"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on February 10, 2012, 03:00:56 PMQuote from: blue moon on February 10, 2012, 02:24:28 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on February 10, 2012, 02:17:04 PMJust build yourself one. Very easy to do. just built a BAD ASS RIG.i7 2600k (3.4ghz)32gb (yes 32 GIGS) of DDR3240gb SSD Sata III1.5TB Western Digital Black Sata IIIGTX 560Corsair Power SupplyDVD DriveCooler Master Case. Sucker is a rocket. If you are into designing and are serious about it you need 3 things.... LOTS of ram. FAST hard drives. Good graphics card.If you do build yourself, look into workstation motherboards. Intel used to make good stuff. As mentioned, they run faster, are more reliable and use ECC (error correction and checking) memory. pierreIve built my own computers for years, had some workstation stuff, used to be a much larger gap in performance, not so much anymore. Just my opinion.quite possible! I've closed the computer business few years back and have not kept up with the specs of the hadware. It would not surprise me if desktops caught up with some things. If the newer chipsets are running wider buses, they could be just as fast and possibly even faster. Workstations also have to compute the error checking which would slow them down. But even if they are slower, workstation boards are tested longer and built to higher standards. Same goes with the certified video drivers. They use similar components as the gaming cards, but the amount of testing, higher quality control and optimized drives drive the cost up significantly. In the end, I think the Thinkstation will cost you less and give you more. Don't think you'll get anything close to it for $500 if you build it yourself . . .pierre
Quote from: blue moon on February 10, 2012, 02:24:28 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on February 10, 2012, 02:17:04 PMJust build yourself one. Very easy to do. just built a BAD ASS RIG.i7 2600k (3.4ghz)32gb (yes 32 GIGS) of DDR3240gb SSD Sata III1.5TB Western Digital Black Sata IIIGTX 560Corsair Power SupplyDVD DriveCooler Master Case. Sucker is a rocket. If you are into designing and are serious about it you need 3 things.... LOTS of ram. FAST hard drives. Good graphics card.If you do build yourself, look into workstation motherboards. Intel used to make good stuff. As mentioned, they run faster, are more reliable and use ECC (error correction and checking) memory. pierreIve built my own computers for years, had some workstation stuff, used to be a much larger gap in performance, not so much anymore. Just my opinion.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on February 10, 2012, 02:17:04 PMJust build yourself one. Very easy to do. just built a BAD ASS RIG.i7 2600k (3.4ghz)32gb (yes 32 GIGS) of DDR3240gb SSD Sata III1.5TB Western Digital Black Sata IIIGTX 560Corsair Power SupplyDVD DriveCooler Master Case. Sucker is a rocket. If you are into designing and are serious about it you need 3 things.... LOTS of ram. FAST hard drives. Good graphics card.If you do build yourself, look into workstation motherboards. Intel used to make good stuff. As mentioned, they run faster, are more reliable and use ECC (error correction and checking) memory. pierre
Just build yourself one. Very easy to do. just built a BAD ASS RIG.i7 2600k (3.4ghz)32gb (yes 32 GIGS) of DDR3240gb SSD Sata III1.5TB Western Digital Black Sata IIIGTX 560Corsair Power SupplyDVD DriveCooler Master Case. Sucker is a rocket. If you are into designing and are serious about it you need 3 things.... LOTS of ram. FAST hard drives. Good graphics card.
I always have to wonder though--I usually monitor my ram usage, my sweet newish notebook right now has six gigs of memory, and even with stupid massive files in photoshop, I can't get usage over half.
What are you guys running that takes ten or twenty or thirty gigs of memory? Photoshop, Illy, Draw, Excel, Premiere, Modern Warfare, and Skyrim at the same time?
If your good with slapping the whole thing together you will come out with a very nice system for $800.i5/7 or maybe a 6+ core AMD at least 8 gigs of ram (16 wouldn't be that much more if you had a motherboard that supported 4 sticks).
Pierre has made me a believer in Thinkstations. I will never buy a different system unless I need a cheap compy for shipping or something like that. For any place else in the shop, you cannot beat a Thinkstation...period. I built my computers for years, and I can tell you that the Thinkstation I bought for $600 is better than my $1500 custom build...by a lot.