Is this a good gaming upgrade?

mpilchfamily

Diamond Member
Jun 11, 2007
3,559
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More then 3Gb of RAm on XP is a waste of money. The OS is unable to use a full 4GB of RAM. If you want to move up to Vista 64 or get Win 7 64 when it comes out then you'll be able to take full advantage of 4GB.

But everything else is fine. Should be a good improvment over your AMD system.
 

LW07

Golden Member
Feb 16, 2006
1,537
2
81
yeah i do plan to get Windows 7 64 when its SP1 comes out.

Will the E8500 last for two years before quads become demanded for gaming?
 

Blain

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
23,643
3
81
DDR2 is so dirt cheap now... Go with 4GB even if you're currently running a Windows 32-bit OS.
 

zerocool84

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
36,041
472
126
Originally posted by: Blain
DDR2 is so dirt cheap now... Go with 4GB even if you're currently running a Windows 32-bit OS.

Exactamundo

I would go with this RAM instead of the Kingston.

G.Skill 2x2GB DDR2 800 $44.99

Also who knows if anybody's system will last 2 years. Things are going to be threaded for more than 2 cores in the future but for now, the E8500 will kick butt in almost every game. Right now there are very few games that take advantage of a Quad but in the future obviously the top games will more then likely make use of Quads.
 

eryx24

Member
Jan 20, 2009
78
0
0
Originally posted by: mpilchfamily
More then 3Gb of RAm on XP is a waste of money. The OS is unable to use a full 4GB of RAM. If you want to move up to Vista 64 or get Win 7 64 when it comes out then you'll be able to take full advantage of 4GB.

But everything else is fine. Should be a good improvment over your AMD system.

Really? I thought that only applies to 32-bit OS'.
 

zerocool84

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
36,041
472
126
Originally posted by: eryx24
Originally posted by: mpilchfamily
More then 3Gb of RAm on XP is a waste of money. The OS is unable to use a full 4GB of RAM. If you want to move up to Vista 64 or get Win 7 64 when it comes out then you'll be able to take full advantage of 4GB.

But everything else is fine. Should be a good improvment over your AMD system.

Really? I thought that only applies to 32-bit OS'.

XP is a 32bit OS unless you're talking about XP64.
 

AstroManLuca

Lifer
Jun 24, 2004
15,628
5
81
I'd save a little money and get an E8400 instead. Isn't the only difference between it and the E8500 167 MHz? An E8400, even on stock cooling, should be able to overclock well beyond that.

If there's some other difference, do tell, because it seems like there's not much point to getting the E8500.
 

yh125d

Diamond Member
Dec 23, 2006
6,886
0
76
Originally posted by: AstroManLuca
I'd save a little money and get an E8400 instead. Isn't the only difference between it and the E8500 167 MHz? An E8400, even on stock cooling, should be able to overclock well beyond that.

If there's some other difference, do tell, because it seems like there's not much point to getting the E8500.

The only difference is e8500 has a .5 higher multiplier, which allows for slightly higher overclocks when you're limited by the stability of the NB FSB. In the majority of cases, it's better to save some $$ and go for the e8400
 

Denithor

Diamond Member
Apr 11, 2004
6,298
23
81
I'll chip in my two bits worth - e8400 is a much better deal. Should be a snap to OC to 3.6GHz (prob just set fsb to 400). Then cruise with that for at least the next year. Maybe at that time drop in a cheap Q9550 if they've dropped into the $150 range and/or quads are becoming more necessary for gaming.