need an xp recovery disc for ze4100 hp

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Here:

1. Case: Antec NSK4482B
2. Mobo: ASUS P7H55-M-PRO
3. CPU: Intel I3 540
4. RAM: Corsair CMX4GX3M2A1600C9
5. HDD: Western Digital WD10EARS
6. ODD: ASUS DRW-24B1ST/B
 
Originally Posted By: daves66nova
I do want to try though,so that i can learn,and also so tat i can rid myself of this dimension 2400.lol

I can certainly understand that. All the best! Let us know how it goes.
 
Don't forget to buy an OEM copy of Win 7 (assuming that's what you want to be using) when you buy your components. Licensing rules allow you to purchase an OEM ("sytem builder") license for much cheaper.

Example
$264 for Win 7 Professional "Full" version
$139 for Win 7 Professional OEM version

They're the same exact thing in terms of what you actually get, its just a matter of the different license.
 
Originally Posted By: daves66nova
Is there a list of cpu's,from oldest to newest type? Such as celeron,p3,p4,etc?

Dave don't take this the wrong way, but Quattro Pete is right. Based on the questions you're asking, you just don't have enough savvy to put together your own system. Its non big deal. Not everyone is enough of a tech geek to build from scratch.

That Pentium D you posted is was released sometime in 2006, that's not really much of an upgrade from what you have.

Wiki is your friend when looking at Intel CPU architecture.

Of those you listed though:

Celerons haven't been released since 2009ish and are just cut down versions of other CPUs with smaller cache etc.

PIII is very outdated (2001 ish last time they were relevant) though the PIII architecture led to the development of the Pentium M which in turn was the architecture Intel used for their Core and Core2 CPUs after abandoning the Netburst architecture of the P4 (Pentium D etc).

P4 was a dead-end from the get go. While powerful enough at the time the Netburst had serious limitations in terms of future expansion for speed along with a host of other issues (like thermal dissipation).

We're currently in the Intel Core i-series for the standard everyday processor. i3, i5, i7 all multicore processors.

The previous generation was the Core2 which were also multicore CPUs. An offshoot of the Core2 architecture was the lower end Intel Pentium Dual Core which was a Core2 architecture with a smaller cache and lower front side bus than its more powerful cousins.

Of course beyond just the P4, Core2 etc then you get into things like Wolfdale, Coppermine, and other names that all relate to the CPUs manufacturing process i.e. how man nanometers the fabrication process is which dictates thermal dissipation characteristics.

For example in the current i-series lineup you have:
Arrandale, Sandy Bridge, and Clarksfield for the different CPU cores available

Current hardware in my house consists of:
Laptops with: 1.6GHz Pentium M, 2GHz TurionX2, 2GHz Pentium Dual Core
Desktops with: Core2 Duo 2.57GHz overclocked to 3.1 with a 3MB L2 Cache, a P4 Northwood running at 3GHz IIRC

To build your own system you need a basic understanding of the following.

Motherboard design:
1) what socket (pin pattern) it uses which must match the socket type of the CPU you buy
2) what speeds of front side bus does the board support as you must match that to the CPU's FSB
3) What chips are being used for the north and south bridge as some are better than others and allow for different capabilities
4) Hard drive and DVD burner connections - moot point most things are SATA today. However, you do need to decide on what speed of hard drive you want (RPM spin rate) or will you go with a solid state disk.
5) RAM - how much will the board support and of what type? DDR2 DDR3. What speed? DDR2 for example comes in 533,667,800,1066. Also you don't need to but is nice to know about latency ratings and timings when buying RAM to get the best bang for the buck
6) Onboard graphics or a separate video card. Your choice, it depends on what you're looking to do. If you choose onboard you're looking at offerings from Intel, Nvidia, and ATI (the Nvidia boards from what I remember have always been rated the best). If you go separate card, they're all now pretty much PCI-e so then its a matter of choosing what level of performance you need out of the card and what kind of connections.
7) Audio - most boards have onboard audio that while not great is sufficient for most peoples needs.
8) A host of other things I'm probably forgetting such as which companies generally produce the most reliable ram or making sure you buy a proper CPU cooler if it doesn't come with one.
9) Oh yes, and how comfortable are you fiddling with BIOS settings to get things working right.


In summary, if what I have written has confused you, you need to educate yourself on these things before building a machine otherwise you're going to end up with a pile of parts that may or may not actually work together.

You've been asking questions that are so, well rudimentary when it comes to attempting to build your own PC that it seems you're in over your head. You've also been asking about hardware that is 5+ years out of date (the Pentium D you linked to).

Just buy a premade box from someone and save yourself the trouble. I'm sure there are plenty of people that if you gave them a budget target would be happy to recommend a good machine with decent specs within that budget.
 
You guys are all right. Based on all this tech info,and what i use my comp for,I'm thinking i just might need or want, something that's barely in the "core" setup,even if it might be 4 years old or so.I only use the comp for youtube vids,email,and going on sites to read.Never any gaming.I do want an hdmi output for netflix for my Vizio lcd.Any recommendation now, based on this?
 
A friend of mine has this comp, eMachines EL1331G-01.should i just stick with this one? I know emachines ain't all that good.It's with a screen for 130.00. not sure of the screen.
 
http://reviews.cnet.com/desktops/emachines-el1331g-01w/1707-3118_7-33799744.html

http://www.productwiki.com/emachines-el1331g-01w/

So would I get that over a Dell 2400? If someone gave it to me for free, but otherwise wouldn't spend a dime on it. It wouldn't even be useful for turning into a home server and shoving it into a closet as it has pretty much zero expansion capability.

Here's a Dell for $450 with an i3 if you don't mind using your current monitor.
http://www.dell.com/us/p/inspiron-620/pd?oc=ddcwjs1&model_id=inspiron-620

http://www.dell.com/us/p/inspiron-zino-hd-410/pd?oc=ddcwfw1&model_id=inspiron-zino-hd-410
Here's a $300 model designed for doing pretty much exactly what you're looking for.


I can only ask WHY? Why are you throwing good money away on 5 year old technology? Its still not going to be powerful enough to do the Netflix sharing you want to do with your TV.

Just shop around. Look for some deals. You ought to be able to find something new for less than $400 that is lightyears ahead of either of these machines.

Heck look on craigslist. You can find something on there for probably $200 that is less than 2 years old.
 
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I like Asrock motherboards, Asrock is a division of Asus and there are coming good for budget build computers, I can even overclock my AMD cpus without problems.
 
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