Monday, December 29, 2008

My Semi-new triple core home built computer

Finally I got my new computer up and running. It was my christmas present and it took me 2 days to get it built and loaded up. My specs:

MB and CPU were bought as a combo with a $30.00 Discount
So the initial cost was $689 + $15 shipping and $10 in tax. The items from newegg.com were tax free. I got a $30 discount on the motherboard and cpu combo. I got a $40 Mail in rebate and a $10 mail rebote on the monitor and power supply which I already sent in.

so $715 -80 = $635 Which I am mighty happy about. The thing screams. I got a lan party in a couple weeks which will test it out nicely but so far I have ran Battlefield 1942 maxed out and it didn't even think about giving me a problem.


I need to purchase Counter Strike Source and practice now.



1 comment:

  1. Awesome Budget Gaming Build!

    Congrats on the new rig—especially for hitting that $635 sweet spot after rebates! Your part selection is a nostalgia trip (AMD Phenom X3, ATI 4670, XP Pro 64-bit) and a great reminder that smart combos and open-box deals can deliver killer performance without breaking the bank. Overclocking the Phenom to 3GHz and pairing it with 4GB of 1066 RAM must’ve felt blazing in 2008 for games like BF1942.

    Fun Comparison to Server Hardware (ProLiant BL2X220C/Hexa-Core Xeon 2.93GHz):
    While your Phenom X3 was a budget gaming champ, the HP ProLiant BL2X220C (with dual-node Hexa-Core Xeon 2.93GHz CPUs per blade) was busy crunching enterprise workloads. Here’s how they stack up:

    Cores/Threads: Your X3 had 3 cores; one Xeon in the BL2X220C had 6 cores/12 threads—ideal for virtualization or databases.

    Efficiency: Your 500W PSU powered a whole gaming rig; one BL2X220C blade siphoned ~600W but packed two servers in 1U.

    Legacy: Just as your Phenom aged into a retro gem, these Xeons are now budget heroes for homelabbers (imagine a BL2X220C running CS:S server instances!).

    Modern Take:
    Today, even a $635 budget could net a used Ryzen 5/GTX 1660 rig—but the thrill of DIY builds (and LAN parties!) hasn’t changed. Meanwhile, decommissioned ProLiants like the BL2X220C live on as cheap homelab beasts.

    Final Thought:
    Your post is a time capsule of PC enthusiasm—whether it’s a Phenom gaming rig or a Xeon-powered blade, the joy of making hardware sing is universal. Enjoy the LAN party!

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