Re: Help an "old computer junky" out.
Yeah I thought I had fully updated my profile but I didn't, I am at 4 gigs. Good points guys. I didn't get to check out what motherboard I'm running, I'm in the middle of a torque tube rebuild on one of my cars so I'm a bit busy but tonight I will dig back into it and find out.
I got a bunch of new power tools here recently... so I'd like to get back into modding, hehe.
Re: Help an "old computer junky" out.
Actually, the 4400 was AM2 (I thought it was 939) so with a bios update you could have a whole wealth of options. I just updated the bios on my media centre the other week and that can now take pretty much any of the current lineup - think it's running a 5200 at the moment (but really not sure) - whatever is in it, I actually have it UNDERclocked - less heat - less cooling required, less noise....
Yes I said it, I have an UNDERclocked PC lol
Re: Help an "old computer junky" out.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
slaveofconvention
Yes I said it, I have an UNDERclocked PC lol
Blasphemy!!!!! :eek:
Re: Help an "old computer junky" out.
Nah, it's tougher to keep an underclocked CPU stable than overclocked. Migration and such. Interesting reading out there on it.
Re: Help an "old computer junky" out.
I'm gonna go both sides on this issue. Either way though, I would recommend upgrading to Windows 7 and doing a clean install.
On the one hand, given the hardware you have and the resolutions you're working with, you shouldn't be having any problems. The fact that you are says to me that you have a software or driver issue.
On the other hand, if you're going to upgrade anyway, do what Trace said, basically. :P You might need a new PSU for that though, but tbh, if you're upgrading that much stuff I would get a new PSU just on general principles.
The one additional thing I would recommend that hasn't been mentioned yet is this...upgrade your hard drive. It sounds like you're running on a pretty old drive (not still that IDE, I hope?), and the HDD is about the only component in a computer that will actually decrease in actual performance (ie, not because of new, higher hardware usage) over time. They just wear out, nothing you can do about that.
So, if you don't necessarily want to buy a whole new system, I would get a new HDD, do a clean install of Windows 7, and you should be good. If you do want to buy a whole new system, like Trace said, Phenom II x6 (the 1055T would be my recommendation) or x4 (Newegg has a 940 OEM chip for $95 that'll do you just fine), 8GB of RAM, new HDD, new PSU, new motherboard if you want, and new mid-end GPU (I would go for a Radeon 5750), and you'll be set for several years.
Re: Help an "old computer junky" out.
You don't need really anymore than 4GB of RAM. 8GB is pretty overkill.
Re: Help an "old computer junky" out.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Trace
You don't need really anymore than 4GB of RAM. 8GB is pretty overkill.
Says the man who recommended a 6-core CPU. ;)
Re: Help an "old computer junky" out.
6-core is future proofing. You can always add in those extra 2 2GB sticks later. Besides, he needs the CPU for encoding and editing. The RAM, not so much.
Re: Help an "old computer junky" out.
I honestly think that any GPU beyond an 8800 is overkill for low resolution RTS gaming. CPU/HDD upgrades would be money much better spent.
Best to rule out any software issues with a clean install of Windows etc. before burning money though. If he can't watch HD movies without stuttering, we know there's something wrong with that PC.
Re: Help an "old computer junky" out.
Defrag the hdd.. particularly if you are watching ripped HD videos. :)