Thanks for the reply Naam. As far as processor goes, I'm looking to go as far as I can on the money I have for now, to reduce the need for improvement in the future. If i had the income, 64bit would be on the cards, so in my opinion, quad core would withstand the pure abuse I could throw at it for a while, until upgrade time came about. Would you really recommend Core2 Duo until then? I'm really out of touch with the desktop world lately, so I don't know what would be best. I have always heard good things about Gigabyte, but had a recommendation otherwise on the cheapness for efficiency of that motherboard, is it worth looking to one of the other brands?
With similar regard to the case and fan, I was taking the student approach to aesthetics/price with the case, and hoping for a window and decent airflow for a fairly decent price.
I understand entirely the need for a good PSU, I was just hoping a stock PSU would be good enough. Is this not generally the case?
I've also suggested modular as that makes the internals a lot neater\better airflow.The graphics card you had suggested was one I had looked at, it was purely monetary reasons I had opted against it. I shall have to run up a new total with your suggestions, as other factors such as food, drink and rent do come into the money I have to spend, unfortunately.
The 2 keyboards is student laziness, and the inability to get out of bed between watching episodes of TV late at night. The keyboard is my early birthday present, and for that reason is not included in the price, I hope that answers the question.
(Also, I must admit my fear/newbieness towards thermal paste. I did intend to buy dome, but I'll look into it and how to apply it properly before I start applying it)
Also, with reference to your comment about memory, is there any particular specifications to tend towards? (For instance I'm look at one that states 5-6-6-18 under latency timing and I do not truly understand what that means).
Also, I feel I should state I do a lot of .avi to .rm or .rar converting, if that's going to affect things.
John can tell you what mouse I have but for BGs some programable buttons makes for quicker gaming.
Unless you're running multiple processor thrashing apps at the same time (Movie and media generation are normally prime culprits) then it's rarely necessary for a Quad core, a Duo is sufficient and can save a few quid into the bargain. Whichever one you choose (and it is your choice Wink) make sure you get either a Wolfdale (Core 2) or Yorkfield (Quad) as they're built on the 45nm process making them cooler to run.
maybe this one? http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/CiT-1003-Black-Gaming-Case-No-Psu-14cm-Side-Fan
Short answer - no.Long answer - Hell no.Longer answer - They tend to use the cheapest POS PSUs that they can get their hands on.The Xclio stuff are good, under the radar, brand for PSUs. They're made with the same components and at the same place as Antecs,
Fair enough, it's just that the 9800 is just a rehash of the 8800GT chipset. Most of the 9 series were damp squibs performance wise.
If you have access to a big PC seller take a trip down there, what looks good on screen can be wrist crippling when you get to play with them, the stores normally have a demo model on display.
For gaming I don't like wireless only because wired loses the connection less. So I have this version in wired but with a wireless mouse.
As for the memory - unless you plan to overclock it doesn't matter what the latency numbers are, just use a good brand (OCZ, Corsair or Crucial)
Only if you're doing two or three at a time while playing games.
Intel Core 2 Duo, E7500, S775, 2.93GHz, 1066MHz, 3MB Cache, 11x Multiplier, 65W, Retail - £117.29http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/Intel-Core-2-Duo-E7500-S775-293-GHz-1066MHz-3MB-Cache-11x-Multiplier-RetailAbit IP35 Pro XE, V1 iP35 Express, S 775, PCI-E (x16), DDR2 1066/667/800, SATA II, SATA RAID, ATX - £68.87http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/Abit-IP35-Pro-XE-iP35-Express-S-775-PCI-E-(x16)-DDR2-1066-667-800-SATA-II-SATA-RAID-ATX896MB EVGA GTX 260 SSC, Mem 2106 MHz, GPU 626 MHz, 192 Cores, 2 x DL DVI/HDTV - £137.15http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/896MB-EVGA-GTX-260-SSC-PCI-E-20-(x16)-Mem-2106-MHz-GPU-626-MHz-192-Cores-2-x-DL-DVI-HDTVCorsair 4Gb (2x2GB) DDR2 1066MHz/PC2-8500 XMS2 - £42http://www.ebuyer.com/product/148816520W Coolermaster Real Power M520 Modular PSU - £62.89http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/520W-Coolermaster-Real-Power-M520-Modular-PSU-2xPCI-E-80-EfficiencySeagate 160GB Hard Drive SATAII 7200rpm 8MB Cache - £31.68http://www.ebuyer.com/product/149458LG Electronics Blu-Ray & HD-DVD-Rom Combo 16x DVDRW Black - £65.92http://www.ebuyer.com/product/139985CiT 1003 Black Gaming Case No Psu 14cm Side Fan - £27.31http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/CiT-1003-Black-Gaming-Case-No-Psu-14cm-Side-FanAsus VH222H 22" Widescreen True HD LCD Monitor - Black - £145.99http://www.novatech.co.uk/novatech/specpage.html?ASU-VH222Logitech G11 Gaming Keyboard - £37.99http://www.ebuyer.com/product/119595( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eF5DmIfhUqA )Keysonic Black Wireless 2.4Ghz HTPC Media Keyboard with Integrated Touch-Pad - £27.98http://www.ebuyer.com/product/139757Akasa AK-965 x3 Copper Heatpipe Cooler Intel Core2Quad/Duo with 92mm side blow fan - £13.79http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/Akasa-AK-965-x3-Copper-Heatpipe-Cooler-Intel-Core2Quad-Duo-with-92mm-side-blow-fan-Intel-push-pinArctic Silver 5 Thermal Compound for CPU and Chipset Coolers - 3.5 gram - £4.95http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/Arctic-Silver-5-Thermal-Compound-for-CPU-and-Chipset-Coolers-35-gramSum total = £783.81
Also, when it says on Scan "Heatsink: Active (With Heat Sink Fan) " does that mean it comes with a heatsink and I won't need to worry about http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/Akasa-AK-965-x3-Copper-Heatpipe-Cooler-Intel-Core2Quad-Duo-with-92mm-side-blow-fan-Intel-push-pin ? I'm a little confused there.
A boxed, retail CPU does come with a fan but it's a rather anemic affair. This is what you get > http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/Intel-Original-Heat-Sink-Fan-for-Socket-1366-Core-i7-Nahelem-CPU-upto-i7-965-Copper-Base-Alu-fin-OEM.The other one has a much larger surface area, heatpipes to transfer the heat better throughout the fins and a bigger fan (better cooling and lower noise) that is held in place on rubber "shock absorbers" for even less noise Smiley I use it in my machine and have also used it in a couple of other build and had no complaints yet.