"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
You don't need an I7, but they are nice, if perhaps overkill in some situations.( I run a newer, fast I3 at home here and it doesn't even break a sweat. 2 cores, 4 threads )The new AMD Ryzen processors are a very compelling alternative. AMD is back in the game.I would suggest a minimum of 16 gigs of ram.I would suggest an ssd for your operating system/programs ( 120 gig is plenty, 250 gig won't break the bank )I would suggest a mechanical drive for your data ( 1 tb should hold you for quite awhile, you can always add another ).A dedicated video card, imho, is a must. Your system will just be way more responsive, and some graphics programstake advantage of a dedicated GPU. Plus, with a dedicated GPU, you will have additional outputs.AMD or Nvidia. For production, you're not going to need a hardcore gaming card, but something in the middle groundis where you should aim for. Nvidia GTX1050ish or AMD RX470ish won't let you down.( They're always releasing new models, do some research before you buy. You can pick up powerful used as well for cheap )Get a good power supply. Cheap out here and your foundation is made of straw.I suppose I could go on about silent cases, dust filters, good CPU coolers, etc, butI think I covered the important stuff.Hope that helps.Cheers.
I thought that 120 would do me, and it did for a while until reality set in it got 90% full. Showed red when looking at the drive in "Computer" and just recently I had to upgrade. Since a 256 is now less than what my 120 cost four years ago, don't get too skimpy here. before I upgraded, I found myself either uninstalling programs, or moving them to my mechanical drive. Not worth the $40 or so in savings.
I have been building systems for over 15 years. I am an AMD fanboy and I would not yet recommend the new Ryzen CPU.
Quote from: Frog on April 15, 2017, 06:06:44 PMI thought that 120 would do me, and it did for a while until reality set in it got 90% full. Showed red when looking at the drive in "Computer" and just recently I had to upgrade. Since a 256 is now less than what my 120 cost four years ago, don't get too skimpy here. before I upgraded, I found myself either uninstalling programs, or moving them to my mechanical drive. Not worth the $40 or so in savings.Get one of the free disk storage analyzers and double check that your space is being used for actual programs etc. We were getting full on one OS drive here and I found that Windows was saving some redonkulous temp stuff. Asin over half the drive. I wonder if MS has any ownership in the disk mfgrs.
I've built probably 40 setups in my time. Only had one bad CPU ever.It was the single time I gave Intel a whirl.
As far as know DRAW X6 is not compatible w/ windows 10. I tried to install DRAW X4 full version and X6 upgrade disk without success.I don't know if this is your case, make sure it works for you before you pull the trigger on a new machine.just my two cents.
Also if you run an SSD drive, make sure you have TRIM(look that one up on the google)active. If not, your SSD drive may pooch.Hope this helps anyone avoid the problems I encountered.