[olug] Mobo/Video recommendations
Eric Lusk
wyrmzr72 at yahoo.com
Thu Feb 7 20:32:36 UTC 2008
Favoring AMD myself, I've found few motherboards that really have any problems with any O/S. I HAVE run into one situation where the BIOS was so far behind that I had to have a stick of old RAM to get it to boot and then flash, but that's an extreme case, and for many of us complete geeks, not much of an issue. The average user doesn't have RAM laying around, but the average user isn't building his own system, either. (For the record, the mobo I have isn't technically rated to handle the Sempron CPU I got with it, without a BIOS flash, so I expected issues during the install).
As far as video goes, I pulled my ATI x1600 Pro/512 and replaced it with a 7800GSOC because 3D just didn't install (that's been over a year ago, so maybe that's changed).
I don't do bleeding edge myself, since if you wait a year the parts can cost half as much; my Sempron 3400+ is probably around $30 now, and this old AGP board still plays every game I have at 1680x1050 resolution.
For a small server, if you were getting along fine with a PIII, a dual core Athlon or even one of the older Sempron CPUs may be more than you need for quite a while (I recall the 6000+ being under $200 quite a while back at Newegg). Chances are that's more than most people will need for a long while, and this includes gamers.
I always go for some overkill as far as making sure things can be expanded to suit my needs; extra PCI slots, lots of RAM capability, higher CPU speed handling (if I'm not already buying the highest the mobo will take).
http://www.ericshaus.com
I ran the Harry Potter books through a spell checker; none of those spells should work.
----- Original Message ----
From: Phil Brutsche <phil at brutsche.us>
To: Omaha Linux User Group <olug at olug.org>
Sent: Thursday, February 7, 2008 2:00:17 PM
Subject: Re: [olug] Mobo/Video recommendations
Obi-Wan
wrote:
>
Of
course,
if
stability
really
was
a
problem,
I'd
rethink
that,
but
>
I've
not
heard
of
any
specific
examples
of
AMD
reliability
problems.
It
more
that
99.99999%
of
all
AMD
motherboards
are
geared
towards
enthusiasts
that
will
abuse
their
systems
by
overclocking
the
dickens
out
of
them.
I'll
prefer
equipment
that's
designed
for
consistency
and
reliability
any
day.
There's
also
the
*platform*
stability
issue
-
if
I
build
a
machine
with
an
Intel
or
Supermicro
motherboard,
and
suddenly
find
I
need
to
drop
in
a
replacement
2
or
3
years
down
the
road,
you
better
believe
I
can
get
a
perfect
drop-in
replacement
off
eBay.
I've
had
horrible
problems
with
that
with
AMD
boards
-
the
manuf.
will
change
the
MB
revision,
and
will
change
the
ethernet
and
audio
controllers
at
the
same
time!
>
Onboard
firewire
is
nice.
I
worry
about
the
future
expandability
>
of
a
board
with
only
one
PCI-e
x16
slot,
especially
with
no
onboard
>
video.
>
>
What's
the
availability
like
for
PCI-e
x1
cards?
I'd
never
even
>
heard
of
those
little
things
until
I
started
looking
at
mobos
lately.
A
year
or
2
ago
there
were
very
few
options,
but
that's
changing
quickly.
These
days
you
can
get
single-lane
video
cards,
SATA
JBOD/fakeraid
cards,
SATA
RAID
(real
hardware
raid)
cards,
ethernet
cards,
sound
cards,
wireless
cards,
TV
capture
cards
for
Windows
MCE
or
MythTV...
>
I
understand
what
you're
saying,
and
if
I
were
starting
from
scratch,
>
I'd
agree
with
you.
However,
I've
got
four
(perhaps
three
now)
IDE
>
drives
worth
over
1
TB,
and
I'm
not
inclined
to
replace
them
until
>
they
die
or
fill
up.
Therefore,
I
still
need
a
mobo
with
good
IDE
>
support.
Unfortunately
such
boards
no
longer
exist.
There
are
boards
out
there
with
PATA
ports
provided
by
an
additional
on-motherboard
controller,
but
the
add-in
controller
is
hardly
any
better
than
the
Promise
cards.
One
example:
http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/Core2Duo/G33/C2SBA+.cfm
>
I
do
have
a
PCI
IDE
card
(Promise
brand,
which
has
flaky
support
in
>
Feisty,
unknown
with
Gutsy)
that
I
suppose
I
could
use
for
my
drives
>
if
it's
supported.
You
should
be
able
to
get
an
older
3ware
7000-series
PATA
PCI
card;
they've
been
well-supported
under
Linux
for
nearly
a
decade,
work
in
JBOD
mode
and
are
pretty
cheap
on
eBay.
One
example:
http://search.ebay.com/110222119557
--
Phil
Brutsche
phil at brutsche.us
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