Deadwood
What is this storage?
I am considering upgrading my computer, and would like any advice others here can give.
Current configuration:
Celeron 1.3 GHz
Shuttle motherboard, Apollo Pro 133 chipset with VT82C686 south bridge
A few parallel ata hard drives
1 broken DVD burner (reads, won't write DVD's anymore, writes CDs)
640 Megs of RAM ("should be enough for anyone")
A power supply of unknown quality that's probably 300W
ATI Rage Fury Pro
SoundBlaster PCI128
USB 2 pci card
Firewire pci card
PCI ethernet card, Lite-On LNE100TX (rev 21)
Usually runs Linux, dual boots WinXP OEM.
I have a Hyundai flat panel, but it does NOT have digital inputs.
I have an extra case and power supply of the same vintage as an Athlon 800.
The computer serves mostly as a web browser and digital photo viewer. However, it also does a lot of compiling. I run a version of Linux (Gentoo) that compiles everything from source, sometimes taking hours to upgrade software. Additionally, it is actually slow at browsing the web. I believe it's due to firefox using cairo using xrender, which is very slow on my video card in linux, or so I've been told. Also, we watch videos taken with our Fujifilm Finepix F10, and it can barely keep up (in linux). If I had more horsepower, I might do more video editing/transcoding and send clips to family. I have a miniDV camera and firewire pci card that I occasionally use to upload home movies to the computer, for editing and burning to DVD (in windows). My two printers each have USB inputs. I do not run any serial devices.
I might be willing to spend between US$400 and $500 to upgrade. I would like something stable, and something that will last a long time. I appreciate quiet, but it doesn't have to be silent. I don't currently do any 3d, so onboard video is an option. I'm considering an Intel branded board with the G33 chipset, assuming there is one. The main reason for considering Intel is stability, I'm tired of the faults in my current system. It eats RAM (2 or 3 bad sticks in the last couple years).
I'm considering a new power supply, motherboard, processor, RAM, and a pata to sata adapter for the time being. Secondary hard drives could be connected via USB, I presume. I can upgrade the optical drive and get a native sata hard drive later. I think I would actually benefit from a multi-core system, because of all the compiling. Also, my wife and I often run programs concurrently from different virtual terminals.
Does onboard audio suck less these days? My current motherboard has terrible onboard audio. I occasionally video conference, I've been known to record from line in, and I frequently listen via headphones.
Thoughts, criticisms, suggestions? Should I wait some more before upgrading?
Previously, I purchased most major items from brick-and-mortar stores. However, there are no nice, local, hobbyist-friendly computer stores where I now live. There is a Best Buy nearby, and a Frys a little further away. I would consider buying online from a reputable store.
A related question: why are the 1333Mhz bus C2D processors cheaper than their 1066MHz counterparts? (e6750 vs e6700, for example)
Thanks!
Current configuration:
Celeron 1.3 GHz
Shuttle motherboard, Apollo Pro 133 chipset with VT82C686 south bridge
A few parallel ata hard drives
1 broken DVD burner (reads, won't write DVD's anymore, writes CDs)
640 Megs of RAM ("should be enough for anyone")
A power supply of unknown quality that's probably 300W
ATI Rage Fury Pro
SoundBlaster PCI128
USB 2 pci card
Firewire pci card
PCI ethernet card, Lite-On LNE100TX (rev 21)
Usually runs Linux, dual boots WinXP OEM.
I have a Hyundai flat panel, but it does NOT have digital inputs.
I have an extra case and power supply of the same vintage as an Athlon 800.
The computer serves mostly as a web browser and digital photo viewer. However, it also does a lot of compiling. I run a version of Linux (Gentoo) that compiles everything from source, sometimes taking hours to upgrade software. Additionally, it is actually slow at browsing the web. I believe it's due to firefox using cairo using xrender, which is very slow on my video card in linux, or so I've been told. Also, we watch videos taken with our Fujifilm Finepix F10, and it can barely keep up (in linux). If I had more horsepower, I might do more video editing/transcoding and send clips to family. I have a miniDV camera and firewire pci card that I occasionally use to upload home movies to the computer, for editing and burning to DVD (in windows). My two printers each have USB inputs. I do not run any serial devices.
I might be willing to spend between US$400 and $500 to upgrade. I would like something stable, and something that will last a long time. I appreciate quiet, but it doesn't have to be silent. I don't currently do any 3d, so onboard video is an option. I'm considering an Intel branded board with the G33 chipset, assuming there is one. The main reason for considering Intel is stability, I'm tired of the faults in my current system. It eats RAM (2 or 3 bad sticks in the last couple years).
I'm considering a new power supply, motherboard, processor, RAM, and a pata to sata adapter for the time being. Secondary hard drives could be connected via USB, I presume. I can upgrade the optical drive and get a native sata hard drive later. I think I would actually benefit from a multi-core system, because of all the compiling. Also, my wife and I often run programs concurrently from different virtual terminals.
Does onboard audio suck less these days? My current motherboard has terrible onboard audio. I occasionally video conference, I've been known to record from line in, and I frequently listen via headphones.
Thoughts, criticisms, suggestions? Should I wait some more before upgrading?
Previously, I purchased most major items from brick-and-mortar stores. However, there are no nice, local, hobbyist-friendly computer stores where I now live. There is a Best Buy nearby, and a Frys a little further away. I would consider buying online from a reputable store.
A related question: why are the 1333Mhz bus C2D processors cheaper than their 1066MHz counterparts? (e6750 vs e6700, for example)
Thanks!