 Buying a computer
Buying a computer
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Choices
  -  CPU chip
  
-  Entry level is something like an 2-GHz Intel Pentium 4 or Celeron
       (comparison).
       Or Pentium 4-M or M. ‘Centrino’ includes Pentium M,
       wireless and sophisticated power management.
       There are also Intel-compatible
       chips from AMD. And Macs. Note that clock speeds are not a good measure
       of processor power.
       
       
  
-  Cache size
  
-  At least 256 KB. Some low-level machines come
       with no cache, which significantly reduces performance.
  
-  Motherboard? Chipset? System BIOS?
  
-  Important with respect to reliability and compatibility,
       but it's very hard to keep up with the choices available.
       Buy a reputable brand and hope they've made sensible design decisions.
  
-  Operating system
  
-  Windows 2000 or XP Home, or latest MacOS.
       Make sure OS is installed.
       DOS and Windows 3.1/95/98/Me are passé.
       Windows NT (or XP Professional) is not needed for average user.
       Consider Linux, either commercial or free.
  
-  Bundled software
  
-  Often MS Office, whether you want it or not. Some vendors
       offer Corel Office (WordPerfect suite). OpenOffice.org is free.
  
-  RAM
  
-  At least 256 MB. EDO, SDRAM, ...
  
-  Video card
  
-  Compatibility.
       May be a bottleneck if slow.  3-D acceleration important
       for some applications, including some games.
  
-  Video memory
  
-  Minimum 4 MB.
  
-  Monitor
  
-  Minimum 15", 17" is more common. Quality is important.
       Refresh rate at least 70 Hz at a reasonably high resolution.
       Minimum resolution 1024x768.
       For really serious use, 19" CRT or 17" LCD panel.
       Look for Energy Star compliance and power management.
       
  
-  Hard disk
  
-  Ultra ATA/33/66/100/133? EIDE? 5400 or 7200 rpm? Buffer size 2-8 MB?
       SCSI is faster but a lot more expensive.
       40 GB is common. Well-known manufacturers include
       IBM, Maxtor, Quantum, Seagate, Western Digital, etc.
  
-  CD-ROM drive
  
-  Speed at least 8x, usually 40x or more. Maybe CD-RW, DVD, DVD-RW, ...?
  
-  Modem
  
-   56 Kbps.
       Cable or ADSL for heavy multimedia Web browsing?
  
-  Sound card
  
-  Integrated or premium? Woofers and tweeters?
  
-  Removable storage
  
-  Standard 1.44-MB diskette. Also something like Zip drive (100-200 MB)?
       USB drive? CD burner?
  
-  Performance
  
-  Look at benchmarks but don't take them too seriously.
 
 
 
R. Funnell
Last modified: Tue, 2004 Apr 27 09:54:49
Slide show generated from buying.html by Weasel 2004 Apr 27