A while back the PSU in my old spare PC died and took the video card with it. A couple weeks ago I did a mild rebuild with some new parts and some used parts. The new parts included an Enermax Tamahawk 500 watt PSU ($65) and an ATI Radeon 2600XT 512 (AGP) video card (also $65). The used parts included a spare WD Raptor HD I had sitting around (1st gen) and 3x1GB DDR400 cas 2 memory I also had sitting around (Patriot). I reused everything else including the motherboard, CPU (AthlonXP 3200+), sound card (Creative Audigy SE 7.1) and DVD burner.
I did a clean load of XP Pro SP3 and have been using the box as my "main PC" for a couple weeks. Honestly, outside of gaming I don't see the difference between this box and my "hi-po" box (which has been parted out on eBay). I've pretty much retired from gaming but if I decide to play a few rounds of CSS I can. I have been using this PC for web, email, HD movies, IT work and graphics work. It has handled everything I have asked it to and the nice part is it's very quiet. The loudest part in the setup is the 10k HD.
Overall, unless I go back to gaming I can't see myself needing more power than this. Anyone else feel that way? I think this is why low-power Netbooks are getting so popular. People are realizing they don't need an uber PC for every day computing.
I did a clean load of XP Pro SP3 and have been using the box as my "main PC" for a couple weeks. Honestly, outside of gaming I don't see the difference between this box and my "hi-po" box (which has been parted out on eBay). I've pretty much retired from gaming but if I decide to play a few rounds of CSS I can. I have been using this PC for web, email, HD movies, IT work and graphics work. It has handled everything I have asked it to and the nice part is it's very quiet. The loudest part in the setup is the 10k HD.
Overall, unless I go back to gaming I can't see myself needing more power than this. Anyone else feel that way? I think this is why low-power Netbooks are getting so popular. People are realizing they don't need an uber PC for every day computing.
