R
Rocker151
New member
Everyone has an opinion, eh?
This thread is right up my alley because I work for a hard drive manufacturer. I have freinds whose job is comparing and testing our products against our competitors. Many of the issues brought up here are have been addressed by my coworkers, so let's dispell a couple of myths:
Myth #1 - VIA chipsets are bad. - These days it's really not an issue. And let's make one thing clear, it's not that VIA ever made an inferior chipset, it's that the sound card makers catered to Intel's chipsets. Maybe with AMD systems catching on, and VIA's KT133 chipset being 25% faster than its competitors, the sound card makers decided they needed to work harder on compatibility with VIA.
Myth #2 - Only a 7200 RPM drive will do. - Where is it documented that this is a requirement? Yes, a 7200 RPM drive can physically produce faster throughput. However, our newest line of 5400 RPM drives are actually faster than earlier lines of 7200 RPM drives due to better electronics and higher areal density (more data in a smaller space).
Myth #3 - If the configuration of two systems is the same, the lower-priced one is the one to get. Wrong! There are two aspects to this.
The first is PC vs. Mac. Mac will cost you more. Period. However, Mac has one platform, one system manufacturer, and one family of operating systems. This proprietary nature has good and bad points. On the plus side, there's no debate about chipsets, no wondering if this motherboard is better than that motherboard. The basic system is a known quantity. This also means better compatibility with add-on cards and with software, because the manufacturers know what they're dealing with. Also, some people like the Mac OS better, but that's a personal preference. On the bad side, Apple can decide to leave you behind and change their architecture entirely. Plus there's still the extra cost since it's a single-source system.
Second is PC vs. PC. Two systems, same processor , RAM, HDD, CD-R, sound, etc., but one is cheaper. Ever give any thought to why that might be? Sometimes you get what you pay for. In something like an Emachine, you get a system built for the lowest possible cost - down to the component level. They make their own motherboards so they can find ways to shave a few cents here and there. They design systems to be stable, not fast. If you're expecting cutting-edge performance, you really shouldn't buy a brand name machine. (Although Computer Shopper's benchmarks are a good source for locating the best mass-marketed boxes.)
But I think we've gotten off the path here. There are two interpretations of "best" being used here. One is "bang for the buck" - biggest numbers (clock speed, RAM, HDD), and easiest setup for the lowest price. For that, go with something like an EMachine. The second interpretation of "best" is performance, which means stability, ease of use, and measurably higher speed, regardless of cost.
For my money (and what I'm currently running) here's what I'd pick:
ABit or ASUS motherboard, preferably with on-board RAID (I have the ABit KT7-RAID)
One or two 40 GB hard drives, the fastest you can afford. (About $100 each for 5400 RPM on Price Watch). Running two good 5400's in RAID 0 mode will flat-out SMOKE a single 7200 RPM drive. In addition to the Maxtors mentioned earlier, check out the Western Digital drives or Seagate's U5.
AMD Duron or Thunderbird (1GHz Durons are around $100)
At least 256 MB of SDRAM (max it while it's cheap unless you can afford to move up to a DDR system).
ASUS V7xxx series video card (very stable and fast)
I have no advice on sound, right now I have a SB Live!
Okay, there's my 2 cents worth and then some.
This thread is right up my alley because I work for a hard drive manufacturer. I have freinds whose job is comparing and testing our products against our competitors. Many of the issues brought up here are have been addressed by my coworkers, so let's dispell a couple of myths:
Myth #1 - VIA chipsets are bad. - These days it's really not an issue. And let's make one thing clear, it's not that VIA ever made an inferior chipset, it's that the sound card makers catered to Intel's chipsets. Maybe with AMD systems catching on, and VIA's KT133 chipset being 25% faster than its competitors, the sound card makers decided they needed to work harder on compatibility with VIA.
Myth #2 - Only a 7200 RPM drive will do. - Where is it documented that this is a requirement? Yes, a 7200 RPM drive can physically produce faster throughput. However, our newest line of 5400 RPM drives are actually faster than earlier lines of 7200 RPM drives due to better electronics and higher areal density (more data in a smaller space).
Myth #3 - If the configuration of two systems is the same, the lower-priced one is the one to get. Wrong! There are two aspects to this.
The first is PC vs. Mac. Mac will cost you more. Period. However, Mac has one platform, one system manufacturer, and one family of operating systems. This proprietary nature has good and bad points. On the plus side, there's no debate about chipsets, no wondering if this motherboard is better than that motherboard. The basic system is a known quantity. This also means better compatibility with add-on cards and with software, because the manufacturers know what they're dealing with. Also, some people like the Mac OS better, but that's a personal preference. On the bad side, Apple can decide to leave you behind and change their architecture entirely. Plus there's still the extra cost since it's a single-source system.
Second is PC vs. PC. Two systems, same processor , RAM, HDD, CD-R, sound, etc., but one is cheaper. Ever give any thought to why that might be? Sometimes you get what you pay for. In something like an Emachine, you get a system built for the lowest possible cost - down to the component level. They make their own motherboards so they can find ways to shave a few cents here and there. They design systems to be stable, not fast. If you're expecting cutting-edge performance, you really shouldn't buy a brand name machine. (Although Computer Shopper's benchmarks are a good source for locating the best mass-marketed boxes.)
But I think we've gotten off the path here. There are two interpretations of "best" being used here. One is "bang for the buck" - biggest numbers (clock speed, RAM, HDD), and easiest setup for the lowest price. For that, go with something like an EMachine. The second interpretation of "best" is performance, which means stability, ease of use, and measurably higher speed, regardless of cost.
For my money (and what I'm currently running) here's what I'd pick:
ABit or ASUS motherboard, preferably with on-board RAID (I have the ABit KT7-RAID)
One or two 40 GB hard drives, the fastest you can afford. (About $100 each for 5400 RPM on Price Watch). Running two good 5400's in RAID 0 mode will flat-out SMOKE a single 7200 RPM drive. In addition to the Maxtors mentioned earlier, check out the Western Digital drives or Seagate's U5.
AMD Duron or Thunderbird (1GHz Durons are around $100)
At least 256 MB of SDRAM (max it while it's cheap unless you can afford to move up to a DDR system).
ASUS V7xxx series video card (very stable and fast)
I have no advice on sound, right now I have a SB Live!
Okay, there's my 2 cents worth and then some.