Posted: Sun Jan 22, 2006 4:46 pm
This is not an attempt to be anti-computer geek (we all know who we are =), but isn't a lot of this stuff overkill? Please keep in mind I am more inquisitive to know the real answers, than saying I have my mind made up.
I have a very simple system I built in October of 2004. It has 1 gig (2x 512) of cas latency 3 Kingston value ram, a socket 754 3200+ Athlon 64, and an ATI Radeon 9800 Pro card (ATI brand) 128 DDR ram, 256-bit interface. I run UT2K4 perfectly fine. The only time I get lag is the same time everyone else is getting it (server side). I rarely seem to have any problems whatsoever, except for that crappy gigabyte board giving out on me (knock on wood).
I guess what I am saying here is when does a lot of this stuff go overboard? I understand that when 2K7 comes out my system needs an upgrade, but it seems to me that if I get 30-50 fps with what I have, then why is everyone out there seem to have 2 graphics cards, 2 gigs of ram, dual core processors, etc.??
I guess for me my budget is very tight, and if it wasn’t I’d have all that stuff, but part of me wonders where the line is for a computer’s “strength” vs. its “bragging rights.”
I have a very simple system I built in October of 2004. It has 1 gig (2x 512) of cas latency 3 Kingston value ram, a socket 754 3200+ Athlon 64, and an ATI Radeon 9800 Pro card (ATI brand) 128 DDR ram, 256-bit interface. I run UT2K4 perfectly fine. The only time I get lag is the same time everyone else is getting it (server side). I rarely seem to have any problems whatsoever, except for that crappy gigabyte board giving out on me (knock on wood).
I guess what I am saying here is when does a lot of this stuff go overboard? I understand that when 2K7 comes out my system needs an upgrade, but it seems to me that if I get 30-50 fps with what I have, then why is everyone out there seem to have 2 graphics cards, 2 gigs of ram, dual core processors, etc.??
I guess for me my budget is very tight, and if it wasn’t I’d have all that stuff, but part of me wonders where the line is for a computer’s “strength” vs. its “bragging rights.”