Wed Oct 17, 2007 1:19PM EDT
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Reader John Coggins recently emailed me wondering whether it was time to upgrade his seven-year-old PC, even though it's working fine. That got me thinking about this post. All things considered... when should you upgrade your computer? Here are some rules of thumb to keep in mind.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
I think all you guys have great answers!!!!!
Just recently, I lost the function of both memory cards and I can't get the computer to even turn on. I followed the user manual to the letter on how to resolve the problem, but it didn't. How can I retrieve the family photos and document files from the old memory cards?
A very thorough, interesting article. many companies tell you to replace computers after two years. money money money.
I have an HP Microtower that I just bought last year. It has a 40GB HD, AMD Sempron, 768 MB of RAM and I will tell you one thing: I RUNS FAST!!!!!!! So don't ever let anyone tell you that an entrylevel computer will be sluggish and only be useful for the basics because that is not true at all. Halo 3 and World of Warcraft run extreemely fast onm this and quite frankly who needs to spend $4k on a gameing machine when you can pay $300-$500 for a "Entry Level" computer that can handle it all. as long as you keep that HD organized and that registry clean you will be in great shape!! I love HP and Dell and I would definetly buy more of there computers. The only reason I would upgrade from my HP Microtower is the fact that it is not a laptop and I have wanted one for 6 years now.
Could some olease tell me if there is any program that will clean up old files from my hard drive. My son was famous for downloading games and other programs to the computor now that he has left home I have uninstalled a lot of what he had on there. I have been told that not all of the files that on there would be removed with the uninstall programs. Is there any thing that will check and clean off any unwanted files and left overs that were not removed?
ucdavisnum1,parker639,omarhamid76 and all the other Macaca sylvanus, YOU should try to use a pc. even apple does. they rebuilt their products with intel xxx -p -g... motherboars, intel cpu, ati gpu and sell it (1000$ more than we buy our pc with the same specs) to those of you who think that a computer is a thing with all its stf inside the monitor.(or in the keyboard, some very macacas). you buy a pc that runs mac os and also can run windows with bootcamp and other nonsense.very impressive. my sisters celeron does too, and xp,vista,linux,unix. for the friend who said something about buying $25k software... well... ok... you love your country? prove it. allways ask for a reciept. said a goverment tv add for taxes and stf some years before, here in greece. wheck the goverment loves you? said a friend. and he was wright. why buying software when at the same time software demands better hardware to run."we made a game with incredible grafics and very smart ai and the sound is better with these 7.1 speakers" and so and so more. i think that companies that make hardware should pay those who make software. if every time a new game is released and your kid wants to play it you'll have to pay $50 for the game and $200 for the gpu you need to run it and this gpu is good for 5 more games and then you need a better one not $25k but $250k couldn't be enough.and and and in the end WE dont love our country.the country loves as as long as we pay for everything we use so we pay our taxes... otherwise you are a thief, you download music that you hear for a week and then erase it because it was crap(and didn't pay $20 for the poor musician that has three houses and ten cars),thief, you downloaded a game, played for two hours then realised that it was so boring and had nothing new to offer more than rechewing the same thing some game you played last year?you thief, nfridia paid the developer $500,000 for the game to run better on their boards than oty's boards. if i have to pay someone i will because he offered something to me that kept entertaining me for some time and he didn't make a product just to take my money. i was making 600€ a month in my last job and stopped working because my boss wasn't paying me the last three months(he bought a boat and a new car and didn't have money for the employes) how am i supposed to pay for the rent, electricity, heat, gas for my bike and pay for my entertainment. and don't tell me i dont deserve it because i work less than the others who make 1000€ or 2000€, i was working for 8 to 12 hours a day, 6 days a week, and sometimes 7 days a week. well i love country music more than i love my country even though i'm not from the U.S. and reggae also. sorry for my english.
hello every one. i need help. i want to buy a new computer. i'm on a tight budget. i want to buy a desk top or a lap top. i can afford a price range of $400-500. may be $600. but i 'll love to pay less than $400. can any body recommend me brands. any suggestions of what should i buy. i will use it, more for internet use. i use internet for my work all day long. where should i buy i?. thank you for your help. please write your comments and suggestions. you can email me your recommendations and suggestions. @t**** sevalangy03@yahoo.com. i will appreciate your help. thank you.
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306 Posted by richaull on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:40PM EDT Report Abuse
Macs=no gaming. Hardcore gamers simply cannot get a Mac. I also see how much Mac charges for memory. 2Gigs for like $500? Thats actually hilarious. Talk about bending the customer over, sheesh! Old PC's are fine for the other non gamers. As has been said, a 5-10 year old PC will be able to go online, play flash games, and do basic word processing. If your not a gamer or hardcore overclocker, hardware that is 1 or 2 rungs below the best will normally suffice. For instance, the 2.4Ghz Q6600 is a fantastic processor that can be had for around $250. Now look at the 3Ghz version, over 1k for a minimal performance gain. Same goes for memory. While you can get 800mhz memory for bargain prices, people will still buy the new DDR3 memory that costs 5x as much for minimal gain. As far as where to purchase, I would recommend a small boutique shop, many can be found online. The big companies like HP, Dell, etc. have horrible customer service that is all outsourced. If you don't know much about computers and call tech support, you need to be able to understand the tech. Having a foreigner with a very thick accent reading from a script is only going to make the problem worse, not solve it. So depending on your needs there is something out there for everyone. Know this though, whatever you buy today WILL be obsolete tomorrow. Technology is advancing that fast. If your hardware is capable of playing your favorite game, compiling next weeks financial report, or whatever else you do then your all set with no need to upgrade. When that changes and you find yourself in need of a new PC, read a few tech mags, ask tech savy friends for whats good, or just buy whatever is in your price range and enjoy!