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Thread: Upgrade time! ...thoughts on this if you wouldn't mind.

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    Upgrade time! ...thoughts on this if you wouldn't mind.

    So after humming and hahing, I have decided to stick with PC format and got this quote yesterday for a new system.
    I want something that will run XP atm, but will handle Windows 7 or similar down the track.
    I shoot raw all the time, and want to run LR and CS4, with room to spare. This is possibly a bit of overkill, but i would rather be over specced than under.

    This is what the guys at the store suggested:

    Cooler master elite 333 NO PSU HD AUD $85

    Vantec ION+ 500w ultra quiet SLI $95

    Gigabye GA-EP45-UD3LS775 P45 FSB1600 4DDR2 PCIE2.0 GbLAN UD3 TX SATA2 $220

    Intel core 2 Quad Q8200 2.33ghz 1333FSB 4MB CACHE, 775 $315

    CORSAIR TWIN2X4096-8500C5 4GB (2X240-PIN DIMMs NON ECC Unbuffered 5-5-5-15 $140

    SAMSUNG 1TB SATA II 32MB 3G/Bs $185

    GALAXY GEFORCE 9500GT PCI-E 512MB DDR2 128-BIT NVIDIA SLI-READY DUAL LINK DVI 2560X1600 RESOLUTION $110
    Assembly Charge $40

    Total: $1190 ( probably get 5 % off that.)

    I have software, dvd burner, monitor etc.


    I would appreciate your thoughts on this if you have a spare minute. I understand a little of the specs but much of it is just letters and numbers.
    Cheers, Lani.
    Bodies: Nikon D700, D300 Primes: Nikon 50mm 1.4, 85mm 1.4G, 105mm VR 2.8, 300mm f4. Zooms: Nikon 14-24 2.8, 24-70 2.8, 70-200VR II 2.8, Sigma 10-20mm Processing: Photoshop CS5 extended, LR 3.2.


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    I sell a lot of that board / cpu combination they work well together
    I normally use a Gigabyte ATI Radeon HD 4670 video card which is around the same price


    Not a fan of hard drive choice, but they are well priced.

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    All looks good to me but I would look at maybe getting a second hard drive to have a backup of your files.

    Paul

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    Try this...
    http://www.ausphotography.net.au/for...tpost&p=305491
    Is there an MSY in Tassie?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Kym View Post
    Try this...
    http://www.ausphotography.net.au/for...tpost&p=305491
    Is there an MSY in Tassie?
    No MSY in Tassie, we are very poor as far as PC shops go

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    Quote Originally Posted by Kym View Post
    Try this...
    http://www.ausphotography.net.au/for...tpost&p=305491
    Is there an MSY in Tassie?
    Yep, been reading that Kym, but I need to have a system built and would like to be able to get back up support.

    Quote Originally Posted by oldfart View Post
    I sell a lot of that board / cpu combination they work well together
    I normally use a Gigabyte ATI Radeon HD 4670 video card which is around the same price


    Not a fan of hard drive choice, but they are well priced.
    What problem is there with this hard drive? I would rather spend a little more to get a reliable system if need be.

    Quote Originally Posted by pgbphotographytas View Post
    No MSY in Tassie, we are very poor as far as PC shops go
    Already have a back up drive, Paul. Not a lot to choose from with lots of things.... IT, tech stuff, camera gear , here is there?

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    I don't think the Quad is of great value, better is a Dual - Quads don't deliver as much performance as you think. Most stuff does not use 2 cores, let alone 4. E8400 will deliver more for Adobe products.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lani View Post
    Already have a back up drive, Paul. Not a lot to choose from with lots of things.... IT, tech stuff, camera gear , here is there?
    Glad to hear you have a backup drive, we are very poor as far as choices for that stuff goes

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    I built a couple of PC's from the ground up before I saw the light and bought a Mac.
    My query would be the motherboard, make sure it can be upgraded down the track. Gigabyte are a average type of MB and I would be looking at a better one, remember this is what runs your system.
    I didn't check to see what RAM you are putting in but make sure the MB can handle more than you anticipate.
    Sound card not that important.
    Graphics card is, spend a bit more to get a real good one.
    And of course the screen has to be as good as you expect it, in otherwords you pay for what you get.
    A second drive is essential and even a third. With this you have the option of having your main drive mirrored onto the second drive. In case the first fails then the second is the same. The third drive is where you can store your processed pictures.
    A computer person could build you a fantastic computer for about the same price as a store brand name.
    Remember this, all pc's look the same, like a row of garages in the street, it is not 'till you open the garage door that you can see the difference.
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    I just read that you are having 4GB, bit light on I reakon. And make sure that the MB you pick recommends your RAM brand. i.e "Gigabyte recommends Corsair RAM for this MB"

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    can't remember Tannin's Avatar
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    Samsung make THE best, most reliable hard drives you can buy. No ifs, no buts, no maybes. We have been selling hard drives for 20-odd years now and at one time we were one of the 50 biggest Seagate dealers in Australia (back before I scaled back and got a life, not to mention a camera); I've been keeping detailed hard drive reliability records for most of that time .... and these days, I don't even bother counting failed drives anymore. I just buy Samsumg every single time and rest easy.

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    can't remember Tannin's Avatar
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    Sheesh ... "Gigabyte a very average kind of motherboard". Well, I suppose that's about the level of technical sophistication we can expect from a Mac user. I've always liked Gigabytes AMD platform boards better than their Intel stuff, but nevertheless, they are a major player, and remarkably consistent with their quality.

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    Perhaps I should have said that the ASUS would be a better choice. It was an ASUS AMD dual core that I put in.
    And Asus is a smaller word to remember for your limited PC brain

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    Quote Originally Posted by davwhite View Post
    I
    A computer person could build you a fantastic computer for about the same price as a store brand name.
    Remember this, all pc's look the same, like a row of garages in the street, it is not 'till you open the garage door that you can see the difference.
    Yeah thanks Dave, this is a quote for a custom build, but using your car analogy, while I enjoy a luxury car to drive, I sure aint no mechanic.


    What about quad v dual core as mentioned by Kym... would going quad core future proof the system a little?

    Also with having more than one drive, is that the same thing as partitioning, or do you actually install two?

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    Disagree the the EP45DS4 is not a good motherboard - it would certainly be on my list if I was building now.

    Recommend another hard disk, but not as a backup - instead, put data and swap space on one drive and OS/apps on the other. Speeds things up (long explanation, relates to drive heads being the bottleneck in any disk access). I learned this approach in my days as Unix system administrator.

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    The EP45 mboard is fine. I too have sold enough of those without issues. Gigabyte has improved dramatically in their quality over the last 5 years IMO.
    I have to agree with CypherOz about Quad Vs Dual for general performance. An average computer user won't utilize the full potential of a quad. (Do you need a V8 engine to pull the boat/van around, or will a 4 cylinder be enough to carry all you need?)
    On the other hand, it can be argued that software in the future will be able to use all cores better, but it kind of goes with the x64 OS argument.
    Future proofing is fine, as long as it's not costing you an arm and a leg now, compared to costing you a tip of a finger in 6 or 12 months time when the newer product lines are more established.

    Hard drives: IMO Western Digital, and Samsung are fine. Seagate/Maxtor (same thing) I've seen more returned than the others. I'm not saying I haven't had DOA (straight from suppliers) for WD or Samsung either, but the numbers / percentages make me lean towards WD or Samsung more often if I have a choice.

    PSU: I would probably recommend something larger, that way you know you are covered if you add in more drives, upgrade the video card etc. I see too many PSU's fail when people upgrade without thinking of the number of watts required.

    Quote Originally Posted by davwhite View Post
    I just read that you are having 4GB, bit light on I reakon. And make sure that the MB you pick recommends your RAM brand. i.e "Gigabyte recommends Corsair RAM for this MB"
    4GB pack of ram on a 32bit XP system is fine. (4GB is the theoretical limit for 32bit OS: 3.0-3.5GB is the reality.) Putting 8GB in now, to future proof it for Win7 64bit would be a waste, as the extra 4GB upgrade when Win7 comes out, will be cheaper then compared to now.

    Quote Originally Posted by Calxoddity View Post
    Recommend another hard disk, but not as a backup - instead, put data and swap space on one drive and OS/apps on the other. Speeds things up (long explanation, relates to drive heads being the bottleneck in any disk access). I learned this approach in my days as Unix system administrator.
    + 1 for that.
    If it's beyond your ability, seek a reputable computer nerd/geek/guru, or even just ask your local store to do it for you when they build it.

    Hope all this helps.
    Last edited by Invictus; 15-05-2009 at 5:17pm.
    Matt.

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    Quote Originally Posted by davwhite View Post
    I just read that you are having 4GB, bit light on I reakon. And make sure that the MB you pick recommends your RAM brand. i.e "Gigabyte recommends Corsair RAM for this MB"
    More than 4GB is only of value if you build a 64 bit system - which means Vista 64 bit - Lani has said she will stick with Win XP for now.

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    Thank you so much for you replies, peoples.
    Will go in on Monday and ask a few more questions relating to the PSU and extra HD.

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    Hi Lani

    From the looks of your components the system looks really good. I would add another hard drive as space soon gets smaller and hard drives are so cheap these days. I just got myself a Samsung 1TB myself and runs cooler than any other hard drive I have bought.
    Last edited by wideangle; 15-05-2009 at 10:09pm.
    please ask before PP my images

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    Ausphotography Regular wideangle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lani View Post
    Also with having more than one drive, is that the same thing as partitioning, or do you actually install two?
    You actually purchase 2 physical hard drives and they are installed into the computer in 2 drive bays. You can then partition these 2 physically separate drives into sections so then you would have virtual drives.

    The good thing about having 2 drives is the obvious of having a cloned duplicate of your photos on your OS hard drive as if things go wrong you can access the drive that hasn't been effected. The other benefit of having 2 drives is that later down the track when its full you may want to take that hard drive out of the computer and put it in an external case to access externally. OR you may want to have one 1TB drive in your computer and buy another 1TB hard drive and a case for it (only about $50) and you have yourself an external HDD that you can duplicate your photos onto and store somewhere else away from your computer. When I just upgraded my HDD from a 250B to a 1TB, I took the 250GB out of my computer and put it in an external case. I bought a Vantec case which also comes with an ESATA connection and card to install into your computer which basically means when you connect the external hard drive you are not bottlenecked in terms of transfer speed as you are with USB, Works as fast as your internal drives do....although it also comes with USB connection as well.

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