Jumplion said:
I have a question to all the PC gamers on here, this is an honest to goodness question (one that is most likely stupid and idiotic) When you build your ultimate gaming Pc, does it still run like a business PC should? Or because you pumped so much power into your graphics processor that the internet isn't the best it could be?
This is a real question, seriously it is. If after you pumped up your PC for gaming and it can't do the original purposes that it was ment to do then you've just bought yourself a pimped out PS3 (in reference to the price)
Only later will I realize how stupid this question is.
Your question speaks directly to what I consider one of the most important strengths of the personal computer: general-purpose utility. (I also think that some players in the industry are trying to take that away, turn the PC into another goddamn black-box appliance that only does what it was designed to do, like a TV set. This is a cryin' shame because the innovative spirit of the "information age" really depends on having broad public access to a general-purpose machine that can easily expand into roles it wasn't originally designed to fulfill.)
You can do a lot with a PC. It's still the best platform for accessing Internet content. It's practically the
only platform for producing Internet content. If you have a big screen and good speakers, it's not bad for watching movies. With the right hardware (a tuner card) you can watch and record TV, too. It's a great tool for creating works in a variety of media, from dead-tree publication to digital video to video games (both for other PCs and consoles).
Now, you're right in thinking that these different features don't all require the exact same hardware. In general, though, most things you could do with a PC don't require much specialized hardware at all. The trade-offs only really come up at the extreme end. If you want a workstation that plugs into four monitors, all showing mostly 2-D content, then the graphics card you would buy to play Crysis wouldn't be the best choice -- though you can cram both into one system if you really want to.
Basic crap like business software will run just fine on a really crazy super-expensive gaming box created by a company like Alienware. Chances are Word will load faster and stutter a bit less thanks to your better processor and RAM. The only real down-side I can think of is that gaming "hot rods" tend to have crazy power supplies (more than they really need -- 425-450 W is more than enough for a performance system as long as you're not sticking multiple video cards in there) and some are a bit noisy.
If you're putting together your own PC, you don't have to be as focused on optimizing it just for gaming as the vendors are. For example, I have a quad-core processor (at only $60 a core, it's not really breaking the bank). I know that most modern games don't really make good use of all four cores, so I could probably get better performance by going with a dual-core processor that has a higher clock speed. But, well, I like parallel applications and I like having the ability to run them efficiently, so I figured I'd rather just get the quad-core chip. I also didn't bother getting super-fast hard drives because lots of storage and money left in my pocket are more important to me than slightly-faster load times on some games.
-- Alex