Adcadet
Storage Freak
Hey Guys,
My wife finally started to complain about the speed of her 3.5 year old computer, a Core 2 Duo E7200 Wolfdale 2.53GHz with 2 GB of RAM. She is generally very patient with her computer, and most of what she does is web-based and Photoshop. I grimmace when I type this, but her method of editing pictures (sometimes >20 at at time) is to open ALL of them at once and then edit them one at a time. I suspect she'd do really well with a simple RAM upgrade, but she hates having her computer worked on so I'd prefer to just do a major rebuild rather than small incremental upgrades. I also think she doesn't know what she's missing with modern computer equipment (mostly an SSD). She was the same way with an iPhone (hated the idea of switching from her old dumb phone, didn't think she'd use any features, now she loves it). Thus, for Christmas I'd like to build her a new PC. This would likely run stock (no over clocking), and stability is a must.
I'd like to re-use some parts I have, including
- an Antec P180 case
- a FSP Group FSP400-60THN 400W power supply
- her mechanical hard drives (maybe 1.5 TB over 3 drives)
At this point I'm wondering about a few things:
- CPU. It looks like Llano is pretty far behind the Sandy Bridge chips, even the i3's (http://www.hardwarecanucks.com/foru...a8-3850-apu-review-llano-hits-desktop-15.html). Bulldozer seems rather slow in Photoshop (http://www.anandtech.com/show/4955/the-bulldozer-review-amd-fx8150-tested/7). Any reason to look at anything but the Sandy Bridge i3's?
- GPU. At this point she does no gaming, but I could see her eventually trying a simple game or two. The Windows Aero desktop likes a GPU from what I've heard. She's still using Photoshop CS2, and I can't find a definitive answer as to whether a dedicated GPU vs an Intel 2000 vs Intel 3000 vs something else would be utilized in Photoshop. She has an old Radeon 3450 and I have an old GeForce 7900 GS that I could put in the box if it would help.
- RAM - I'm thinking 8-16 GB given prices. 16 GB for $100 given how she uses Photoshop seems like a reasonable thing.
- SSD. I'd like to get her into an SSD, as I think she doesn't know what she's missing. For an OS she probably only needs 40-60 GB. I guess I could recycle my Intel X25-M-G2 and get a newer model for myself. Or just get her a budget SSD (Crucial M4? I'd prefer to avoid Sandfarce unless the BSOD issues really are cleared up). Does anybody have a current favorite budget SSD?
Any other thoughts?
Thanks!
Adcadet
My wife finally started to complain about the speed of her 3.5 year old computer, a Core 2 Duo E7200 Wolfdale 2.53GHz with 2 GB of RAM. She is generally very patient with her computer, and most of what she does is web-based and Photoshop. I grimmace when I type this, but her method of editing pictures (sometimes >20 at at time) is to open ALL of them at once and then edit them one at a time. I suspect she'd do really well with a simple RAM upgrade, but she hates having her computer worked on so I'd prefer to just do a major rebuild rather than small incremental upgrades. I also think she doesn't know what she's missing with modern computer equipment (mostly an SSD). She was the same way with an iPhone (hated the idea of switching from her old dumb phone, didn't think she'd use any features, now she loves it). Thus, for Christmas I'd like to build her a new PC. This would likely run stock (no over clocking), and stability is a must.
I'd like to re-use some parts I have, including
- an Antec P180 case
- a FSP Group FSP400-60THN 400W power supply
- her mechanical hard drives (maybe 1.5 TB over 3 drives)
At this point I'm wondering about a few things:
- CPU. It looks like Llano is pretty far behind the Sandy Bridge chips, even the i3's (http://www.hardwarecanucks.com/foru...a8-3850-apu-review-llano-hits-desktop-15.html). Bulldozer seems rather slow in Photoshop (http://www.anandtech.com/show/4955/the-bulldozer-review-amd-fx8150-tested/7). Any reason to look at anything but the Sandy Bridge i3's?
- GPU. At this point she does no gaming, but I could see her eventually trying a simple game or two. The Windows Aero desktop likes a GPU from what I've heard. She's still using Photoshop CS2, and I can't find a definitive answer as to whether a dedicated GPU vs an Intel 2000 vs Intel 3000 vs something else would be utilized in Photoshop. She has an old Radeon 3450 and I have an old GeForce 7900 GS that I could put in the box if it would help.
- RAM - I'm thinking 8-16 GB given prices. 16 GB for $100 given how she uses Photoshop seems like a reasonable thing.
- SSD. I'd like to get her into an SSD, as I think she doesn't know what she's missing. For an OS she probably only needs 40-60 GB. I guess I could recycle my Intel X25-M-G2 and get a newer model for myself. Or just get her a budget SSD (Crucial M4? I'd prefer to avoid Sandfarce unless the BSOD issues really are cleared up). Does anybody have a current favorite budget SSD?
Any other thoughts?
Thanks!
Adcadet