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Quote from: ruler501 on November 19, 2013, 01:53:55 pmQuote from: harold on November 19, 2013, 12:18:37 pmHow good "good enough" is depends on what you're doing with it, of course.To play Skyrim dual-monitor, you're going to need a pretty nice GPU (or enjoy looking at pixels)Skyrim also was not written to support multi-monitor and I've found multi-monitor hacks very unstable(especially when using mods)How the heck can a game (other than online multiplayer games where more monitors gives an unfair advantage to the player, such as in Starcraft II) lack multiple screen support in 2013? Did the programmers take an arrow in the knee while implementing it?Quote from: leafy on November 19, 2013, 01:35:04 pmQuote from: pimathbrainiac on November 19, 2013, 12:08:52 pmSSD: no, No, and NO. Here's why: SSDs are flash memory, which has a limited number of Read/Writes. After a few years (depends on usage), the drive will either a: slow down immensely or b: stop working. This can happen to anything with flash memory eventually, such as flash drives and calculators.Just a quick note, this is not actually true any more. Early SSDs were prone to failure, but the tech has improved vastly since then. The average hard drive has a life of around 10-15 years; SSDs can now survive over 100 yrs. In addition, hard drives are prone to mechanical failure if you bump your case around a lot; my SSD's been dangling in my case (haha cable management) and has absolutely no problems. Since most OSes have support for TRIM nowadays, there's really no reason for write/read speeds to deteriorate over time as well.Another note about RAID: I'd highly suggest not doing it, especially if it's your first time; for RAID0 (which pimathbraniac talks about), if any of the drives fail all your data is lost. Other RAID arrays provide redundancy, but decrease performance.Isn't SSD lifetime reduced only during defragmenting anyway? For TI calculators, the Flash chip was apparently weared out only by garbage collecting and defragmenting, not by archiving/unarchiving/flash unlock, from what I remember.
Quote from: harold on November 19, 2013, 12:18:37 pmHow good "good enough" is depends on what you're doing with it, of course.To play Skyrim dual-monitor, you're going to need a pretty nice GPU (or enjoy looking at pixels)Skyrim also was not written to support multi-monitor and I've found multi-monitor hacks very unstable(especially when using mods)
How good "good enough" is depends on what you're doing with it, of course.To play Skyrim dual-monitor, you're going to need a pretty nice GPU (or enjoy looking at pixels)
Quote from: pimathbrainiac on November 19, 2013, 12:08:52 pmSSD: no, No, and NO. Here's why: SSDs are flash memory, which has a limited number of Read/Writes. After a few years (depends on usage), the drive will either a: slow down immensely or b: stop working. This can happen to anything with flash memory eventually, such as flash drives and calculators.Just a quick note, this is not actually true any more. Early SSDs were prone to failure, but the tech has improved vastly since then. The average hard drive has a life of around 10-15 years; SSDs can now survive over 100 yrs. In addition, hard drives are prone to mechanical failure if you bump your case around a lot; my SSD's been dangling in my case (haha cable management) and has absolutely no problems. Since most OSes have support for TRIM nowadays, there's really no reason for write/read speeds to deteriorate over time as well.Another note about RAID: I'd highly suggest not doing it, especially if it's your first time; for RAID0 (which pimathbraniac talks about), if any of the drives fail all your data is lost. Other RAID arrays provide redundancy, but decrease performance.
SSD: no, No, and NO. Here's why: SSDs are flash memory, which has a limited number of Read/Writes. After a few years (depends on usage), the drive will either a: slow down immensely or b: stop working. This can happen to anything with flash memory eventually, such as flash drives and calculators.
Quote from: harold on November 19, 2013, 12:18:37 pmHow good "good enough" is depends on what you're doing with it, of course.To play Skyrim dual-monitor, you're going to need a pretty nice GPU (or enjoy looking at pixels)Skyrim also was not written to support multi-monitor and I've found multi-monitor hacks very unstable(especially when using mods)Quote from: leafy on November 19, 2013, 01:35:04 pmAnother note about RAID: I'd highly suggest not doing it, especially if it's your first time; for RAID0 (which pimathbraniac talks about), if any of the drives fail all your data is lost. Other RAID arrays provide redundancy, but decrease performance.RAID 5 supports drive loss and increases speed, but it requires three drives and you cannot use one of them for storage
Another note about RAID: I'd highly suggest not doing it, especially if it's your first time; for RAID0 (which pimathbraniac talks about), if any of the drives fail all your data is lost. Other RAID arrays provide redundancy, but decrease performance.
So yeah, I want to get a desktop.But the thing is: i have like no idea what to look for. What I want to do with it is here:Linuxat least two monitorsprogrammingfinally be able to watch full hd videos without the acting up like i have atm on my lappyI guess USB 3.0 would be coolRun emulations without a problem or much lag (like virtualbox or a virtual androis device or something from that area (I hope it'll be able to run Wabbitemu ))A second monitor (already have one)KeyboardI guess a blu-ray drive would be cool but dvd is just fine (as long as i can burn dvds)SSD to boot quicker + start applications quickerAt least 1TB hdd (or are SSDs so big and long-living by now that i could go full on ssd?)Yep, no windows needed So, I wouldn't get anything before christmas now as i'm putting some money for this on my wishlist.Any ideas/what I whould look for/should i buil on my own?Thanks for any help
Quote from: Sorunome on November 19, 2013, 08:44:53 amSo yeah, I want to get a desktop.But the thing is: i have like no idea what to look for. What I want to do with it is here:Linuxat least two monitorsprogrammingfinally be able to watch full hd videos without the acting up like i have atm on my lappyI guess USB 3.0 would be coolRun emulations without a problem or much lag (like virtualbox or a virtual androis device or something from that area (I hope it'll be able to run Wabbitemu ))A second monitor (already have one)KeyboardI guess a blu-ray drive would be cool but dvd is just fine (as long as i can burn dvds)SSD to boot quicker + start applications quickerAt least 1TB hdd (or are SSDs so big and long-living by now that i could go full on ssd?)Yep, no windows needed So, I wouldn't get anything before christmas now as i'm putting some money for this on my wishlist.Any ideas/what I whould look for/should i buil on my own?Thanks for any help thats a lotif you have a heavy wallet then go for a macit is similar in context with linux---------------> both are based on unixmulti display and everything is thereexcept for dvd drive you have a separate one for that
Quote from: Sorunome on November 19, 2013, 08:44:53 amSo yeah, I want to get a desktop.But the thing is: i have like no idea what to look for. What I want to do with it is here:Linuxat least two monitorsprogrammingfinally be able to watch full hd videos without the acting up like i have atm on my lappyI guess USB 3.0 would be coolRun emulations without a problem or much lag (like virtualbox or a virtual androis device or something from that area (I hope it'll be able to run Wabbitemu ))A second monitor (already have one)KeyboardI guess a blu-ray drive would be cool but dvd is just fine (as long as i can burn dvds)SSD to boot quicker + start applications quickerAt least 1TB hdd (or are SSDs so big and long-living by now that i could go full on ssd?)Yep, no windows needed So, I wouldn't get anything before christmas now as i'm putting some money for this on my wishlist.Any ideas/what I whould look for/should i buil on my own?Thanks for any help Definitely build your own. MUCH cheaper.depending on how much money you have you can get certain parts for certain things.You will need/want/what I suggest for the core components.PSU - atleast 600w. but 700w+ is pretty good to have too.Graphics Card (you want a good one) - GeForce GTX Series's I prefer the GTX 760 (getting that soon, brother has it)Processor - INTEL (NOT AMD, because AMD is good for cheap processors and if you are going cheap they are fine, but intel is sturdy it will last and there is a slight difference between them that make me like intel better, cant remember what though) Quad-Core processor of atleast 3.00 GHzMotherboard - anything that is compatible with all your parts, doesn't need to be too great.RAM - If you don't really care or it doesn't matter than do 4 gb if you need a little extra then 6 is good. you probably wont need 8 or 16 for a couple years so don't bother.I'm not a hardware or even software for that matter genius so don't credit me for my likes and dislikes. I'm just trying to help out .If your price range is smaller than this that's fine. You can always get lesser parts but remember your GPU and CPU REALLY matter on the computers performance.And don't forget you can always download more RAM.
Definitely build your own. MUCH cheaper.
[...]if you have a heavy wallet then go for a macit is similar in context with linux---------------> both are based on unixmulti display and everything is thereexcept for dvd drive you have a separate one for that
Quote from: hking1 on November 20, 2013, 12:56:30 am[...]if you have a heavy wallet then go for a macit is similar in context with linux---------------> both are based on unixmulti display and everything is thereexcept for dvd drive you have a separate one for thatew, you'd have to brainwash me for me even thinking about that, sorry Anyways, out of your posts it seems as if AMD is not that good at all.....(lol, i have an AMD cpu in my lappy)Also, graphic card, yeah, i heard about nvidia and linux......so i guess no GeForce card. Any suggestions? (other than saying, hm, decent because i don't know what the hay to pay attention for to get 'decent' GPUs)