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asphaltgambler 10-30-2005 07:08 AM

Computer Replacement / Advice please
 
I currently have a really old machine (HP) at home with 433/319Ram running Wn98 with Office and Mozilla. Connection is DSL with ext firewall.

More and more I find newly loaded apps that will not / occasionally work. USB connections /devices that seem to conflict, security isses, etc, etc. I want a machine that works quickly, really good video (streaming) has the latest OS so there are no issues with backward compatibilty.

The main use is word processing, Internet, video. That's it.
I have a new flat creen and only need just the machine. I think the best $$ way is to purchase a new from one of the giant retailers with the software loaded or have one built.

There are many local retailers; Best Buy, Circuit City, etc where you can have them 'customize' a machine with the hardware and software that you want.

Advice please, thanks!

masraum 10-30-2005 07:33 AM

I'd get a Dell. It may sound hokey, but they are good machines that run well. On the Dell website you can pretty much choose any options that you want. I used to build my own PC's, and if I needed a no compromise machine to do a specific task I might still, but these days from the major vendors the prices can't be beat.

Sounds like you need a pretty basic PC. Nearly anything that you buy these days will come with XP and be able to do what you want.

The only question that I have is what do you mean by streaming video? That's the only thing that you may have to customize for. If you are doing something really intensive with the video then you may have a harder time getting a prebuilt with a video card that you want. In that case you may just want to buy a PC and then upgrade the card.

Get plenty of ram, 512Mb min, preferrably a Gig. Get plenty of hard drive space. Get a good video card.

asphaltgambler 10-30-2005 07:36 AM

Video, for example as replaying some of the road racing clips posted here.

jrdavid68 10-30-2005 08:40 AM

I agree with Steve. Get a Dell. What this site for deals:

http://www.hotdealsclub.com

ernestedward 10-30-2005 08:43 AM

Dell! Sound advice. Buy as much ram and hard drive space as you can afford. You WILL use it.

HardDrive 10-30-2005 08:46 AM

What kind of budget would you like to stick with?

I guess for your purposes an intel 2.8 with 1 gb (1024mb) of memory would do the trick. The onboard video card should be a suficient for what you want to do. btw, if you find a computer, and you need to put in more memory, this is absolutely something you can do yourself.

I would avoid buying from Best Buy or Circuit City, but then again I do my own service. They are not the best deal out there. I have heard good things from folks who have went for the service guarntee at Best Buy. But be forewarned, if you ever take your machine in for service, back it all up, because the kids working on the box are prone to wiping out the hard drive to quickly solve OS problems.

asphaltgambler 10-30-2005 10:14 AM

I'm looking @$500-600 for just the machine. Is that doable? or am I just dreaming?

Joeaksa 10-30-2005 12:42 PM

Pay for it using an AmEx card or Visa/MC with the extended benefits. AmEx will usually double the warranty for free and its a big benefit.

Dell is one of the best and the support is excellent. Am typing this out on a Dell right now...

JoeA

Neilk 10-30-2005 12:46 PM

If you managed with a 433, the cheapest Dell with 512mb of ram, would be just fine. Don't worry about video cards. The integrated one will work just fine for what you do.

ronb 10-30-2005 02:38 PM

emachine - super cheap, very reliable, go direct to their website (a subsidiary of gateway).

stomachmonkey 10-30-2005 04:41 PM

$500-$600?

Sounds like your in the market for a Mac Mini. Will do everything that you are looking for w/out the virus/spyware worries.

Scott

claptrap 10-30-2005 08:23 PM

My vote is for Dell also. Very pleased with them, and they will retain some resale value.

Scott

masraum 10-30-2005 08:43 PM

yep, for just playing some vid clips and surfing the net virtually any new PC that you buy today will work. You don't need anything special.

I have an emachine. I added a better video card so I could play some games and added a couple of fans. I think you could probably go with an emachine, but again, I'd recommend a Dell. I think there are probably a couple of Dells that you could get for $500-600 that would work just fine.

masraum 10-30-2005 08:47 PM

prices right now aren't the best becaus X-mas is coming up, but here's a Dell for $600 with 512mb RAM and an 80 gig Hard drive. It would work fine.

http://configure.us.dell.com/dellstore/config.aspx?c=us&cs=19&l=en&oc=D30CVB2&s=dhs

masraum 10-30-2005 08:52 PM

Here's another good one, and probably a better deal. If you go to the Dell webpage go to "small business" instead of "Home and Home Office" the small business stuff includes less crap (like a monitor) so you can add more stuff (like Office) for the same or less money.

http://configure.us.dell.com/dellstore/config.aspx?c=us&cs=04&kc=6W300&l=en&oc=dim30min&s =bsd

I'd definitely recommend getting Trend Micro PC-cillin if you don't already have it. I'd not bother getting MS-Works, but Office or maybe WordPerfect suite (used to be better than office, but I don't know these days).

1 Gig of RAM is probably more than you need. 512Mb is plenty for what you say you do. I have 512mb ram, and a 2.4gHz celleron processor with about 60 gigs of HD space and I can surf the net, edit 8Mb images in photoshop, watch video full screen, pretty much anything like that. I usually have several things running at once and my PC runs fine. I can even play most games that are more than a year old. Some of the new stuff would stump my PC.

Right now what I need more than anything else is hard drive space. I have about 10 gigs of music and 25 gigs of car videos that are eating my harddrives.

SlowToady 10-31-2005 06:56 AM

I disagree, you don't need a new computer, really.

-->Get a new hard drive. The tech has come a long way and they are cheap. Check out SATA stuff.

-->Find out how much RAM your mobo chipset can handle, and upgrade to it.

-->Get a new video card.

You'll be under the cost of a new PC. Anyone who says you need a 2.4Ghz CPU with 1GB of RAM to run office and surf the internet is NUTS. You ever look at your system load while running AIM and IE?

I have a dual 300mhz PII with 512MB RAM and two 9GB 10K SCSI drives that I use everyday. It has never let me down. It's got Windows 2000, Office 2003, Photoshop 9 CS2, DreamWeaver, etc etc etc.

Before you spend $600 on a new rig, do a little research and see if what you have might just need "freshened up." Hell, just going to a clean Windows 2000 install over an old crusty Windows 98 install will make a ton of difference.

edit()

If you do get a new machine, I'd shy away from Dell. I've had nothing but problems, and so have my buddies who run em. Also, they use crappy chipsets.

wludavid 10-31-2005 07:13 AM

Mac Mini if you like your current monitor, keyboard, mouse; low-end G5 iMac if you don't.

widebody911 10-31-2005 07:17 AM

The good thing about brand-name systems is they're easy to buy. The bad thing about them is they're made with bottom-of-the barrel, low-budget components.

masraum 10-31-2005 07:31 AM

I recommended Dells because I worked at a place where everyone had 2 PC's on their desk connected to two different networks. THere was about 150 of us. All of the PC's were Dells. There were two other floors in our building for our company, all of the people on those two floors also used Dells. In 3 years we had very few issues. Actually, I had no issues, but I know that from time to time stuff must have broke. And all of these people were at least a little technical with admin rights, so there were all different kinds of software being installed and uninstalled.

I once worked someplace with Compaq computers and once worked someplace where I did some support for people with Gateway computers. Both of those were crap. That was years ago, things may have changed, but like I said. I've been around lots and lots of Dell PC's that ran like a top.

They are right though. a bunch of RAM and hard drive space will get you buy. The potential problems with the upgrade route are that a lot of times the older motherboards are limited in what sort of upgrades that you can do. The memory used by your old motherboard [i]MAY[i] be hard to find and actually more expensive than newer, faster, larger memory because it's nearly obsolete. I ran into that problem when I was ready to upgrade from my old celeron 300 that was overclocked to 450Mhz. The motherboard would only support PC100 memory and at the time that was more expensive than faster newer memory.

Good luck. Let us know what you decide and how it turns out.

targa911S 10-31-2005 07:47 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by stomachmonkey
$500-$600?

Sounds like your in the market for a Mac Mini. Will do everything that you are looking for w/out the virus/spyware worries.

Scott

I know this will start an old arguement but...I agree. I have a Mac Mini and I love it. Dumped a G4 tower and have not looked back. $499


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