Originally posted by: Kenazo
So here is what I'm considering for the backbone of my system:
Abit IC7-G
P4 3.0 (800fsb)
2x Corsair XMS 512 PC3200 ECC
Quadro4 980 XGL
I've always worked w/ Athlon XP systems, but you're telling me not to recommend say an Asus A7N8X, an Athlon XP 3200 and a gig of higher end PC3200 ram. I have never had a stability issue w/ AMD, but will the premium paid for p4 really be worth it?
What exactly will the system do?
Review X will show the P4 winning. Review Y will show the Athlon XP winning.
That will be a good system regardless, but chances are that overall it will be a wash between the AthlonXP and P4, unless you're using a CAD program optomized for the P4 (AFAIK, most aren't optomized much at all, which I imagine is part of what leaves the Athlon XP competitive, much like it is in basic office apps) or Athlon. The Athlon64 would surely be better, but probably not by too much, and Opteron is VERY costly, with little or no gain in this case compared to P4 HT or dual Xeons (the Xeons will likely be overkill, even if you have large files and big databases).
...much like high-end video, the memory, motherboard and hard drive will likely make the kost difference, just don't get cheap on any of it.
BTW, I built a system for someone using Land Development Desktop 2004 9and still help him out every now and then), and for any and all actual work, an AthlonXP 3000+ w/ 1GB of pC2700 HyperX on a 8RDA+ w/ an 8MB 80GB WD drive was plenty. Initial loading, occasional complete redreawing, and trying to make a nice presentation piece of the stuff took some time, but even then a single-digit matter of seconds. To play around, I lowered the memory to about 100MHz (60% or so)...fast memory helps a lot. With the 200MHz Athlon XPs and Athlon64s, it'll be even better, and the P4s won't be lagging behind, however, they stack up.
For things that are open: RAM and CPU (mostly RAM)
For saving/loading: HDs.
If you can help it, get enough memory not to need to swap. Get a mobo that can take 4GB registered ECC, and if the thing ends up needing more than your 1GB, you can add and replace as needed (with 2x512 you can go to 3GB w/o replacing, and I doubt you'll need more than 2, but you might need more than 1--depends). Pagefile BAD.
Also, get Windows XP if you go with an LCD monitor. It's generally a bit slower than Windows 2000 (no, I'm not making this up), but for an LCD, after using ClearType, your eyes will thank you and buy you a valentine.
Lastly, seriously consider dual monitors. Having the bulk of the drawing in one, and the command line and some not-often-used-but-needed palettes and toolbars on the other make great use of space. Otherwise the main monitor will fill up very fast, no matter what actual program you're using--there's too much stuff for one display.