Forum Moderators: phranque
IF I can justify that it will be useful for my content website...
How can I justify this?
Making movies for the content site?
Massive Graphics?
HELP!
Your website would then be a gaming website.
Or since it's faster, you work faster, have more time to make more money, as previously stated.
-B
All well, I can get a pretty good computer for hardley more than an Ipod (2.4 GHz, 256 mb of ram etc.)
What if you made a gaming website, or are you going to be required to use it to help the company you work for...?
But if you do want to justify it you'll stop calling it a gaming desktop and refer to it as a content creation PC/off-line web server... whatever. Normally tagging "workstation" at the end of the description helps, as in "graphics workstation".
Good luck.
Power: 400Watt Power Supply
Processor: AMD Athlon 64 3400+ with Hyper Transport
CPUCooler: AMD Certified K8 Cooler
Motherboard: Abit KV8 VIA K8KT800 Motherboard
Memory: 1GB PC3200 DDR400 Dual Channel
1stHardDrive: 200GB Serial ATA 7200RPM 8MB Cache
2ndHardDrive: 200GB Serial ATA 7200RPM 8MB Cache
1stOpticalDrive: 8x DVD ± R/RW & CD-R/RW Drive
VideoCard: Radeon 9800XT 256MB DDR
SoundCard: Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS - 7.1
NetworkCard: Onboard 10/100 Network Adaptor
Good/Bad?
But, I don't want to derail this discussion and take it off-topic. Please feel free to contact me by sticky if you need any help or have any technical questions about this (or what possible upgrades you can have to a system that on the face of it looks like a high-end system to the average punter).
Do you need a good video card for creating graphics/video/multimedia
The card you've got is plenty powerful for 3D graphics and "multimedia" (presumably playing DVDs etc). For video editing per se the video card doesn't make much of a difference. Please read up on realtime editing and hardware based (PCI) realtime editing cards (which also have hardware MPEG encoding). However, a card like yours will give you dual outputs which is kinda cool if you are running an NLE program like Adobe Premiere.
For more precision work (including for use with autocad, 3ds max) there are workstation graphics cards like nVidia's "Quadro" range, and ATI's "FireGL", not to mention the excellent 3D labs range (wildcats etc). These pro cards start at about$300 (Quadro FX500) and go up to over $3,000 (Quadro FX4000). But I wouldn't worry too much about these - if you haven't heard of them you probably don't need them ;)
For normal gaming all existing AGP cards are history. There is this new type of PCI slot that's going to take over... but that's another story.