tinkerbell Posted December 1, 2008 Content Count: 1662 Joined: 05/16/07 Status: Offline Share Posted December 1, 2008 (edited) lol, ok, say £2k +little over/little less inc vat will post an insane spec pc Edited December 1, 2008 by tinkerbell Link to comment
tinkerbell Posted December 1, 2008 Content Count: 1662 Joined: 05/16/07 Status: Offline Share Posted December 1, 2008 link not working Link to comment
Maxwelldon Posted December 2, 2008 Content Count: 1730 Joined: 02/15/08 Status: Offline Share Posted December 2, 2008 Shens! Any decent 64bit OS can easily take advantage of the RAM available. Open up any rendering product and it'll use as much as you give it to work with. You can easily build it for less, but technology is an investment not worthless shit. If it'll help you achieve what you want then don't think twice about it. Things will always become outdated, but it doesn't mean you can't invest in it wisely. If you have the money, do what you want with it. Ah well, still.. I prefer to stick to reasonable budgets instead of spending overboard to PC when I know I can manage with lot less. Like I think it's useless to get more RAM than you actually need.. Still love to tweak around with my own settings and such so I don't mind to build a new computer or tweak around with upgrades :001_tongue: I just don't see a point of spending about £1900 (or €2232 or $2820) to a computer when I can get a pretty decent unit home build for less than half of that :001_rolleyes: Link to comment
Zero001 Posted December 2, 2008 Content Count: 1230 Joined: 05/17/07 Status: Offline Share Posted December 2, 2008 It may just be me, but I don't trust any hard drives larger than 500gb because of what I've seen on their out of box fail rate. That was kinda true when the first 1TB drives were released. Manufacturers were stuffing 5-6 platters into a drive so problems were bound to happen. Just make sure you don't buy one of these older drives and you'll be alright. Link to comment
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