I was under the impression that no one played games on a computer per se any more, that the world had moved onto consoles....
But then I already have all three computer games, Civ IV, Sim City 3000, and Railroad Tycoon 3. My students insist that there are others, but I remain unconvinced.
Build one is the best option, but pretty costly. A friend of mine built a gaming PC for £1,500 and it's absolutely state-of-the-art. Runs BF2 with no problems at all.
No, it's cheaper than buying pre-made. Sure your friend spent a lot, but you don't need to spend a lot to get a fast PC. Buy the right components and then use them again when you change other parts in 3-5 years.Build one is the best option, but pretty costly.
Yes / Depends. People say they're the best upgrade ever, but that depends what PC you have and what you want to improve. I have a fast PC, and adding an SSD reduced boot time, speeds up starting a new app etc, but the PC was already fast, and I'm not bothered by boot times (PC boots while I make the tea in the morning, big deal) so I wasn't wowed.does anyone have any experience with Solid State Drives? Are they worth it?
Which Win 7 do you have - did it come on disk? You can even make upgrade disks work if you know what you're doing. Reinstalling Windows is generally what you should be doing with an SSD. They better than they used to be, pretty good value now too.I'm considering buying one and reinstalling Windows onto the SSD to decrease my boot times and generally make the PC faster, would there be any issues with reinstalling Windows 7 from disc?
Yes / Depends. People say they're the best upgrade ever, but that depends what PC you have and what you want to improve. I have a fast PC, and adding an SSD reduced boot time, speeds up starting a new app etc, but the PC was already fast, and I'm not bothered by boot times (PC boots while I make the tea in the morning, big deal) so I wasn't wowed.
Which Win 7 do you have - did it come on disk? You can even make upgrade disks work if you know what you're doing. Reinstalling Windows is generally what you should be doing with an SSD. They better than they used to be, pretty good value now too.
I'd recommend one, although not quite as excitedly as many would.
This - my PC cost me £400-£500 to build and copes with modern games just fine - I tend to change the graphics card one year then the processor the year after to keep things relatively up-yo-dateNo, it's cheaper than buying pre-made. Sure your friend spent a lot, but you don't need to spend a lot to get a fast PC. Buy the right components and then use them again when you change other parts in 3-5 years.
If you can, it's a nice upgrade for PC usability. It won't speed up games, but will help them load quicker. The Crucial M4 is good, although there might be some nice newer ones out now.Well using the rather crude Windows Experience Index, my hard drive is a 5.9, everything else is 7.2+ so I figured the hard drive would be the best thing to upgrade first.