Blog #48 - Design my next computer

Sith Holocron

4,631 views

The premise is that you have up to 2,000 dollars of pretend money to spend. What sort of computer could I get for that? Assume I have a mouse and keyboard - everything else is up for grabs. It would also have to be able to play SWTOR on maximum settings.

Have at it - and provide links and pictures if possible, please!

Update: Instead of creating a whole new computer, I plan to rebuild my current computer. For reasons, I plan to stay with Windows 7 for the time being. Here are the parts I plan to carry over to the new computer.

  • iBuypower ARC 647 CASE ATX Mid Tower Case
  • PowerColor Radeon R9 270X 2GB Video Card
  • Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive (I will likely add another Hard Drive as well though.)
  • Noctua NH-D14 65.0 CFM CPU Cooler
  • LG UH12NS30 Blu-Ray Reader, DVD/CD Writer
  • Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 OEM 64-bit


I will be updating my drafts for the computer with this list on PCPartPicker.com.



32 Comments


Recommended Comments



Do you not have an SSD? That is one thing that I would say is well worth it in any build

  • Like 1

Share this comment


Link to comment

On the SSD front, the motherboard you currently have selected sports an Ultra M2 slot, which will supposedly take a SATAIII or PCIe 3.0 x4 type M2 SSD. I guess SATA M2 exists for extreme form-factor stuff. In a tower I would think you would just use a 2.5" SATAIII SSD if you're going the SATA route. The PCIe M2 SSDs are spendy but generally much faster (very unlikely that these are limited by the connection speed in any way as PCIe 3 x4 is giving it almost 4GB/s of bandwidth, compared to a .75GB/s SATAIII connection or 1.25GB/s SATA Express)

 

I think, though, if it's your first SSD, trying to get a slightly larger capacity (512G minimum) SATAIII in the 2.5" form factor is probably a good bang for the buck. Maybe somewhere down the line a PCIe M2 SSD would make sense, but I just think it's probably too expensive right now to get one that you can fit a Windows system and games onto. Personally I like Crucial as an SSD brand, but I have no idea what is good for Windows, so grain of salt please.

Share this comment


Link to comment

On the SSD front, the motherboard you currently have selected sports an Ultra M2 slot, which will supposedly take a SATAIII or PCIe 3.0 x4 type M2 SSD. I guess SATA M2 exists for extreme form-factor stuff. In a tower I would think you would just use a 2.5" SATAIII SSD if you're going the SATA route. The PCIe M2 SSDs are spendy but generally much faster (very unlikely that these are limited by the connection speed in any way as PCIe 3 x4 is giving it almost 4GB/s of bandwidth, compared to a .75GB/s SATAIII connection or 1.25GB/s SATA Express)

 

I think, though, if it's your first SSD, trying to get a slightly larger capacity (512G minimum) SATAIII in the 2.5" form factor is probably a good bang for the buck. Maybe somewhere down the line a PCIe M2 SSD would make sense, but I just think it's probably too expensive right now to get one that you can fit a Windows system and games onto. Personally I like Crucial as an SSD brand, but I have no idea what is good for Windows, so grain of salt please.

I understood nearly none of that, yet it was in English. I may getan SSD down the line but I've ordered the part to bring the computer to what I'll call minimum.

 

I may return to this thread (or open a new one) to ask more questions about SSD's down the line but it won't be for at least a few months.

Share this comment


Link to comment

Yeah that info was directed more at the other windows PC builders that might want to help you but didn't read the specific manual for your motherboard :)

 

Everything else in the part list looked good to me. I think you'll probably be bringing the machine up to a pretty happy "minimum".

Share this comment


Link to comment

Guest
This blog entry is now closed to further comments.