Well, I want a good computer that's good for a studio, and can hold up a lot of stuff like ps, pics, rendes, etc.. (Photoshop related).. Anyone got any suggestions..Oh and don't say Dell, I will die..
There is some good stuff on pcspecialist.co.uk their custom PC's, theres up to 1TB HDD's, 4GB RAM, top of the range GFX cards and more. ideal for what you want. but will be expensive for the best stuff.
i hate dells s0o0o0o0o0 much. umm i would recomment this. www.ibuypower.com thats a good site and they have sick cases on their comps
Ahh ok.. would you like a prebuilt system or would you build one yourself? When putting this all together, do we need to include a monitor? How about an OS? If so which one?
I want it prebuild, I have no clue how to build a computer..Only a little bit that my Computer Teacher taught me in 7th Grade but..Other then that.. I want it prebuilt.. And I have a Moniter And what do you meen by OS?
nah mate you should build it yourself. I built my first machine a month ago. It just took a little longer. Its all self explainitory as all the stuff slots in where you think it does and there are video tutorials for every bit. You will save like $200, that could mean the difference between a crt and a 19' lcd.
Well, I guess I will build it, I meen my dad built a comp at his work before, I watched him so I guess, Yeah sure why not ..
he means operating system, like windows, linux distros, mac OS/X, solaris etc. here's what I would suggest for the 1000$ budget AMD Athlon @x 3800+ x800GTO 1gig dual channel ram 80gig HD x2 in RAID0 windows XP Pro 64 and really, having someone else build it costs about 100$ extra and it takes about 20 mins to put the computer to gether and then you just pop in a windows disc and watch TV while the comp prinstalls everything. EDIT: here's a guid to building comps... 1. Find case and put little mount screws into case 2. screw motherboard into case 3. insert processort carefully(make sure ti is in the correct direction and don't force it) 4. insert ram(hardest part of building a comp just slide it in slow ly applying minimal from one edge to the next, kind of rock it in) 5. insert auxillery cards 6.install HDDs and optical drives by screwing them to the case 7. plug in PSU and IDE ribons 8. close case computer is thereby built.
most people do. if you have the extra 50$, i'd go for XP pro 64 though, it's a stepping stone to windows vista. it should have software coded for it for a longer time than regular XP and it has a few extras in with it, like the capacity to hold more than 4 gigs of ram etc.