Fel wrote:I saw this computer at Sam's Club:
http://www.samsclub.com/sams/h8-1417c-p ... 7910132.ip
I've never bought a main brand name computer before...but this one interested me. Would this be a good buy?
Oh, and by the way, today I bought a 27" Samsung monitor, upgrading from an old 19" non-widescreen one.
Might I say:
Oh. My. GOD.
Welcome to the 27" Owners club. It's quite nice up here, isn't it?

Also - keep the 19" around - two (or more) screens are even more awesome.
Moving into a new apartment at the moment, so I'll be able to set up my workspace properly soon.
I think that Sams Club link is overpriced.
I'm trying to find a decent custom-build place that'll let you pick the parts, assemble, test, install the OS and drivers and ship it. We've got several here in Australia. The ones I've found via Google are *expensive*.
2TB HDD for USD$180?! We're paying USD$150 for the same thing here - $90 if you're not after the 'black' edition.
General Recommendations:
Modern CPUs from Intel are
stupidly fast. Don't go on the Ghz numbers - they're pretty much useless for comparing except within the same processor line. Anything more than 3Ghz is going to be more than fast enough.
Storage - SSDs are
the number one way to make your computer just go fast. Even if you can't afford a 512 or 256GB SSD, a 120GB one will be enough to install your apps and a few games. If you have to - get a slower CPU to afford the SSD. Now, any time I use a computer with a spinning disk as it's boot drive I wonder if it's broken. That said - they have a terrible failure rate. Back. everything. up. Use something like Crashplan or Backblaze to do it automatically so you don't have to worry about it.
Get a spinning disk (2TB or two) for bulk storage - movies, tv, etc.
Graphics Cards - I know very little about, except in general terms. The last two digits are apparently a lot more important than the first. In the AMD/ATI space, a
7950 will get it's backside handed to it by a 6990, for instance. A graphics card should be your second priority for money, after the SSD, imo. I've got a Radeon 7950 running my 27" display. I can play
Planetside 2 at full res (2560x1440) with everything turned up high fine - it's actually CPU limited most of the time.
RAM - 8GB is okay, 16GB is nicer. If you had more than $1k to spend I'd recommend going all out with 32GB. It's $80/8GB stick, so why not?
DVDRW - Do you really use one of these? I haven't used optical media more than a handful of times in years.
Power Supply - unless you're overclocking and putting two high end GPUs in there getting more than 450W is probably a waste of cash. Do make sure it's an "80 plus" one though, that means it's at least 80% efficient in converting from mains down the voltages needed.
OS - I'm not exactly a fan of Windows 8, but you can make up your own mind on that one. Windows 7 is still great imo.
arargh wrote:I use 98SE for software development
Whaaaaat - 98SE? Are you kidding? It can't even address enough ram or storage to be useful for day to day usage for me.