play the latest games, but will run virtual machines and your scientific software without a hastle. Here’s a suggestion from APC mag for the best current budget setup (<AU$800).

http://apcmag.com/budget-pc.htm,

or for a bit more money http://apcmag.com/master-builders-value-pc.htm

Linux should be fine for your needs, with a little adjustment….

For the iPod:
1. Flash your iPod firmware with Rockbox: http://www.rockbox.org/, and then it will both be a better device and work with all operating systems.
or:
2. Use Amarok to transfer files back and forth on the iPod (yes, I said back and forth which iTunes does not let you do). You may instead prefer Banshee media player, which also works with iPods no problem. There’s probably even more programs that will work for you.

PCB design:
1. Best freebie is gEDA: http://www.gpleda.org/
or:
2. Best $$$ is Eagle. It’s US$50 if you want the lite edition, or up to US$1500 for all the bells and whistles.

MPLAB:
This apparently runs just fine on Linux, using WINE. Let me know if you want help getting it up and running.

Microman's picture

Current Selection

I have never done this before, and don’t really know what to look for. Excuse me if I have chosen ancient stuff, bad brands, or should spend a few more $$ to get something far batter.

Motherboard NZ$103.30
Intel DG35EC
Motherboard CPU type: up to Core 2 Quad
Socket type: 775
Form factor: M-ATX
FSB: 1333
Chipset: Intel G35 Express
On-board video: Yes
DDR2-SDRAM slots: 4
Memory speed: 800 MHz
Graphics slot: PCIe-16
Link: http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=389064

CPU NZ$148.10
Intel Pentium Dual-Core E6600
CPU type: Pentium Dual-Core
Socket: 775
Frequency: 3.06 GHz
FSB: 1066 MHz
Fan: Yes
Link: http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=384339

Video Card NZ$96.67
Gigabyte GV-N210TC-1GI
Video card Bus: PCIe-16
Chipset: GeForce 210
RAM: 1024 MB
RAM type: DDR3
Memory bus: 64
Core clock: 590 MHz
Link: http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=389011

Memory NZ$155.09
Corsair Value Select VS4GBKIT800D2
Size: 4096 MB
Module: DIMM
Type: DDR2
Rated speed: 800 MHz
Bandwidth: PC2-6400
CAS: 5
Module size: 2048
Modules per package: 2
Link: http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=377071

Hard Drive NZ$123.44
Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 ST31000528AS
Interface: SATA-2
Capacity: 1TB
Speed: 7200
Cache: 32 MB
Link: http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=375914

DVD Writer NZ$49.28
LiteOn iHAS324
Type: DVD±RW/±R/RAM
Connection: SATA
DVD-R write speed: 24x
DVD-RW write speed: 6x
DVD+R write speed: 24x
DVD+RDL write speed: 12x
DVD+RW write speed: 8x
DVD-RAM write speed: 12x
DVD-ROM read speed: 16x
CD-R write speed: 48x
CD-RW write speed: 32x
CD-ROM read speed: 48x
Buffer: 2048 KB
Link: http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=378886

Monitor NZ$203.40
Asus VH192C
Type: LCD
Screen size: 18”
Colour: Black
Max resolution: 1366×768
Vertical resolution: 768
Pixel refresh: 5 ms
Contrast: 10000:1
Speakers: Yes
Widescreen: Yes
DVI: Yes
Link: http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=381507

Case NZ$91.47
Cooler Master Elite 341 M-ATX
Case type: Mini Tower
Board type : M-ATX
PSU: 350 watts
PSU included: Yes
Material: SECC
Colour: Black
Height: 365 mm
Depth: 185 mm
Width: 400 mm
Side opening: Yes
Total bays: 6
Exposed 5¼ bays: 2
Exposed 3½ bays: 2
Hidden 3½ bays: 2
Maximum fans: 4
Fans included: 0
Front USB: Yes
Front audio: Yes
Link: http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=378819

Total: $970.75

Unless these parts are pretty decent, this is a bit much. Might skip the monitor, and select a cheaper graphics card. Ascent also might not be the cheapest place to buy parts from.

Microman's picture

lt

Thanks Mate :-). I’ll have a look into the budget PC guide.

I am very interested in getting MPLAB running in WINE, I’ll ask you after I buy a faster machine. Currently, I use Hitech’s PICC18 compiler, which works great. I miss out on a lot of features with the PICKIT2 though, like programmer to go.

Eagle is one of my favourite PCB design tools. Along with Altium DXP. Perhaps I will just need to play around with WINE to get things working. I am looking into purchasing eagle.

With the iPod, I have an iPod touch. It’s not too big of a deal to use a different computer, I was just looking for an alternative.

I’ll read through that guide, find parts, and let you know how I get on…

ltmon's picture

Eagle

Has native Linux version, so no WINE required.

Your choices for your PC seem pretty good.

The Pentium Dual Core may be a the weak point (it’s basically an old design shrunk on to a single chip), and I’m personally a fan of the AMD chipsets and processors in the budget range — more money makes Intel the better option though. But, you should be able to get faster socket 775 CPUs for cheap for a while yet, so it’s upgradeable.

Microman's picture

Budget PC

Comes to NZ$1040.63 I can afford it, but would like to cut down on cost to less than $1000. I don’t think my parents are willing to chip in :-P. As long as this can run the Quake 3 engine (which my current machine does just fine), then that is all the gaming I need. Perhaps watching movies uses a lot of processing power?

Can somebody help me cut a few extra corners? As it stands, the RAM is the second most expensive component ($240!), coming second by $7 to the mother board! That’s crazy.

Microman's picture

Alternate parts

RAM:
How important is ECC? I can save a lot without it…
http://ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=369094 (Without, $164)
http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=9380681 (With, $240)
Save: $76

Video Card:
How much power do I really need? I would probably watch DVDs, on my up to 20” screen.
http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=384472 (GeForce 8400, $69.51)
http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=385068 (RadeonHD 5670, $168.95)
Save: $99

CPU:
Athlon vs Phenom?
http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=381299 (Athlon II X4, $174)
http://www.ascent.co.nz/productspecification.aspx?ItemID=378909 (Phenom II X2, $160)
Save: $14

Savings with alternate parts: $189, making the total cost: $851. I would certainly pay that much, providing the graphics card isn’t a piece of turd…

ltmon's picture

My suggestion

ECC: Automatic correction of errors. It makes the RAM more reliable. I suggest you don’t need it in this build.

Video card: Anything discrete and new can play Q3 games reasonably well — the 8400 will be just fine for this. To play movies, look for the HD decoding and scaling etc. on the video card. I think both of these cards will have that capability, but worth checking. The Nvidia will work best for HD content on Linux if it supports VDPAU — I think it does, but again check. I don’t think the AMD has HD video acceleration on Linux just yet.

CPU: The Athlon is older, but was a higher spec when new. The Phenom is newer, but a lower spec — but still I suspect the Phenom will be faster. The Athlon wins in multitasking (quad core) but unless you use this capability it will be slower, hotter and more power hungry otherwise. I think the motherboard to fit the Phenom will end up costing more though (?).

Edit: You should be able to find a GT210 or GT220 for a similar price to that 8400. You can get them for as low as $50 over here, and they will be somewhat faster than the 8400 which is a couple of generations behind.

Edit again: I just checked the prices at your NZ shop for this stuff … Egads! You’re up about 30% on Aus prices after conversion! Try buying online from AU and shipping it, maybe just buying the case in NZ to save on costs. http://pccasegear.com.au is very respectable, and you should make up your shipping charges in savings.

e.g.

For NZ$10 less you can get a better Phenom: http://www.pccasegear.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=187_345...

Another NZ$30 saved on RAM: http://www.pccasegear.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=186_113...

You’ll save at least NZ$100 in the end.

Microman's picture

CPU

The mother board says ‘up to PhenomII’. In regard to multitasking, I run four desktops with chats, firefox, up to 5 PDFs open at a time, some light weight IDEs (I actually used gedit, and the compiler for PIC is pretty light weight), and mail. All of this works fine on the 800MHz I have, just a bit slow. As long as it is snappy, unlike now where it is laggy. I think the Phenom II will be fine. With a saving of $14, it is hardly a big decision. I just don’t know which one to pick :-).

By reading through the budget build, many of the choices were made about long term upgradablilty. I can always get new RAM, a new video card, a faster processor, as long as it fits in the sockets right?

The 8400 GS looks like it will do a fine job. On the NVidea site it meantions playback of HD DVD and BluRay. Great!

I’ll choose the faster and cheaper DVD drive, which will save a further $10.

I guess that’s my parts more or less chosen then :-). Thank you very much lt!

ltmon's picture

Did you read my edits?

Look again at my previous comment. Just checking you didn’t miss the additional bits I added.

Microman's picture

Buying in Aus

Why not, I’ll see how much the difference is. Thanks LT.

Better parts for less is always good!

EDIT: Just from pc case gear:

Cheaper RAM (Don’t know if 2× 2GB or 1×4GB is better)
Cheaper Better Phenom II X2
Same priced better card (GeForce 210)
Cheaper HDD
Much Cheaper DVD drive, not better but no big deal.

They don’t have the motherboard, and I’ll get the case in NZ.

Total with AUS parts: NZ$780. That saves $70! Including a slightly better CPU, a much better GFX card. Unfortunatly it doesn’t look like pc case gear ships out of Australia. Any other places I could try?

n0mad's picture

n0mad's HTPC

m0rnin MM

I’ll send ya my HTPC build if ya like MM

Total AU$800.00

n0mad

Microman's picture

New Zealand Store

Found another place in NZ, PBTech.

Can build the rig for NZ$824.01 AU$654.14

Specs:
AMD Phenom II X2 555 Black Edition 2× 3.20GHz
MSI 890GXM-G65 4xDDR3 2xUSB3
4GB 1333MHz DDR3 Non-ECC CL9
WD 7200RPM 500GB 32MB SATA II Caviar Green
EVGA GT210 512MB 64-bit DDR2 PCI-E 2.0 ×16 HDCP Ready Video Card
LG GH22NS50 22x SATA INTERNAL OEM Black Color SATA DVD WRITER
Gigabyte GZ-M2 M-ATX Mini Tower Case Black 1xFan 6xBays

I think this will be an excellent machine, even for that price. Add $180 for Windows 7, which I think I will pass on. Perhaps I just need a copy of Windows XP for a bit of gaming. I’ll run a bench mark on the computer to compare to my existing machine, as the specs above are looking pretty good!

EDIT:
Mobo:
Gigabyte GA-870A-UD3 ATX (-$30.24)

Case:
Lea-Dai S501 ATX (-$1.94)

New Total: NZ$791.83 AU$628.59

ltmon's picture

pccasegear shipping

Ship to me and I’ll ship to you. I can pick up from pccasegear in person, so if you trust me enough it should come out for less! If I reneg and run away with your gear, Shad will come down and beat me up.

A parcel up to 2kg ships to NZ for about AU$40, dunno how much this lot will cost though. Also, you might want to consider insurance on the freight.

The only site that I could find in a few minutes, which specifically says they’ll ship to NZ, is http://www.auspcmarket.com.au. I’m not sure if they’ve got a good reputation or not. Others might have a favourite shop which can ship to NZ.

Of course, it might be worth calling pccasegear and simply asking nicely :)

Edit: Looks like you’ve found a better price locally after all.

mm

have you tried looking on pricespy.co.nz, really good for finding the cheapest deals in nz. Pc pacific is usually about 10% cheaper than ascent, but ascent does seem abit more slick.

Hashy's picture

Linux Fails

c0ngratulati0ns micr0, g00d stuff. Winning stuff is awes0me. Winning stuff thr0ugh hard w0rk is s0mething i w0uldnt know ab0ut th0 ;p

Techn0l0gy * Hippies d0nt mix, theref0re I have had end 0ver end tr0ubles with Linux. That’s just my luck haha, but still it is always great t0 have the dual b00t handy. Fr0m my rec0llecti0n, 0lder hardware architecture was just m0re unstable, it was part 0f the devel0pmental pr0cess, hardware & s0ftware was just m0re unstable, and 0ne day, it wasn’t. Upgrading bey0nd the early 2000’s really seemed t0 s0lve al0t 0f pr0blems, at least in my experience.

Never fear, the team is here! Y0u will find all the help that y0u need in selecting and finding the c0mp0nents y0u need f0r y0ur new system! I really aint that helpful, but just a few tips fr0m me are t0 basically leave y0urself with r00m f0r future expansi0n. Get as bigger case as y0u can aff0rd, get a b0ard with 2 PCI-E spaces f0r future p0ssible upgrades t0 a twin GPU system (cr0ssfire/SLi). Giving a system that y0u d0nt plan t0 use f0r gaming as much r00m f0r future expansi0n as y0u p0ssibly can, means that it sh0uld last y0u as l0ng as it p0ssibly can! Gaming machines, t0 really keep 0n the ball, need a maj0r c0mp0nent upgrade every year 0r tw0. Just ab0ut any 0ther type 0f system can keep y0u happy f0r many years t0 c0me, asl0ng as y0u select the right c0mp0nents n0w, planning f0r the future. N0t much m0re advice I can pr0vide aside fr0m that.

I stick with AMD, ATi, and usually rec0mmend a Seagate hard drive, but have given Samsung a g0 lately. 24” m0nit0rs are the shiz t00. d0nt think ab0ut this in regards t0 gaming, its just as useful f0r anything besides gaming, all that screen space 0n y0ur deskt0p really helps t0 max 0ut the multitasking.

Try and be able t0 d0 as much with y0ur system as y0u can! Keep 0pen the realms 0f p0ssibilities, and 0fc0urse, START F0LDING S0ME W0RK UNITS!! F0R THE TEAM!! HAHA http://fah-web.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/main.py?qtype=teampage&teamnum=136356

Hashy's picture

nVidia 0r ATi

Am actually running an nVidia these days, but did run an ATi card happily f0r many years, but have used nVidia’s successfully in the past, I thiiiink.. Kazashi?
We’ve had a mix 0ver the years, and I really can’t say which is “better”, i think they’re really all the same! Like y0u say, f0r Linux c0mpatibility, nVidia seems t0 have the better supp0rt.

CPU’s, the CPU is just ab0ut the m0st hardy, l0ng lived c0mp0nent in y0ur wh0le system. Asl0ng as there are n0 faults with it, it c0uld 0utlive y0u haha. If y0ur trying t0 save s0me cash, g0 AMD, 0therwise, g0 upmarket and get an Intel, but really, they’re ab0ut as g00d as each 0ther (durability wise anyway..) and sh0uld last y0u a g00d lifetime.

Weather 0r n0t y0u want t0 leave y0urself 0pen t0 cr0ssfire/SLi is upt0 y0u, but after giving myself that 0pti0n, I have decided its n0t really w0rth it, and that spare PCI-E sl0t w0uld “pr0bably” be better put t0 use with either a USB 3.0 expansi0n, 0r a g00d TV Tuner card that runs thru the PCI-E sl0t. Pe0ple are realistically getting 150% 0ut 0f 2 graphics cards with SLi/Crossfire c0nfigurati0ns, h0wever s0me are claiming with newer cards/b0ards/whatever that they are getting cl0ser t0 180% 0f t0tal perf0rmance. Really n0t necessary if y0ur n0t l00king int0 a gaming system.

ltmon's picture

24" monitors

Problem with 24” monitors is that for just a little more money you can get two 21” monitors. Although they are coming down now that they are seen as “normal” rather than “huge”.

I know what I would choose for work use though :)

Microman's picture

GST, Crap!

Okay, Will list parts with price (inc GST) and distributor to make it easier for me to find stuff.

Part Name Price NZD Link
CPU AMD Phenom II X2 550 3.1Ghz 7MB Cache AM3 Black Edition Retail with Fan $123.30 PC Pacific
Motherboard Gigabyte GA-870A-UD3 $176.30 PC Pacific
GPU GIGABYTE GEFORCE GT220 OC 1G DVI HDTV HDCP HDMI ATX $105.00 PC Pacific
Memory Kingston ValueRam 4GB 1333MHz DDR3 Non-ECC CL9 DIMM $163.99 Ascent
Hard Drive WESTERN DIGITAL CAVIAR BLACK WD5001AALS 500GB 3.5’ 32MB SATA2 $69.20 PC Pacific
Optical Drive LG GH22LS50 22X Internal SATA DVD SecureDisc LightScribe $39.20 PC Pacific
Case ANTEC TWO HUNDRED VERSATILE ATX TOWER CASE BLACK NO PSU $60.40 PC Pacific
Power Aywun A1-550E MEGA POWER ECO Series 550W, 80 PLUS, 140mm fan, 2 $59.00 PC Pacific
Total . $796.39 .

AUD: $632.21

Hashy's picture

True!

True that, and t0 be h0nest, ive already had 0ne 24” Samsung SyncMaster have issues. Try t0 av0id this m0del if y0u can, Samsung Sync Master 2443BW. The issue I suspect, is a design flaw, the m0nit0r is designed t0 be turned 90 degrees cl0ckwise, and THATS where I think the pr0blem lies. When its m0ved ar0und t00 much, the c0nnecti0ns are damaged and the u end up with a c0lumn 0f dead pixels. Abs0lutely sh!t and ann0ying in my 0pini0n, but as u say lt, they are quiet “normal” these days, I w0uldnt want t0 g0 with anything less, but it all depends 0n what y0u wanna use it f0r, and what y0ur t0lerances are!

A 21” m0nit0r sh0uld d0 y0u just fiine, just pick y0ur m0del well. I w0nt say that Samsung’s have a pr0blem in general, I w0uld just say the particular m0del has its design flaws, and the c0ntr0ls are a pain t0 use if y0uve actually g0t s0me adjusting t0 d0 manually! Actual butt0ns cant be beaten with “stylish” tap like c0ntr0ls that y0u cant even see!

ltmon's picture

Looks good

If you can squeeze a bit more cash out, the best upgrade I reckon is moving from the G210 to the G220.

GeForce G210 (GT218) – > 16 stream processors, 64- bit bus, 512 mb DDR-2 memory, frequency 589/1402/1000 MHz
GeForce GT 220 (GT216) – > 48 stream processors, 128- bit bus, 1024 mb DDR- 3 memory, frequency 615/1335/1580 MHz

That’s a big difference for about $30.

However the G210 will certainly play Q3 level games with ease.

Microman's picture

Graphics

Part Name Price Link
GPU GIGABYTE GEFORCE 210 OC 512MB DDR2 PCIE2.0 2XDVI HDTV HDCP HDMI $69.60 PC Pacific
GPU GIGABYTE GEFORCE GT220 OC 1G DVI HDTV HDCP HDMI ATX $105.00 PC Pacific

Difference: $35.40

I actually think it will be worth it, as it will make the specs faster than my gaming rig. All it will need is an OS, so I could get a cheap copy of XP.

Fuzz's picture

-

Lookin good MM. Exciting!

Are you building it yourself? We should get some kinda IPX video conference going of you building it all with IPX assistance!

Microman's picture

Intriguing

I will have to consider that. My current machine supports the webcam on skype just fine, but fails with audio. Perhaps I can host a webcam server, and have everyone in IRC. I will indeed be building it myself. It can’t be harder than plugging parts in the right place… I used to do it in my lunch times with parts like Pentium 2s, SDRAM (128MB), and 20GB HDDs. I had no problems.

If I order the parts tomorrow, I should be able to build it this coming weekend!

Microman's picture

GST

Again, it bit me in the ass! PC Pacific does not include GST until the checkout. Now I have to look around for parts again…

Microman's picture

New Prices

All from Ascent. They have a 2% off if you build your PC with them (which I will). You also save money with a bank deposit, which I can do.

Part Name Price NZD Link
CPU AMD Phenom II X2 555 CPU, 3.2GHz, Socket AM3, 32/64-Bit, Retail pack with fan, Black Edition $163.23 Ascent
Motherboard Gigabyte GA-870A-UD3 Motherboard $217.38 Ascent
GPU Gigabyte GV-N220TC-1GI Video Card, GeForce GT 220, 1024MB, DDR3, PCIe-16, DVI, HDMI $129.67 Ascent
Memory A-RAM ECO Series ARTW4GB1333D3E, 2×2GB, DDR3-1333, PC3-10600, CL9, DIMM $152.55 Ascent
Hard Drive Western Digital Caviar Green WD5000AADS Hard Disk Drive, 500GB, 5400-7200rpm, 32MB Cache, SATA-2 $76.66 Ascent
Optical Drive LG Electronics GH22NS50 DVD Writer, DVD 16R/22W/8RW, CD 48R/48W/32RW, Internal, SATA, Black, OEM $51.35 Ascent
Case Aerocool Aquilo ATX Mid Tower Case, 500W PSU, Black $101.21 Ascent

Discount = 3.5%
Shipping = Free

Grand Total NZ$861.08 AU$683.57

ltmon's picture

Looks good (still)

A bit more expensive, but I think you won’t be disappointed. Funny how far $1k can get you these days… that GT220 can apparently play Crysis at middle settings and 30fps!

I just looked up the Aquilo case… and found that Aerocool has another model called the “Masstige”. Fail.

Microman's picture

Worth It in the Long Run

Will take this to uni with me. As it stands, my gaming rig plays BFBC2 with lower specs. I think after I get a windows OS, I will be able to play BFBC2, and hopefully brink, from uni… Getting extra power now means not having to buy it later, plus I think $875 is a good price to pay :-).

lt, you will notice some of the numbers don’t include GST. This really screwed me over, making some of the prices above false. I corrected some of them, but not all.

I might be able to get a free monitor from school, which will be a 19” wide screen cheapy from HP.

Microman's picture

Updated Parts

Somebody check these parts?

Part Name Price NZD Link
CPU AMD Phenom II X2 555 CPU, 3.2GHz, Socket AM3, 32/64-Bit, Retail pack with fan, Black Edition $163.23 Ascent
Motherboard Gigabyte GA-870A-UD3 Motherboard $217.38 Ascent
GPU Gigabyte GV-N220TC-1GI Video Card, GeForce GT 220, 1024MB, DDR3, PCIe-16, DVI, HDMI $129.67 Ascent
Memory A-RAM ECO Series ARTW4GB1333D3E, 2×2GB, DDR3-1333, PC3-10600, CL9, DIMM $152.55 Ascent
Hard Drive Western Digital Caviar Green WD5000AADS Hard Disk Drive, 500GB, 5400-7200rpm, 32MB Cache, SATA-2 $76.66 Ascent
Optical Drive LG Electronics GH22NS50 DVD Writer, DVD 16R/22W/8RW, CD 48R/48W/32RW, Internal, SATA, Black, OEM $51.35 Ascent
Case Aerocool Aquilo ATX Mid Tower Case, 500W PSU, Black $101.21 Ascent
Total NZ$ . $861.08 .
Total AU$ . $683.57 .

I swapped the RAM and the Optical Drive. I can either get the Caviar Green with 32MB (low power) or the Caviar Blue with 16MB cache (mid power), the caviar black is a bit more expensive, and I don’t know if I will need it.

for the video conf

why not use tinychat

Microman's picture

Mumble

Have got mumble working just fine. TinyChat didn’t seem to work… Will most likely go with mumble and ustream.

n0mad's picture

n0mad's th0ughts

Nice mike MM, Ya s0unding 0lder n0w :P

Ok a few th0ughts
Ram – 2GB will d0 unless U g0 64bit 0perating system t0 maximise ya 4GB ram….
Motherboard – Yep stick with Gigabyte always a g00d choice…USB 3.0 is here :P
Chip: Amazing h0w stable the AMD chip is when U 0vercl0ck it but as LT ment0ned ab0ve thr0w sum cash ar0und t0 get a stock Intel is the better ch0ice….
GPU: I just g0t the Geforce 220 nice little card with HDMI 0ut….
DVD/BD: f0r an extra $30.00 bucks U c0uld g0 a Blueray drive, the Samsung is in mass supply, think 0f it this way, dr0p 2GB 0f ram and dr0p in a Samsung Blueray :p
HDD: Yep I went – Western Digital Caviar Green, g00d ch0ice there…
Case/P0wer Supply: Case is pers0nel ch0ice but g00d 2C ya g0 500W p0wer supply anythink smaller w0nt d0 n0w days….

l00king g00d MM……………

0hh and have U th0ught ab0ut running Ubuntu and an emulat0r f0r th0se Wind0ws Pr0gs that U must have ?

And 2 sec0und that LT – Amarok is gr0use…….

n0mad

Microman's picture

2x 2GB

Have got two 2GB sticks as it should be faster this way. I plan to have Windows 7 64bit and Ubuntu Lucid 64bit. I’m hoping to set up both OS’s almost exactly the same so switching between them only changes a couple of things.

How should I share files between the two?

The Phenom II X2 is dual core, and is clocked at 3.2GHz. I think (for now) this will be plenty fast for me. I’m doubly pleased this computer has become a gaming rig without really changing much of the price.

I think I’ll get a bluray drive when I actually get a bluray disk, and a decent monitor. As it stands, my 17” monitor wont be great for HD movies. When I head off to uni, I’ll have to get a decent 22” screen with 1080p.

Good to hear you like gigabyte though. I prefer this motherboard to the MSI I had originally chosen. The inclusion of USB3 will be great for when my camera uses USB3, or when I get a USB3 card reader etc.

I actually bought all of the parts last night, so I’ve pretty much concreted that list above. I’ll be saving my money for a good screen and a bluray player at this stage though…

HDD

On the HDD front I used to run a 500gb green as my os drive and now i got a 1tb black and the greens are a lot quieter but slower too.

Why bother with blue ray. Just d/l 1080p movies off the net.

Hashy's picture

Bly Ray is g00d

The Blu Ray is g00d, think 0f it as leaving y0ur 0pti0ns 0pen, h0wever its n0t an essential at this time, and s0mething that can be easily added later, think ab0ut it f0r the future, and wait 0ut f0r Blu Ray burners t0 dr0p t0 a better price, n0t that theyre t00 bad at the m0ment mind y0u. Depends 0n h0w much y0u d0nt mind swapping CD’s ar0und f0r backing up purp0ses. Its n0t c0st effective en0ugh yet with the prices 0f blanks, but y0u kn0w.. The future. The f00tchure!!

Microman's picture

Windows 7, Software

I’ll admit I am a windows newbie. I don’t know anything about setting up this anti-virus stuff, and where everything is installed (on XP, I know it goes to program files). I don’t think there is a root terminal either…

What software do I need (free) to protect myself from viruses?

Fuzz's picture

Microsoft Security Essentials

If you’ve got a legit copy of Windows, you can use their one (Microsoft Security Essentials). It’s not brilliant, but it’s free. I use it on both my PC’s at home. Seems to not slow your pc down as much as AVG.

My preference for AV software is Nod32, but it’s not free and if you’re careful I think paid AV software is a bit of a waste.

n0mad's picture

Avast

Did s0me0ne menti0n Avast

n0mad

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