BenQ XL2411T is not available in the US. Asus VG248QE is essentially the same thing.
wow but i still ordered it and I don't know what to do now. Is it an import?
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BenQ XL2411T is not available in the US. Asus VG248QE is essentially the same thing.
wow but i still ordered which I dont't know what to do know. Is it import?
I don't see an XL2411T on newegg. Where did you buy it from? Link? Sure you didn't get the XL2420T which is an older monitor with a 120hz panel instead of 144hz? You'd be better off with the VG248QE than XL2420T.
As I said, the XL2420T has an older panel that is limited to 120hz. Asus VG248QE is 144hz. Asus is considerably less expensive, currently $240 AP, versus $330 for the BenQ. There's not much else different between them... it is both better and cheaper. The hassle of sending the BenQ back is worth $90
You will need one phillips head screwdriver, not sure of the exact size. If you have some lying around you'll probably find one that fits close enough to go ahead with the installation.
The CPU will come with thermal paste.
How future proof the setup is depends on what you do with it. If you want to play new games on high/very high settings at smooth framerates, you'll need to upgrade the GPU about once a year or a year and a half, and the CPU with every other GPU upgrade. Upgrading the CPU in 3 years will require a new socket and at that time we'll probably be in DDR4 era so new RAM will be needed as well. You may need to increase the amount of RAM before that, it's impossible to say without a crystal ball.
The case and PSU should last 5+ years, while it's hard to say if the drives will become sluggish or even obsolete before then. If you take a 5 year old hard disk, it'd be pretty slow by today's standards and you would probably have upgraded it, but on the other hand, you could easily use a slow drive as media storage.
Ok thanks for that. But now I'm curious as to how I will get sound from it, do I need a sound card? Will be ordering the i30 today though. Also any choice of good keyboard? Also apart from the core components which I already have what else would I need further down the line?
For the keyboard I recommend http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16823109191
Edited: the polling rate is incorrect. But I think only USB keyboard can have 'media keys' and other extra keys. I found media keys very convinent. I often listen to music while playing games. and when I want to skip tracks or stop playing, I can press a key without having to tab out. And that keyboard has almost all keys anti ghosting.
You can install the CPU and RAM onto the motherboard, then put everything into the case, attach cables and wires and route them, etc. Then just install the cooler and boot.
Alternatively you can do a testbed build on the antistatic bag the motherboard came in, using Intel's stock cooler. That way you find out if any component is DOA, which can save a lot of time if you found that out only after installing everything into the case. Particularly regarding the motherboard and PSU