SirRoxalot said:
Wow, the silence is deafening. That's a statement about the PC business these days, isn't it?
No, I’d say it’s a statement that this post was put on the Production board and that’s why there’s been little response. Post it on the Engineering board and you’ll likely find it would get more responses.
SirRoxalot said:
Look for something with an actual Intel motherboard and Intel processor - and NOT a Celeron.
With all due respect Rox – I had to check my calendar because I thought we were back in 1999. Your Intel-only & avoid-the-Celeron assertions were certainly true ten years ago but a LOT has changed since then.
AMD makes some pretty darn good chips these days and even the “lowly Celeron” is available in a dual-core version. So it's no longer necessary to stick to the Intel-only-no-Celeron school of thinking.
Now that we’ve got that out of the way, let me give you some suggestions you can ACTUALLY use.
You said the old computer was five years old. That means it was likely a Pentium 4-class processor running WinXP and perhaps Audition 1.5, Protools LE or the first version of M-Powered PT.
As you probably know Microsoft has officially released Win7 - and while you can still find computers with XP on them(or are loaded with Win7 but include an “ XP downgrade”) it won’t be as easy (and WILL be more expensive). So the FIRST thing you need to do before buying a new computer is to make sure it can run those older programs – or if you plan to upgrade you need to add in the cost of those upgrades to your budget.
Once you get that sorted out THEN take a look at new hardware.
If you want to go big with a quad-core and 8Gb of RAM, that’s fine – but remember many apps aren’t designed to take advantage of multiple-core hardware so in most cases you won’t get any immediate tangible benefit from such a configuration.
Another lower cost option is to fix what killed the old computer. Was it the motherboard? Power supply? Hard Drive? In most cases you can get the old machine up and running again for a LOT less than a new computer – and you won’t have to worry about software compatibility issues with this approach.