Asus Mycinema
Asus Mycinema
need IT genius to check this computer specs?
im just planning to build a computer
since its the first time i dont know if this combination would work (i did give it a considerably amount of research)
•PC Case – >> Antec 200V2 Two-Hundred-V2 Gaming Tower Case without PSU
•Hard Drive - Hitachi 3.5" Deskstar 500GB SATA HDD
•CD-ROM Drive - >>>> Samsung SATA 22x Black DVD RW - 1 Year Warranty
•Processor - Intel Core i7-870 2.93Ghz LGA1156 CPU
•Motherboard - {{>>> ASUS P7P55-LX P55 1156pin DDR3 Motheboard
•RAM - Kingston HyperX TI XMP 6GB Kit(2Gx3) ddr3 1600MHz
•PSU - Coolermaster Extreme Power Plus RS-550 Watt. PSU
•TV tuner - && ASUS MyCinema MYC-P7131 PCI TV Tuner Card
•Sound card - >> Creative SB5.1-VX 5.1 PCI Sound Blaster Sound Card
•Network adaptor - unknow yet
•OS - Microsoft MS Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit (or ultimate 64bit)
•Video Card – >> Gigabyte 1GB GTS450 PCI-E VGA (or HD 5770)
if you are an IT expert or simply good at it please leave advices
thanks very much
For one thing, IT means Information Technology, and those people may not know diddly about building a pc
Secondly, I just built a very fast machine for less than $800, but I'm sure this system will cost significantly more. As a general rule, if the components cost more, then putting them together will most likely result in a better computer. If you haven't got unlimited funds, then you have to be particular about the final cost and relate that to how you wish to use the computer.
For example, you can buy an expensive case which probably will look cool, but you're giving up funds that could have gone into a better processor if you need the pc for processor intensive, mathematically oriented processing. But if you need a good game machine, you might put that extra money into a better graphics card instead.
I recommend this strategy during the initial phase of creating your system. Pick the cheapest case (give up some aesthetics cred), the cheapest DVD-RW, select less RAM, plan to use the built-in sound, pick the mobo that has less oc'ing features, go with AMD instead of a Intel CPU, and pick a less powerful graphics card now (but one that will kick but in SLI, and later get a SLI-ready mobo), and finally a smaller hdd. These are all ways of saving money now, so that when you decide where the rest of your funds should go, you just need to make those related components a priority and no longer go cheap with them, Always plan to do an upgrade of some sort later, maybe once every month or two until you have all the major components of your 'final' system.
Using this method, your list would change drastically, and you wouldn't list everything for judgment because you know that you've gone cheap with those components.
Thanks for visiting!