Time for a new PC?
Nov. 13th, 2008 10:20 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

So the question is what do I want in a moderately priced gaming box? It's probably going to be a Microsoft OS, and preferably Windows XP.(**) My baseline for this right now is the Dell XPS 630 with a dual NVIDIA GeForce 9800 card. That comes with XP pre-installed - I'd rather not do my own downgrade if I don't have to. Price new from Dell is $1400.
The question is whether I can beat that without going out and building myself a white box, which I would really rather not do. I loathe messing with PC hardware and I don't mind paying for someone else to Just Make It Work.
Other things I looked at:
Dell's Optiplex line - too limited video options
Dell's Precision line - lots more expandability, but pricey. Even the low-end T3400 comes in around the same $1400.
PC Connection HP/Compaq line - doesn't let me customize the machine. The HP SmartBuy xw4600 looks pretty close in terms of specs but is weak on the graphics and only about $300 cheaper.
One option I've heard discussed, but can't seem to find reliable data on: buy a Mac and dual-boot it with my personal copy of XP installed in the other partition. That's intuitively appealing but I'd need a lot more data on current Macs and dual booting than I can find this morning.
(*) I'm pretty sure the problem is a bad video driver. The fact that my motherboard is so old I had to get a retro card for which ATI doesn't seem to make new drivers is part of the problem.
(**) I don't particularly want to start an XP-Vista debate. I just don't see what Vista buys me, and I do see a lot of problems. One of the advantages of getting a name-brand PC is that they come with licensed media to put Vista onto the box if I decide to do that later.
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Date: 2008-11-13 04:06 pm (UTC)I certainly won't try to steer you towards Vista, but XP is no longer supported, which means that new games may well not run on it.
Windows 7, the follow-up to Vista (and rumored to be the reason why more effort has not been put into fixing Vista) is coming out soon. If you can hang on just a bit longer, that will likely be worth it in the two-to-three-year time frame.
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Date: 2008-11-13 04:15 pm (UTC)Why? DirectX 10 don't run on XP. Only Vista.
For what it's worth, Win7 is really just a cosmetic rehash of Vista with some new shinies tacked on: it should certainly be a better user experience but it's the same thing under the hood.
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Date: 2008-11-13 04:42 pm (UTC)That said, if you know of a better (cheaper?) Vista-only gaming box I'm willing to look at it. XP is a preference but not the only factor.
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Date: 2008-11-13 05:29 pm (UTC)All the deals I looked at included basic mouse/kbd, and a couple had pretty sweet-looking LCDs but none of those packages were right in the important dimensions.
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Date: 2008-11-13 04:36 pm (UTC)He is far beyond "developing" one... ;-)
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Date: 2008-11-13 04:39 pm (UTC)WoW is my main gaming hobby these days. I've not gotten into console games, not least because I loathe the controllers. If I got a console I'd probably get a Wii just because its controllers are so different from the tiny thumb-twitch stuff I see on other consoles.
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Date: 2008-11-13 04:29 pm (UTC)However, I'm not a particularly hardcore gamer, and since my favorite stuff is (1) 4X games, which don't put much of a burden on the hardware and (2) out on the Mac anyway, I can't really speak to the usability of running Windows games on Mac hardware.
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Date: 2008-11-13 04:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-13 07:27 pm (UTC)Their budget box doesn't have the graphics power you are talking about (about $600, no monitor but with an OS).
Their "hot rod" shoots for $1730 plus shipping, which is past your target range. But look closer:
You have a monitor, speakers, mouse, keyboard, dvd drive. That knocks about $500 off the price. ($1230)
If you're happy with your existing hard disk, that's another $180. ($1050)
If you're never using that old machine again, transfer the OS to the new one for about $130. ($920)
Personally, I'd buy a new hard disk. They have a limited lifespan, and it's bad to lose one.
That's a lot of machine in a quiet case.
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Date: 2008-11-13 07:27 pm (UTC)http://arstechnica.com/guides/buyer/guide-200809.ars/3
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Date: 2008-11-13 07:28 pm (UTC)I have put many game boxes together from both places and it is rather nice to pick what you want to spend you $ on.
Sometimes Video alone is enough, or cpu, or putting a SATA Raid together instead to get the ooomf for the desired game.
Want a hand?
This is really the stuff I dig doing. Nothing gets me happier than a liquid cooled dual or quad box with enough lights to make Vegas jealous. Or a sleeper that looks like Wall-e yet pegs sandra scores.
Good luck either way.
Honestly though you can still go name brand if you realize your motherboard is realy not upgradeable.
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Date: 2008-11-14 05:08 am (UTC)Watch techbargains.com for any really good deals. Dell routinely has stackable coupon codes that can save over 25%
24" LCDs at 1920x1200 seem to be the sweet spot for monitors, I have bought several in the last year for under $300 each.