- Jul 8, 2007
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I'm building my first computer at the moment, and am in a predicament.
The Intel price drop on July 22 has prompted me to build a new computer that will hopefully be able to handle all the new generation games. (The computer I have right now is a piece of crap.) But to be honest, I have no interest in going dual-core, simply because that is a bit out of my budget, and from the feel of things, it is over-kill. The processor that I have been trying to research is the Intel C2D 6750, which will start out at a great price. But with the imminent release of Penryn (well, within the next few months... supposedly), I have been starting to think that investing in a computer that I will want to last for atleast 3, if not 4 years is going to be hard to do. I don't like using the term future-proofing, but I want it to run until it can no longer handle the games of the next upcoming generations. If it is impossible to do such a thing without going quad-core... then I am screwed. I have read many discussions regarding the E6850 vs. Q6600, and while most people seem like they lean towards the quad-core, it just seems out of my reach.
While I couldn't find much out on the date of release and price of Penryn, it certainly has made me rethink my entire build. Currently I am thinking about going for the Wolfdale, which is the Penryn chip that is dual-core, as opposed to that other one which is quad-core.
Here are my specs:
Case - CM Centurion 5
PSU - Corsair 520HX
Memory - G.SKILL 2GB (2 x 1GB) 240-Pin DDR2 SDRAM DDR2 800 (PC2 6400) *(most likely 4 GB of RAM)
HD - Samsung Spinpoint T 500 GB
Mobo - Gigabyte P35-DS3R
Video Card - nVidia 8800 GTX 640mb
etc.
But what I need to know is:
1. Should I go with the 6750 or should I buy a cheaper, lower-end Intel C2D (such as the 4300 / 4400) and then wait until Penryn and make the upgrade?
2. If I do go for the latter choice, is the computer that I described good enough to take advantage of what Penryn has to offer? Should I go for the 4300, the 4400, or do you have any other recommendation?
3. A general critique of the computer itself, knowing the possible CPU choices.
Notes: This computer is going to be built for gaming. I'm not a hardcore gamer who wants the best graphics possible or the best eye candy; rather, I'm looking for a computer that has stability, a long life, and (hopefully) smooth gameplay.
Cheers!
The Intel price drop on July 22 has prompted me to build a new computer that will hopefully be able to handle all the new generation games. (The computer I have right now is a piece of crap.) But to be honest, I have no interest in going dual-core, simply because that is a bit out of my budget, and from the feel of things, it is over-kill. The processor that I have been trying to research is the Intel C2D 6750, which will start out at a great price. But with the imminent release of Penryn (well, within the next few months... supposedly), I have been starting to think that investing in a computer that I will want to last for atleast 3, if not 4 years is going to be hard to do. I don't like using the term future-proofing, but I want it to run until it can no longer handle the games of the next upcoming generations. If it is impossible to do such a thing without going quad-core... then I am screwed. I have read many discussions regarding the E6850 vs. Q6600, and while most people seem like they lean towards the quad-core, it just seems out of my reach.
While I couldn't find much out on the date of release and price of Penryn, it certainly has made me rethink my entire build. Currently I am thinking about going for the Wolfdale, which is the Penryn chip that is dual-core, as opposed to that other one which is quad-core.
Here are my specs:
Case - CM Centurion 5
PSU - Corsair 520HX
Memory - G.SKILL 2GB (2 x 1GB) 240-Pin DDR2 SDRAM DDR2 800 (PC2 6400) *(most likely 4 GB of RAM)
HD - Samsung Spinpoint T 500 GB
Mobo - Gigabyte P35-DS3R
Video Card - nVidia 8800 GTX 640mb
etc.
But what I need to know is:
1. Should I go with the 6750 or should I buy a cheaper, lower-end Intel C2D (such as the 4300 / 4400) and then wait until Penryn and make the upgrade?
2. If I do go for the latter choice, is the computer that I described good enough to take advantage of what Penryn has to offer? Should I go for the 4300, the 4400, or do you have any other recommendation?
3. A general critique of the computer itself, knowing the possible CPU choices.
Notes: This computer is going to be built for gaming. I'm not a hardcore gamer who wants the best graphics possible or the best eye candy; rather, I'm looking for a computer that has stability, a long life, and (hopefully) smooth gameplay.
Cheers!