Ian Packham -> (6/25/2003 10:35:56 AM)
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I rarely upgrade individual pieces. My strategy is to purchase a rig with specs close to the top end and keep this rig for 3 years then purchase a completely new rig. This has worked so far - I purchased my first rig in 1997, second rig in 2000 and now I will purchase again in 2003. The problem with upgrading individual parts is that the machine will become imbalanced - some parts are fast, other parts are slow. You need to design your rig so that there is synergywith no bottlenecks that hamper the data flow. So talking about video cards as a separate item is somewhat meaningless. You dont place a 6 liter V8 engine into a Beatle chassis - the poor thing will fall apart. So design your rig with the correct amount of RAM, video card, HD space etc that reflects upon the speed of the CPU and motherboard. Personally I buy rigs that have six months old technology - you get great specs without paying premium prices. In Spetember I plan to buy; P2.8Gig (200mhz) (to be overclocked) motherboard with 200Mhz FSB 512MG DDR RAM (anything more is excessive) Radeon 9700 64MG 40Gig 10,000RPM HD I will keep my existing DVD player, floppy drive, sound card, mouse, keyboard etc so helping keep the cost down.
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