A pic of it installed:

Moderator: Thanas
If I were you, I'd get a heftier power supply. The alienware ones with similar specs tend to have 750W PSUs, so that's what I am aiming for when I build my next PC (going to wait for the 8-cores to come out first).Darth Mall wrote:Looking to upgrade, thinking these parts:
E3500
ASUS P5K DELUXE/WIFI-AP LGA 775 Intel P35 ATX Intel Motherboard - Retail
CORSAIR 4GB (2 x 2GB) 240-Pin DDR2 SDRAM DDR2 800 (PC2 6400)
and for the video card I am thinking either a MSI R4850-512M Radeon HD 4850 512MB or a VisionTek 900244 Radeon HD 4870 512MB
I already have a 500w power supply, which I think should be good and all my drives, etc.
Currently I have a 3800+ and an 8800 gt on an asus board.
Good, bad, recommendations?
Have you noticed any particular sluggishness or heating issues? I'm actually looking at the Vaio as a possible laptop model to get in another 2 months and I was curious how they actually handled.Zuul wrote:
Anyway, my new laptop:
Sony Vaio AR71 M
Processor: Core 2 Duo T8100 2.1 GHz
Memory: 4GB
HD Capacity: 300GB
Display: 17" WXGA+
Graphics Card: NVIDIA GeForce 8400M GT GPU 256MB
Operating System: Windows Vista Home Premium
Optical Drive: Blu-Ray BD-ROM/ DVD+-RW/+-R DL/RAM Drive
The 8800GT will probably be fine for now.Darth Mall wrote:Currently I have a 3800+ and an 8800 gt on an asus board.
What do you need a 750W PSU for? For that matter, what do you need an eight-core machine for?Zuul wrote:If I were you, I'd get a heftier power supply. The alienware ones with similar specs tend to have 750W PSUs, so that's what I am aiming for when I build my next PC (going to wait for the 8-cores to come out first).
This one's not arrived yet, I'll let you know when it does (should be Monday, when I'll give it a good workout with games and stuff before I go to uni and use it for work). My previous laptop was a second hand vaio and is still going strong and does heat up rather noticeably; in fact it's great for warming the bed up on cold nights. That said, with that one, I never noticed it slow down despite the stream of hot air, and it's never crashed on me in a good 2 or 3 years. The reviews I've read for this model haven't said they've had any heating/slowdown issues, so I'm guessing it's okay.General Zod wrote:Have you noticed any particular sluggishness or heating issues? I'm actually looking at the Vaio as a possible laptop model to get in another 2 months and I was curious how they actually handled.Zuul wrote:
Anyway, my new laptop:
Sony Vaio AR71 M
Processor: Core 2 Duo T8100 2.1 GHz
Memory: 4GB
HD Capacity: 300GB
Display: 17" WXGA+
Graphics Card: NVIDIA GeForce 8400M GT GPU 256MB
Operating System: Windows Vista Home Premium
Optical Drive: Blu-Ray BD-ROM/ DVD+-RW/+-R DL/RAM Drive
I probably won't get an 8-core (octocore?), I'm just hoping it'll drive down the cost of the dualcores and quadcores. As for the PSU, I was going by alienware specs which is what my new one is going to be built by, my idea being if they're selling them like that, they obviously work properly. At any rate, I plan on using it to do some HD video editing, music production and gaming as the uni editing suites are usually in high demand.phongn wrote:What do you need a 750W PSU for? For that matter, what do you need an eight-core machine for?
Well, my main concern is that I've heard nightmare stories about Vaios getting bogged down with pre-loaded crapware, so I'm rather concerned about initial performance out of the box. Of course I've also heard it's a customer to customer thing, so I'm not really sure who to believe on this.Zuul wrote: This one's not arrived yet, I'll let you know when it does (should be Monday, when I'll give it a good workout with games and stuff before I go to uni and use it for work). My previous laptop was a second hand vaio and is still going strong and does heat up rather noticeably; in fact it's great for warming the bed up on cold nights. That said, with that one, I never noticed it slow down despite the stream of hot air, and it's never crashed on me in a good 2 or 3 years. The reviews I've read for this model haven't said they've had any heating/slowdown issues, so I'm guessing it's okay.
I actually meant 7800gt, per above. Sorryphongn wrote:The 8800GT will probably be fine for now.Darth Mall wrote:Currently I have a 3800+ and an 8800 gt on an asus board.
Its running fine on my 520 ish watt supply. As phongn said, theres no need for such a large power supply.Zuul wrote:If I were you, I'd get a heftier power supply. The alienware ones with similar specs tend to have 750W PSUs, so that's what I am aiming for when I build my next PC (going to wait for the 8-cores to come out first).
750W is rank overkill. Alienware is simply putting in an over-specified and over-expensive PSU into the system to pad their profit margin and impress people who don't know better.Zuul wrote:I probably won't get an 8-core (octocore?), I'm just hoping it'll drive down the cost of the dualcores and quadcores. As for the PSU, I was going by alienware specs which is what my new one is going to be built by, my idea being if they're selling them like that, they obviously work properly. At any rate, I plan on using it to do some HD video editing, music production and gaming as the uni editing suites are usually in high demand.phongn wrote:What do you need a 750W PSU for? For that matter, what do you need an eight-core machine for?
If you want to use more than ~3.25-3.5 GiB of RAM, yes.Darth Mall wrote:Is it worth upgrading to XP64 or Vista 32 or 64 bit?
Duly noted. It's not like I've much idea how much the rest of the machine will be sucking down, I just know my current 400W one is having issues with my modern setup and wanted to err on the side of bigger numbers.phongn wrote: 750W is rank overkill. Alienware is simply putting in an over-specified and over-expensive PSU into the system to pad their profit margin and impress people who don't know better.
Rendering.phongn wrote: For that matter, what do you need an eight-core machine for?
Sure, for your purposes it might be useful, but I doubt Zuul is doing anything that requires eight cores (or, for that matter, four).Darth Nostril wrote:Rendering.phongn wrote: For that matter, what do you need an eight-core machine for?
Vue 6 Infinite x64 edition would utilise all eight cores, seriously reducing render times.
Point, Set and Match to phongn.phongn wrote:Sure, for your purposes it might be useful, but I doubt Zuul is doing anything that requires eight cores (or, for that matter, four).Darth Nostril wrote:Rendering.phongn wrote: For that matter, what do you need an eight-core machine for?
Vue 6 Infinite x64 edition would utilise all eight cores, seriously reducing render times.
2.40 gigahertz AMD Athlon 64 X2 Dual Core
128 kilobyte primary memory cache
512 kilobyte secondary memory cache
Board: KN9(NF-MCP55P) 1.x
Bus Clock: 201 megahertz
BIOS: Phoenix Technologies, LTD 6.00 PG 05/30/2006
Drives Memory Modules c,d
NVIDIA JBOD 232.88G [Hard drive] (250.06 GB) -- drive 0
NVIDIA JBOD 298.09G [Hard drive] (320.07 GB) -- drive 1
2048 Megabytes Installed Memory
Slot 'A0' has 1024 MB
Slot 'A1' has 1024 MB
Slot 'A2' is Empty
Slot 'A3' is Empty
NVIDIA GeForce 8500 GT [Display adapter]
ACR AL2223W [Monitor] (22.3"vis, October 2006) (2x)
It is what I have already. What do you mean dongle?Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:Do you really want a ... 8500GT dongle that is quite useless? I would think that there's 9600GTs around that are pretty cheap as they are.
I meant dongle as in, it's quite useless. Its performance is pretty comparable to the 7300.Enigma wrote:It is what I have already. What do you mean dongle?Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:Do you really want a ... 8500GT dongle that is quite useless? I would think that there's 9600GTs around that are pretty cheap as they are.
How much of a step up is a 9600GT compared to a 8500GT?