DominionSeraph
Diamond Member
- Jul 22, 2009
- 8,386
- 32
- 91
The key is that you have to assume what the OP meant. Given the vague OP, some people decided that the OP had an idea of what budget was needed to meet his dad's needs.
Actually, I just used the budget to cover for the assumptions I had to make.
"Will i3 be enough?"
Budget allows for i5 2500k, which is over 2x the processor for less than 2x the price. Spec i5.
"Will Gen2 SSD speeds be enough?"
Budget allows for Gen3. Spec Gen3
"Will 64GB SSD be enough?"
Budget allows for 120GB. Budget does not allow for 240GB no matter how much we cut down on anything else. So no point in trying to skimp on everything else to try to fit in a 240GB on the assumption that he needs all that space -- just spec the 120GB.
"Does OP want to mess around with HDMI/VGA adapters, and is there no chance whatsoever for gaming?"
Budget allows for GT 430, which would be 2-4x faster than HD3000/2000 if OP's dad decided he wanted to load up a game on his brand-new PC. The Gigabyte board with the great combo with the RAM also requires a discrete graphics card -- going with a Asus/Gigabyte board with dual-monitor capabilities with the IGP would've been at least $25 more, counting losing out on the combo, which is only $25 away from the GT 430 (after rebate). So spec GT430.
I saw no outstanding price/performance champ with minimal downsides under what I specced (like the i5 2500k is in relation to the i7 2600k) so I was not comfortable with making the decision to downgrade on my own just in the interest of price. You'd have to lose half the cores, half the SSD space, half the SSD performance (worst would be halving the RAM considering how little money it saves.)
While it's possible that a $650 i3/IGP/4GB/64GB Gen2 SSD machine would've sufficed, a $900 i5/GT430/8GB/120GB Gen3 SSD machine is just so much more. Given that the budget was $1000 and OP said he wanted "fast", there was no way to make the decision for the OP that any of the downgrades was appropriate simply in the name of price.

