industrian
will gently cradle you as time slowly ticks away.
I don't know what Rma policy means. Also the odd £20 adds up!
RMA = Return Merchandise Authorization. Or in more basic terms: warranty.
I don't know what Rma policy means. Also the odd £20 adds up!
I don't know what Rma policy means. Also the odd £20 adds up!
So, my 11 year old nephew is getting into PC gaming. Their home computer is an HP p6310y
http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/product?product=4120042&cc=us&dlc=en&lc=en
He has played minecraft for a year or two and just tried buying Rust but couldn't get it to run. I think it's due to the integrated graphics card, but I'm half of the country away, so pretty much guessing at this point. He got a hard lesson in PC requirements and troubleshooting. He's looking at Primal Carnage now, and I warned him that he might have the same issues.
What do you guys think? Should I look for a dedicated GPU? What's the best bet for a system that old?
300w power supply. Neither of those will work without swapping a lot of parts.If it takes PCI-E?
Then definitely get a dedicated GPU. Nvidia 770 or 280 are decently priced, at least here in aus.
So, my 11 year old nephew is getting into PC gaming. Their home computer is an HP p6310y
http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/product?product=4120042&cc=us&dlc=en&lc=en
He has played minecraft for a year or two and just tried buying Rust but couldn't get it to run. I think it's due to the integrated graphics card, but I'm half of the country away, so pretty much guessing at this point. He got a hard lesson in PC requirements and troubleshooting. He's looking at Primal Carnage now, and I warned him that he might have the same issues.
What do you guys think? Should I look for a dedicated GPU? What's the best bet for a system that old?
750ti works off of bus power (no extra power needed) with the strength and speed of a 580. Hell of a card.Is this it?
http://h20566.www2.hp.com/portal/si...ac.admitted=1395847885965.876444892.199480143
Get a 750 Ti and pray the 300W power supply is quality enough.
750ti works off of bus power (no extra power needed) with the strength and speed of a 580. Hell of a card.
I'd suggest this Gigabyte H87, unless you need more than one PCI-E slot for videocards.I found the Xeon just fine, but are these the motherboards you're referring to?
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813131996
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813130697
But yeah, I definitely think it'd be worth it to save money getting those two and then be able to invest in a 750w power supply. I'm taking it the H87 is more powerful? Might as well go with that if I can't overclock it.
Can anyone vouch for a cheap, good-quality bluetooth mouse? When I say "cheap," I mean $50 or less. I don't need it for aiming or to have zero input latency or anything ridiculous.
Though I am almost always loathe to ever recommend SLI setups, I think the 670 is in a position where getting a second one is the only move that makes sense. It has such amazing performance for the $, that any single card upgrade seems really inefficient. Getting a second card puts your performance a good amount above a 780 when SLI profiles are working. When they're not, you still have a 670, which is a great card.My computer is mostly for video editing, but I also have no consoles and don't want one, do you think this setup will last me a while gaming at 1080p?
i7 3770k
gtx 670
16 gig ram
was thinking of buying a 770 and selling the 670 or just getting another 670 and going the SLI route, but is it even worth it if I'm only gonna be using a 1080p display?
no, that is too steep
It's hard to say what developers will be doing one year from now. So I usually err on the side of caution, since I don't own a crystal ball.
But 60 euros is highway robbery
christ. One thing's for sure: you don't need it now, nor will you need it in the immediate future.
My guess is that the worst that can happen with the 2GB in the next two years is that you have to go with "high" instead of "ultra" textures. If you want to spend more, spend it on all around performance and go right to the 780 (which also ups the VRAM to 3GB). A 770 2GB will be good until Pascal, a 780 will be fantastic until Pascal (and run any new game well beyond that point). The 780's performance is not a waste at 1200p, even with current games.
I don't know what Rma policy means. Also the odd £20 adds up!
I'd suggest this Gigabyte H87, unless you need more than one PCI-E slot for videocards.
If you have any specific requirements in terms of number of PCI-E slots, or required devices, I can put together a list that ought to make you pretty damned happy. Since it's for audio work, I could even tailor it to be pretty much silent.
Any audio devices?The main, resource-intensive programs I'm using are Acoustica Mixcraft, Photoshop and Illustrator CC, UE4, and maybe Sony Vegas. I was looking to fit it all in a Fractal Arc Midi R2 case. Other than that, I have no specific hardwarw requirements. I was looking for an i7 or equivalent processor and 16 gigs of RAM, though.
404 is the lowest i see it (by Gigabyte).
How much worse is the 780, compared to the TI? And how better compared to the 770? Can't search for benchmarks now.
~18-22% gain on the 770->780, 10-15% gain on the 780->780 Ti404 is the lowest i see it (by Gigabyte).
How much worse is the 780, compared to the TI? And how better compared to the 770? Can't search for benchmarks now.
I've seen the Samsung 840 EVO 500GB is £189. Is this the best 500GB I can get at around this price?
Any audio devices?
Might suggest a Define R4 as well. The type of hardware you'd be putting in there wouldn't necessitate the additional airflow you get with an Arc, and would be much more quiet.
5-10% performance.
~18-22% gain on the 770->780, 10-15% gain on the 780->780 Ti
Go for that motherboard I linked earlier with the Xeon E3-1230V3, 16GB of RAM, Define R4, and a PSU of your choice (RM 650 or Seasonic G 650 are both really quiet, Corsair more so). That'll give you the option of any video card you want. Add in a heatsink like the CM Hyper T4 or 212 Evo. That'll give you a nearly silent running PC.I'm definitely a fan of the Define R4 in black, because the upward USB ports were kind of a selling point for me.
Weird setup, but save for an old wacom tablet, I don't have too many hardware perhipherals, none sound. Most of my work is digital, hence the emphasis on getting a decent CPU, RAM, etc.
Go for that motherboard I linked earlier with the Xeon E3-1230V3, 16GB of RAM, Define R4, and a PSU of your choice (RM 650 or Seasonic G 650 are both really quiet, Corsair more so). That'll give you the option of any video card you want. Add in a heatsink like the CM Hyper T4 or 212 Evo. That'll give you a nearly silent running PC.
I've seen the Samsung 840 EVO 500GB is £189. Is this the best 500GB I can get at around this price?
I've been reading this thread for a while, and I think this is the perfect place for the question I have, better than starting a whole new thread.
So, I have recently did an upgrade, from a Core 2 Duo E6850 4GB of RAM, and a MSI 560 Ti TF II, to an Core i7 4471 16GB of RAM, and the same 560. I had planned to stay with the 560 (seeing as it had been bottlenecked by the C2D the whole time I had it), and would upgrade when the 20nm Maxwell cards came out, probably going with the what I assume would be called the 870. Problem is, one of the fans on the 560 is going, so I decided to give the card to my brother (he's on a 9800 GTX+), who will spend the time and ~$25-50 to replace the fan, and I would get another card in the meanwhile to tide me over.
I had originally planned to get a 750 Ti, but now I'm not so sure. It's got half the ROPs (32 vs 16 I believe) and memory bandwidth (128 vs 256), but does have twice the VRAM (2GB vs 1GB). I paid $229 for the 560 Ti, and a 750 Ti would be $159, and may not even be any better in the long run. I'm not talking about the added features such as ShadowPlay, and I already get adaptive VSync, I'm just concerned about raw performance. This however, is just a temp card like I say, but I don't want to spend what's almost the same price as my 560 was 3 years later to only get basically the same performance.
So I've been looking at the 760, specifically http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130933 this one from EVGA. Should I get it, or should I go with this http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814487024 EVGA 750 Ti What do you guys think?
So, my 11 year old nephew is getting into PC gaming. Their home computer is an HP p6310y
http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/product?product=4120042&cc=us&dlc=en&lc=en
He has played minecraft for a year or two and just tried buying Rust but couldn't get it to run. I think it's due to the integrated graphics card, but I'm half of the country away, so pretty much guessing at this point. He got a hard lesson in PC requirements and troubleshooting. He's looking at Primal Carnage now, and I warned him that he might have the same issues.
What do you guys think? Should I look for a dedicated GPU? What's the best bet for a system that old?
Need way more info than that. Rest of the system? Budget?Alright guys let's try again! i5 4440 + GTX760? Mobo is MSI H81M-P33 m-atx.
This is budget build. I will probably upgrade both mobo and CPU whenever a new socket comes out.
It depends on the video card, but probably not.I have a duel monitor set up, can I change which monitor my computer uses when booting? I gave a gtx 760.
Your mind will be blown with how quiet that is.New build!
Build Excellent - Best Overall
CPU Intel Xeon E3-1230V3
Motherboard GIGABYTE GA-H87M
RAM 2x8GB (16GB)
Graphics GTX 760 2GB
SSD Samsung 840 EVO 250GB
Storage 1TB WD Blue WD10EZEX (Already have a 1TB external harddrive)
Power Supply CORSAIR RM Series RM650
Case Define R4
Heatsink CM Hyper T4
Sound Card Xonar DGX
Total: $1270
Keyboard Logitech K750
Monitor ASUS VS247H-P
Grand Total: $1495
Audio work. Am right with you on the VT-d, and it didn't sound like he was going to use it.Are you planning on running VM's with that?
Are you planning on running VMs with that?New build!
Build Excellent - Best Overall
CPU Intel Xeon E3-1230V3
Motherboard GIGABYTE GA-H87M
RAM 2x8GB (16GB)
Graphics GTX 760 2GB
SSD Samsung 840 EVO 250GB
Storage 1TB WD Blue WD10EZEX (Already have a 1TB external harddrive)
Power Supply CORSAIR RM Series RM650
Case Define R4
Heatsink CM Hyper T4
Sound Card Xonar DGX
Total: $1270
Keyboard Logitech K750
Monitor ASUS VS247H-P
Grand Total: $1495
Hard to say why he's going Xeon over i7 - even with "audio work". I also doubt that board will support a Xeon - which tend to favor ECC memory.Audio work. Am right with you on the VT-d, and it didn't sound like he was going to use it.
I'm glad you made me double check, you're absolutely right.Hard to say why he's going Xeon over i7 - even with "audio work". I also doubt that board will support a Xeon - which tend to favor ECC memory.
.Yeah.dont
Just keep the Patriot RAM.http://uk.pcpartpicker.com/p/3gTAL
PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant / Benchmarks
CPU: Intel Core i5-4670K 3.4GHz Quad-Core Processor (£161.99 @ Aria PC)
Motherboard: MSI Z87-G41 PC Mate ATX LGA1150 Motherboard (£64.12 @ Amazon UK)
Memory: Patriot Signature 8GB (2 x 4GB) DDR3-1600 Memory (£58.43 @ Amazon UK)
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 660 2GB Video Card (£131.43 @ Ebuyer)
Case: Zalman Z5 ATX Mid Tower Case (£30.32 @ Amazon UK)
Power Supply: XFX 450W 80+ Bronze Certified ATX Power Supply (£20.00 @ Maplin Electronics)
Total: £466.29
(Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available.)
(Generated by PCPartPicker 2014-03-26 19:47 GMT+0000)
It's gonna be about £450 or so. Thanks for the help. I am not sure if I should use the ram below or even if I can but I am pulling the trigger tomorrow and hopefully will be building it on Saturday.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B003OSTE1G/