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Edited on Tue Feb-24-09 04:36 AM by RoyGBiv
The i7 and the Phenom II for the AM3 sockets are currently cutting edge. This means a couple things that aren't published in the marketing literature. First, the motherboards out there for them right now may or may not take full advantage of all the capabilities of CPU/Memory/Graphics combos. Since I trend toward AMD anyway, I know a bit more about them at the moment, and I can say this is certainly true (and bad) with the current crop of AM3 motherboards. If you want to use the DDR3 memory -- and why would you not if you go to the expense of getting this combo -- you may have trouble finding memory that works properly with a particular setup.
This is mostly personal preference speaking, but it's served me well. I don't do cutting edge in hardware. I leave that for hardcore gamers and people with cash to burn. I need performance as well and run several things that are processor and memory intensive. But, I'm not spending a few hundred dollars more for a single-digit performance increase that will be improved substantially once the platform is better seasoned.
I'm in the process of researching for a new system myself at the moment, and I'm leaning toward the Phenom II X4 940 for a processor. This is an AM2+ socket type. Price/performance ratios have this beating the Intel *price* equivalents. Clearly Intel has some better products out there right now, but they'll cost you anywhere from $100 to $700 more. (The top of the line i7 is outrageous all by itself at about a grand, and then you have to get the motherboard and memory for all that power to mean anything.)
I'm still looking for the right motherboard. I have it narrowed down to a few from ASUS, Gigabyte, and MSI.
Memory will be my last decision.
As for a case, I'd suggest roaming around TigerDirect and Newegg looking at what they have to offer. Find a few that look like something you want and then compare specs. This is both an aesthetic decision as well as one of utility. My current case is a CoolerMaster, and it's been great. Plenty of airflow, room, sturdy. I've had decent luck with some Rosewill cases for cheaper systems. Thermaltake makes some decent ones, but they often fall out of my price range. When looking for a case, don't bother with the power supply, by which I mean don't consider it as a selling point. If the case you decide you like comes with one, consider it an emergency backup. They universally suck. They'll work for budget systems, but I don't trust them at all.
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