sedrosken
Florida Man
A 4770-4790K would actually be overkill for what I do. I don't do the high-end graphics and video processing, and I don't have time for playing games anymore. Honestly I would be extremely happy if I could scrape together enough for an A8 or so, and I could probably get away with going with the integrated Radeon on that. The only place that I couldn't cut corners (and in a pinch I could cut these anyway) is in RAM and SSD. I absolutely will not settle for less than an SSD on a new machine that I build. Will not. The build will not commence without it. And I will definitely be going with 8GB RAM, 4GB is just barely enough for me now and I want to be able to use it for a few years on its base config. I don't know how I ever survived with 2GB, but it probably has something to do with my not having anything better to compare it to at the time. When I upgraded to 4GB, I could just feel my computer breathing easier. That upgrade is what made 64-bit feasible for me.
I will want to get a decent board with a decent amount of DIMMsockets slots and a couple PCI-E x16 slots. Onboard USB3 would be nice but isn't essential, as long as there's a free PCI-E 1x slot. I want at least 4 SATA connectors, and will probably want more as I start to experiment with RAID, which hopefully will be onboard, but if it's not I'll just get a PCI-E 1x SATA RAID card (for which there will need to be another slot present if the board doesn't have onboard USB3) and call it good.
I'm getting way too into planning this out, by the time I've got the cash to pull it off we'll probably be in the next generation altogether. Ah, well. Thinking does the brain good, I guess. What's your estimate on such a system, anyway? My surveying skills aren't that good, but I'd put it at about $500 for the whole thing as configured. Onboard video, small SSD (likely with larger HDD for storage, otherwise will probably be connected to NAS of some kind), 8GB RAM, A8-5600K(?), no display/mouse/keyboard included. Looking at it again, I could probably do it for $400. Still pretty steep, but less steep than I originally thought.
Oh, wow. I really derailed this. Um... carry on...
What does DDR4 have that DDR3 doesn't, exactly? Other than faster speeds? For that matter, other than the aforementioned faster speeds, what does DDR3 have that DDR2 doesn't?
I will want to get a decent board with a decent amount of DIMM
I'm getting way too into planning this out, by the time I've got the cash to pull it off we'll probably be in the next generation altogether. Ah, well. Thinking does the brain good, I guess. What's your estimate on such a system, anyway? My surveying skills aren't that good, but I'd put it at about $500 for the whole thing as configured. Onboard video, small SSD (likely with larger HDD for storage, otherwise will probably be connected to NAS of some kind), 8GB RAM, A8-5600K(?), no display/mouse/keyboard included. Looking at it again, I could probably do it for $400. Still pretty steep, but less steep than I originally thought.
Oh, wow. I really derailed this. Um... carry on...
What does DDR4 have that DDR3 doesn't, exactly? Other than faster speeds? For that matter, other than the aforementioned faster speeds, what does DDR3 have that DDR2 doesn't?
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