|
Free Webmaster Articles
Feel free to use these articles, but remember to keep the author's
information and links. Please give a link back to this site as well.
Back To Article Summaries
Buying a Desktop PC?
By Logan Rokwild What
to look out for when out shopping for a desktop PC
There are numerous factors to consider before you choose the desktop PC
that is right for you. Moreover, there is now a wide, almost mind boggling
array of choices for the buyer. Hence, it will pay to make an informed
decision.
The following are some of the key factors that are worth considering
before you make your final decision:
Processor (CPU)
The choice of which processor you should have will be determined by how
much power you need. Although most of the budget processors available
today are efficient enough to handle simple office applications such as
e-mail, a slightly higher expenditure on a faster processor would increase
your PC’s life span by five years. Moreover, you will need a faster
processor for memory-hogging applications such as photos and graphics.
Recommendation: Intel Pentium 4 or AMD Athlon XP
Memory (RAM)
Good RAM ensures that your PC will run at optimum performance. The minimum
amount of RAM required is 256MB. Ideally, however, 512MB would be optimum.
A bigger RAM will allow you to run multiple applications at the same time
and power Windows XP. All the current systems use
DDR memory, the most
common one being PC3200.
Recommendation: 512MB
Monitor
The type of monitor you buy depends upon what you will use it to do.
Graphics and spreadsheet applications require a bigger monitor, while
e-mail can be done easily on a smaller one. Ideally a 17” CRT or 15” LCD
would do the job.
Recommendation: 17” CRT or 15” LCD
Hard disk drive (HDD)
Today, most hard disk drives provide at least 40GB space, which is enough
for most tasks. However, if you want to work with graphics, music or large
databases, get a minimum of 60GB installed. An 80GB HDD would be ideal.
7200-rpm drives
give optimum performance whereas 8MB of cache would really give a
super-turbo performance.
Recommendation: 80GB with a 7200-rpm drive (or 8MB cache if you can afford
it)
Optical drives
If you do not plan to view DVD movies, then a CD-RW drive should do the
job. Each CD-RW drive has three speeds mentioned for it – recordable
speed, rewritable speed and read speed. The minimum your drive should have
is 40x recordable speed, 12x rewritable speed and 40x read speed. There
should be at least a 2MB buffer for CD-RW drives.
Recommendation: CD-RW drive (DVD drive if you plan to view DVDs) with 40x
record speed, 12x rewritable speed and 40x read speed
Logan writes about various topics. This article is free to re-print as
long as nothing is changed, the bio remains, all hyper links remain
intacked and the rel="nofollow" tag isn't added to any links. Thank-You
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Logan_Rokwild
Discuss
this article on the message board
|
|