Hi Guys and Guyesses(!)
Looking for some genuine help and advice here. I'm planning to do my first own-build PC soon and need some advice re CPU/MOBO. I've done repairs/upgrades to PCs before and should be up to the assembly/configuration stuff.
Main uses will be: (Desktop)
Dual-boot Linux (Ubuntu) & Windows 7 (would like option of going to Win 8 later but without significant slowdown)
Internet/Office-y type stuff - some video-on demand
Minor graphic editing - GIMP, diagrams etc
Some programming/compiling programs, mainly in Visual Studio 2010/2012
Some audio/video ripping/converting
Occasional gaming - mainly Oolite - with some of the more graphical expansion packs (OXPs) - kids may want to play other stuff at some point.
(Current monitor is DVI-LCD @ 1900x1200 ish - LG L225WT)
Like everyone these days I'm looking to get the best bang-for-buck. Was looking at Bulldozer, but the advice here and elsewhere seem to suggest Ivybridge i5-3570K may be the way to go - but I'm happy to go AMD or Intel.
I need this system to be "fairly" future-proof (useable that is - allowing for updates to .NET and antivirus etc to slowdown the system - that was why I first started playing with Linux!) for the next 4-5 years - current PC is approx 6 years old and the hardware is struggling with the OS - even with XP - because of the .NET and security updates - have optomised EVERYTHING I can!! - If you want a laugh I'll post hardware specs and some basic performance indicators (boot times etc)
My specific questions are:
1) would I be better to go for a non-GPU cpu and separate video card - if so, would the performance be better than a "modern" GPU cpu? If so, which ones do you advise? - I'd prefer not to overclock at this time, but might do so later.
2) if I go down the GPU route and later (or now) add a separate video card, am I likely to get conflicts or will the integrated graphics part of the chip just be sitting there twiddling its'...thumbs(!)
3) does the integrated graphics bottleneck main CPU performance - ie if I put a GPU with (say) 16GB of 1866MHz DDR3, it seems to me that a GPU would still have to use system memory for the graphics core to use...that would mean less physical RAM is available to the "main" CPU and because the graphics core is (physically) further away from the RAM, data moving/instructions would be slower than a dedicated graphics card with on-board RAM sending...or am I missing something really basic here???
Really sorry for the looong post, but I really need to get this straight in my head before I spend my cash.
Many thanks in anticipation for any help or advice.
iFixem
Looking for some genuine help and advice here. I'm planning to do my first own-build PC soon and need some advice re CPU/MOBO. I've done repairs/upgrades to PCs before and should be up to the assembly/configuration stuff.
Main uses will be: (Desktop)
Dual-boot Linux (Ubuntu) & Windows 7 (would like option of going to Win 8 later but without significant slowdown)
Internet/Office-y type stuff - some video-on demand
Minor graphic editing - GIMP, diagrams etc
Some programming/compiling programs, mainly in Visual Studio 2010/2012
Some audio/video ripping/converting
Occasional gaming - mainly Oolite - with some of the more graphical expansion packs (OXPs) - kids may want to play other stuff at some point.
(Current monitor is DVI-LCD @ 1900x1200 ish - LG L225WT)
Like everyone these days I'm looking to get the best bang-for-buck. Was looking at Bulldozer, but the advice here and elsewhere seem to suggest Ivybridge i5-3570K may be the way to go - but I'm happy to go AMD or Intel.
I need this system to be "fairly" future-proof (useable that is - allowing for updates to .NET and antivirus etc to slowdown the system - that was why I first started playing with Linux!) for the next 4-5 years - current PC is approx 6 years old and the hardware is struggling with the OS - even with XP - because of the .NET and security updates - have optomised EVERYTHING I can!! - If you want a laugh I'll post hardware specs and some basic performance indicators (boot times etc)
My specific questions are:
1) would I be better to go for a non-GPU cpu and separate video card - if so, would the performance be better than a "modern" GPU cpu? If so, which ones do you advise? - I'd prefer not to overclock at this time, but might do so later.
2) if I go down the GPU route and later (or now) add a separate video card, am I likely to get conflicts or will the integrated graphics part of the chip just be sitting there twiddling its'...thumbs(!)
3) does the integrated graphics bottleneck main CPU performance - ie if I put a GPU with (say) 16GB of 1866MHz DDR3, it seems to me that a GPU would still have to use system memory for the graphics core to use...that would mean less physical RAM is available to the "main" CPU and because the graphics core is (physically) further away from the RAM, data moving/instructions would be slower than a dedicated graphics card with on-board RAM sending...or am I missing something really basic here???
Really sorry for the looong post, but I really need to get this straight in my head before I spend my cash.
Many thanks in anticipation for any help or advice.
iFixem