How to Build Your Own PC - Page 5

The Processor


Hail to the King! The Intel Processor and AMD Processor are the main manufacturers of PCs processor in the world. Intel was once beaten by the AMD's Athlon and Duron Morgan processors but now Intel has taken back its throne when Intel Core 2 Duo was introduced.

The processor also known as CPU (Central Processing Unit) is the brain of a computer. The faster the processor, the faster it will execute instructions and run your programs.

Some say "Intel sucks! go buy AMD processors!" and some noob would say "AMD processor is unstable and super hot! Intel processors are extremely stable. Lol!". So what are the differences between these processors? Which processor should we use?

For me, these question is really unnecessary because the main question is, what type of your PC is going to be? Right? If you're going to build an office use PC, you don't need a Core 2 Duo. Celeron D would do fine. If you're going to build a gaming PC, modify it by using a Core 2 Duo processor, an ATI PCI-e Graphic Card, add more RAM capacity and a LAN Party or any nVidia based chipset mainboard. Anyway, if we want to see which processor performs well, we can do professional method called Benchmark. Well, thats pretty much of it, lets take a look at criteria for choosing a CPU.

Criteria for choosing a Processor Unit

1. For office or normal use, use a Celeron D processor a Celeron dual core. For gaming or media editing PC, use a Core 2 Duo with a high FSB support to make use of your DDR2 FSB advantage.

2. Usually, when choosing a processor, i would buy the cheapest one that supports features that i really want such as 1333Mhz FSB and a sweet boost of 6MB L2 memory cache in processor. Why? It is because we buy its technology not its Ghz.

Conclusion

For office use PC, it is easy to choose a processor. The cheapest one!
For gaming PC, use a powerful processor at least a Core 2 Duo or AMD Dual Core X2 with a good L2 Cache memory and a high FSB(Front Side Bus).
The Processor

Hail to the King! The Intel Processor and AMD Processor are the main manufacturers of PCs processor in the world. Intel was once beaten by the AMD's Athlon and Duron Morgan processors but now Intel has taken back its throne when Intel Core 2 Duo was introduced.

The processor also known as CPU (Central Processing Unit) is the brain of a computer. The faster the processor, the faster it will execute instructions and run your programs.

Some say "Intel sucks! go buy AMD processors!" and some noob would say "AMD processor is unstable and super hot! Intel processors are extremely stable. Lol!". So what are the differences between these processors? Which processor should we use?

For me, these question is really unnecessary because the main question is, what type of your PC is going to be? Right? If you're going to build an office use PC, you don't need a Core 2 Duo. Celeron D would do fine. If you're going to build a gaming PC, modify it by using a Core 2 Duo processor, an ATI PCI-e Graphic Card, add more RAM capacity and a LAN Party or any nVidia based chipset mainboard. Anyway, if we want to see which processor performs well, we can do professional method called Benchmark. Well, thats pretty much of it, lets take a look at criteria for choosing a CPU.

Criteria for choosing a Processor Unit

1. For office or normal use, use a Celeron D processor a Celeron dual core. For gaming or media editing PC, use a Core 2 Duo with a high FSB support to make use of your DDR2 FSB advantage.

2. Usually, when choosing a processor, i would buy the cheapest one that supports features that i really want such as 1333Mhz FSB and a sweet boost of 6MB L2 memory cache in processor. Why? It is because we buy its technology not its Ghz.

Conclusion

For office use PC, it is easy to choose a processor. The cheapest one!
For gaming PC, use a powerful processor at least a Core 2 Duo or AMD Dual Core X2 with a good L2 Cache memory and a high FSB(Front Side Bus).

Build Your Own PC - Page 6

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