Looking for advice.
I'm building a system for my son to take to college. Here's what my requirements are. Any and all suggestions are greatly appreciated.
Keep in mind: The kid is clueless when it comes to maintenance and hardware. He plays lots of games and downloads movies and music but he's not likely to ever open the box or do any modifications to the system. His priorities are:
1. DVD burner
2. Play awesome video games
3. Store lots of movies and music
4. Work perfectly and never give him any problems.
My priorities are:
1. Stablility (want to minimize the "MOM! The computer is broken" phone calls)
2. Longevity (good enough system that I don't have to replace it in a couple of years. i.e. let him buy his own computer next time!)
3. Automatic backup of important files ("automatic" is the key here as he'll never remember to do it manually)
4. Stability (I gotta say this again!!!!!)
5. Ability to have the monitor double as a TV (so that he doesn't have to have a TV and a monitor too).
5. DVD burner
6. Great video for games
7. Portability (not sure how important this is. Maybe he'll do LAN parties??? Maybe he'll bring the computer home on weekends for mom to fix when he breaks it?)
7. Anticipation of new technology (i.e. lots of usb, firewire? bluetooth? whatever else you think might be coming within the next few years that he'll desperately have to have. In other words this ties into item 2 (longevity)).
I posted this on the motherboard forum thinking that I should start with the right motherboard and then build the rest on to it.
Specific questions I have include:
Where can I learn more about current technology? I've been reading the mobo reviews and have to admit that I don't understand most of the terms any more - the technology has changed so much over the past few years. Is there an "idiots guide to understanding computers"? Which bus speeds are really important? What's SATA mean to me? Do I care? What's the latest on the Intel vs AMD issue? Is one "better" than the other? Does it matter? Does processor speed mean anything any more? Which type of RAM is the "right" one to use right now?
To RAID or not to RAID? Shoud I use RAID to mirror drives in order to get the automatic backup? And do they really do the backup automatically? Is there any manual intervention to get the mirror created (on at least a daily basis)? Or should I just use XP's backup software and schedule it to run? If I use RAID, where do I learn about how to do it? There seem to be different kinds (i.e. 0, 1, whatever). Anyone know a good site to read up on this?
How in the world do you get stability? I have 3 computers at home and have had continuous problems with disk drive failures (yes I have them all on UPS's), memory failures, lockups, crashes, blue screens of death etc. I would dearly love to go for a few weeks without some sort of failure! :disgust: What am I doing wrong? And how can I prevent this (HAH!) on my son's computer.
My thanks in advance for your opinions. I have enjoyed reading all the posts in these forums - it's fascinating!
I'm building a system for my son to take to college. Here's what my requirements are. Any and all suggestions are greatly appreciated.
Keep in mind: The kid is clueless when it comes to maintenance and hardware. He plays lots of games and downloads movies and music but he's not likely to ever open the box or do any modifications to the system. His priorities are:
1. DVD burner
2. Play awesome video games
3. Store lots of movies and music
4. Work perfectly and never give him any problems.
My priorities are:
1. Stablility (want to minimize the "MOM! The computer is broken" phone calls)
2. Longevity (good enough system that I don't have to replace it in a couple of years. i.e. let him buy his own computer next time!)
3. Automatic backup of important files ("automatic" is the key here as he'll never remember to do it manually)
4. Stability (I gotta say this again!!!!!)
5. Ability to have the monitor double as a TV (so that he doesn't have to have a TV and a monitor too).
5. DVD burner
6. Great video for games
7. Portability (not sure how important this is. Maybe he'll do LAN parties??? Maybe he'll bring the computer home on weekends for mom to fix when he breaks it?)
7. Anticipation of new technology (i.e. lots of usb, firewire? bluetooth? whatever else you think might be coming within the next few years that he'll desperately have to have. In other words this ties into item 2 (longevity)).
I posted this on the motherboard forum thinking that I should start with the right motherboard and then build the rest on to it.
Specific questions I have include:
Where can I learn more about current technology? I've been reading the mobo reviews and have to admit that I don't understand most of the terms any more - the technology has changed so much over the past few years. Is there an "idiots guide to understanding computers"? Which bus speeds are really important? What's SATA mean to me? Do I care? What's the latest on the Intel vs AMD issue? Is one "better" than the other? Does it matter? Does processor speed mean anything any more? Which type of RAM is the "right" one to use right now?
To RAID or not to RAID? Shoud I use RAID to mirror drives in order to get the automatic backup? And do they really do the backup automatically? Is there any manual intervention to get the mirror created (on at least a daily basis)? Or should I just use XP's backup software and schedule it to run? If I use RAID, where do I learn about how to do it? There seem to be different kinds (i.e. 0, 1, whatever). Anyone know a good site to read up on this?
How in the world do you get stability? I have 3 computers at home and have had continuous problems with disk drive failures (yes I have them all on UPS's), memory failures, lockups, crashes, blue screens of death etc. I would dearly love to go for a few weeks without some sort of failure! :disgust: What am I doing wrong? And how can I prevent this (HAH!) on my son's computer.
My thanks in advance for your opinions. I have enjoyed reading all the posts in these forums - it's fascinating!
