It's a good single-processor board, and I use one at work (specs, some of the parts listed are currently in transit). I don't do any serious gaming at work, of course, but it's very satisfactory for hardcore file manipulation, image editing, all manner of office work and so forth.Originally posted by: taltosit
Ok, perhaps I should state what I will use my puter for.
Of course I want it for regualr Internet stuff such as surfing, and email.
I want to run and use things such as Word Processing, Excel, Power Point, and a MultiSim Electronic workbench, and some serious gaming. =)
Some of the additional hardware will be a scanner and a digital camera. So, I guess there will be some image manipulation.
Now, taking your advice on the AMD dual motherboard, here is what I found.
Asustek A7N8X Deluxe Motherboard
Is this a good choice?
Originally posted by: mechBgon
There's not actually such a thing as a "Pentium 4 Xeon." 😉 It's either a Xeon, or a Pentium 4.
Originally posted by: mechBgon
It's a good single-processor board, and I use one at work (specs, some of the parts listed are currently in transit). I don't do any serious gaming at work, of course, but it's very satisfactory for hardcore file manipulation, image editing, all manner of office work and so forth.Originally posted by: taltosit
Ok, perhaps I should state what I will use my puter for.
Of course I want it for regualr Internet stuff such as surfing, and email.
I want to run and use things such as Word Processing, Excel, Power Point, and a MultiSim Electronic workbench, and some serious gaming. =)
Some of the additional hardware will be a scanner and a digital camera. So, I guess there will be some image manipulation.
Now, taking your advice on the AMD dual motherboard, here is what I found.
Asustek A7N8X Deluxe Motherboard
Is this a good choice?
If you want a dual-processor AMD board, then a Tyan TigerMPX would be a safe bet (it will accept your ATX power supply and fits many popular cases), but be aware that it doesn't offer as many cool goodies as the nForce2 boards such as A7N8X-Deluxe. No Firewire, no USB 2.0, no support for 333MHz-based or 400MHz-based CPUs. It does offer 64-bit PCI slots, if you want to run a burly PCI RAID card and/or a gigabit network card at full speed, and two AthlonMP 2800+'s would still hold the aces over a single AthlonXP 3200+ in some situations... but not in gaming.
Sorry I was splitting hairs 😉 but the names, as best I recall, are:Originally posted by: render
Originally posted by: mechBgon
There's not actually such a thing as a "Pentium 4 Xeon." 😉 It's either a Xeon, or a Pentium 4.
how do you identify p2 xeon, p3 xeon, and p4 xeon ?
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Sorry I was splitting hairs 😉 but the names, as best I recall, are:Originally posted by: render
Originally posted by: mechBgon
There's not actually such a thing as a "Pentium 4 Xeon." 😉 It's either a Xeon, or a Pentium 4.
how do you identify p2 xeon, p3 xeon, and p4 xeon ?
Pentium II Xeon,
Pentium III Xeon, and
Xeon (the current processor is simply "Xeon")
taltosit, glad I could help, but be aware that in all honesty, the Pentium4's with 800MHz bus are faster than any of the AthlonXPs for most situations, if you have the money to set them up right with an i875P or i865PE board and dual-channel DDR400.
Originally posted by: beatle
Judging from what you're planning to do on your computer, it sounds to me like you'd be just fine with a single CPU setup. Aside from the cost, the heat and resulting noise needed to cool a dual cpu setup could break your bank and/or ears. 🙂