On Sep 1, 10:18 pm, drdich....DeleteThis@yahoo.com wrote:
> Is an SLI motherboard and 2 SLI graphics card worthwhile versus
> getting a cheaper mobo with a basic preinstalled 256M graphics card,
> and then adding another $50 256M card myself so I have 4 total DVIs?
>
Go for the latter, since you're not in it for games or graphics. You
won't experience a difference in real-world business apps.
> Is quad core v dual core worth the money?
>
quad core will supposedly help your multi-tasking cause but the
current quad cores are earlier versions. If you can wait until Nov,
Intel will be releasing their improved, 45 nm quad core processors,
with some models to sell for even lower than the current quad cores.
> Am I going benefit much from 1066mhz ram v 800?
>
> Am I going benefit much from 10K v 7.2K RPM hard drive?
I don't know how to put this. Do you tend to open all your programs at
the same time? If so, then yes, you will notice a difference. But if
you tend to open applications one at a time, there's no palpable
benefit from going with the faster models.
Are the faster
> HDs noticibly noisier
generally yes
>or more prone to crash?
>
no
> I hate CPU fan noise, and my inner nerd really wants a liquid cooled
> CPU even though I think I won't be doing anything to get my CPU hot
> and sweaty. Should I restrain myself or go ahead get liquid cooling?
>
Liquid cooling is very unusual and is often more trouble than it's
worth. To minimize fan noise, I'd rather go for passively cooled video
cards and a computer enclosure that's designed for a silent PC.
>
> My trust in Dell also has gone done when I saw how much they mark up
> getting 4GB RAM v 1GB compared to the cost buying the identical stuff
> yourself.
You're right about that. The only benefit from Dell is the cost of low-
end PCs. I've done the comparisons, and the Dell comes out to be most
affordable when it involves similarly configured low-end PCs.
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