- Joined
- Aug 7, 2013
- Messages
- 1,338
Hi,
So I am considering getting a new computer altogether. It doesn't need to be capable of playing anything too crazy--I'd be happy with how my previous machine ran (the one with the motherboard fried) in terms of fps for WC3 and SC2 (medium settings comfortably except in big battles).
For WC3 the fps was pretty decent (with some things turned off, like unit shadows), running pretty decently in large pitched battles (little to no lag), though using the editor was a little tedious.
I'm ignorant of hardware and its implications for performance, but I am guessing a desktop will outperform a laptop for the same price. I also don't need a portable Windows machine, since I've got my relatively new macbook pro (cost a leg and an arm, of course), from which I *can* do coding anywhere (though quite honestly all the environments just don't feel right, except perhaps for using Lisp, otherwise I preferred doing Python and Java in Windows).
Let's say my budget is $300 (the price it would cost to get the motherboard replaced). I'd be willing to go a bit over that (likely no more than $450) if the increase in price meant something close to significant gain in performance (let's say polynomial perhaps?).
Here's one deal I found that pretty much fits the budget: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16883229562
But I'm a complete newb at this, so I'd very much appreciate help and advice.
My plan is to also test out the computer--if it does good enough I'd keep it and not get my previous machine fixed. Otherwise if nothing works then I'd go and get it fixed.
So I am considering getting a new computer altogether. It doesn't need to be capable of playing anything too crazy--I'd be happy with how my previous machine ran (the one with the motherboard fried) in terms of fps for WC3 and SC2 (medium settings comfortably except in big battles).
For WC3 the fps was pretty decent (with some things turned off, like unit shadows), running pretty decently in large pitched battles (little to no lag), though using the editor was a little tedious.
I'm ignorant of hardware and its implications for performance, but I am guessing a desktop will outperform a laptop for the same price. I also don't need a portable Windows machine, since I've got my relatively new macbook pro (cost a leg and an arm, of course), from which I *can* do coding anywhere (though quite honestly all the environments just don't feel right, except perhaps for using Lisp, otherwise I preferred doing Python and Java in Windows).
Let's say my budget is $300 (the price it would cost to get the motherboard replaced). I'd be willing to go a bit over that (likely no more than $450) if the increase in price meant something close to significant gain in performance (let's say polynomial perhaps?).
Here's one deal I found that pretty much fits the budget: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16883229562
But I'm a complete newb at this, so I'd very much appreciate help and advice.
My plan is to also test out the computer--if it does good enough I'd keep it and not get my previous machine fixed. Otherwise if nothing works then I'd go and get it fixed.