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Basically my question is: just how much difference do sound cards play in terms of sound quality, and will a built-in card be enough if I'm using headphones?
the built-in sound cards suffice for everyday needs. Don't bother with a pro one unless you will actually need quality for recording music and such.
What's your build looking like?
If you want to save a little money on your processor/mobo, running an AMD system with a phenom card won't take you down too much. I run an 1100T ($175 right now on newegg) with no issues in BF3.
EVGA GeForce GTX570 - A decent and fast GPU paired with an idiotic and shitty CPU. Btw, EVGA is OK. But i'll be glad if you will pick something from MSI next time.
PSU: Pick the Silverstone, my friend uses the same one and he is as happy as a mo-fuckin crack addict on...guess what.
MOBO: Asus P8P67 is an OK motherboard, but Gigabyte is better. I was using their motherboard once, very stable and good.
G-Skill Ripjaws: Huge heatsinks, big speed and big price. My corsairs have costed only 45 euros compared to this. I can't see a difference between 1333 and 1600 MHz.
Western Digital 320 GB: Hooah, 320 Gigabytes. I am doing well on my 250 GB.
Corsair 400: Woohoo, a case with some fans, but CoolerMaster Sileo 500 is a better case.
I hope that my piece of wasted time has helped you very much in choosing between the components for your PC.
Intel sucks for their graphics capabilities, which are laughable(not only performance wise, but driver and API support wise too) at best.
Fuck Intel and Microsoft, AMD + Ubuntu for the win.
Quote from: Clawbug on October 07, 2011, 01:34:58 pmIntel sucks for their graphics capabilities, which are laughable(not only performance wise, but driver and API support wise too) at best.I'm liking your posts in this thread, but can you please elaborate a little? Are you referring to Intel's very ubiquitous onboard graphics and saying they have lame performance and drivers, or something else? (forgive my ignorance; I do my best to avoid having to deal with hardware)
While I am at this, are you aware of the Intel's C/C++ compiler being shady towards non-Intel CPUs via it's CPU dispatcher? It has quite big impact on software in circulation(especially games and benchmarking software).
Quote from: Clawbug on December 31, 1969, 10:39:40 pmWhile I am at this, are you aware of the Intel's C/C++ compiler being shady towards non-Intel CPUs via it's CPU dispatcher? It has quite big impact on software in circulation(especially games and benchmarking software).I think I remember reading that their cpus might have undocumented instruction sets (or something similar) that only ICC is aware of. But is that really important if msvcc and gcc (and its derivitives) are king?And yes, I'm happy to see you're back..at least partially. I love it when techie people (as in those well rounded with hardware, unix, and windows) are active in computer discussions here. It's a shame that mar77a, toumaz, yourself, elephanthunter, flab, and others have been largely absent in recent years and all we have are single-minded people like virtualtt who only care about microsoft.
My my. Swap CentaurHauls for AuthenticAMD, and Nano's performance magically jumps about 10 percent. Swap for GenuineIntel, and memory performance goes up no less than 47.4 percent.