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I'm not going to bother to go into specs etc, but is it worth it to buy a new PC at the end of the summer?
I'm in Year 11 at the moment, just about to finish GCSEs. Now, bearing in mind I'm going to have this PC all the way through Uni too, I need a PC that's near top of the line.
So, would it be pointless buying it at the end of the summer, or should I wait until Christmas/next year/two years?
How drastically will PC's have changed by the three periods above?
Yes, your opinion is indeed important.
Thanks
Anyway, my last and final question- Ethernet. What do I need to install on this PC that I'm on at the moment dn on my new PC that will be upstairs to allow me to connect wirelessly to Broadband? Ethernet PCI cards or what?
Thanks.
It's all about planning.
> adrian wrote:
> SATA is only 150mb at burst when ATA133 is 133mb. Reading up about
> hard drives the speed of the burst hardly ever gets reached. If your
> really after a fast drive then get a SCSI. If not just stick with a
> decent ATA133 7200rpm 8mb Cache model.
>
>
> The SATA technology is rated up to either 300MB/s or 600MB/s (can't
> remember which). There are already 10K rpm SATA drives on the market.
> Advances in controller technology are allowing drive speeds to go up,
> and they're only going to go up further, probably up to SCSI and
> beyond. SATA is the future, parallel interface drives are the past.
Well the SATA at the moment is only 150mb. Maybe in the future or if you plan to spend big bucks.
> SATA is only 150mb at burst when ATA133 is 133mb. Reading up about
> hard drives the speed of the burst hardly ever gets reached. If your
> really after a fast drive then get a SCSI. If not just stick with a
> decent ATA133 7200rpm 8mb Cache model.
The SATA technology is rated up to either 300MB/s or 600MB/s (can't remember which). There are already 10K rpm SATA drives on the market. Advances in controller technology are allowing drive speeds to go up, and they're only going to go up further, probably up to SCSI and beyond. SATA is the future, parallel interface drives are the past.
> I have been thinking. Would it be possible to get a Dell with a
> standard 30Gb HDD (lowest they have) and then get an SATA 120Gb when
> they come out/ are cheaper?
Yes, but you'd need an SATA controller on your motherboard, and at the moment the technology is in its infancy. As they become more popular expect prices to tumble and performance to skyrocket, and they're just not there yet.
So yes, but you'd likely have to add a seperate SATA PCI card (and SATA is faster than PCI iirc, so the card would be a bottleneck) or replace your motherboard if you wanted high speed SATA.
If you want to get a computer now, don't let Serial ATA ruin your decision for you. They are faster than IDE, and the technology doesn't have so many kinks and bugs in it, but it may be longer than I reckon before SATA is mainstream, and it won't be *that* much faster.
http://www.romulus2.com/feedback/chart.php?1
Only thing i know that has SATA is the nforce 2 mobo's.