I am looking to either buy a new computer or have one built for me. Can you tell me what computer would be best or where would be a good place to go to have one built for me? I know I want a CD-ROM, DVD-ROM. It will mainly be used for internet, games, music. Is HP a good brand? I would like to get the best. I really don't have a budget,but I don't really want to spent more than $3000.
Let me give my background up front. I have been an electronic technician for 40 years and a PC technician for about 25 years. I was a major PC warranty station forZenith in 1984 and have taught computers, as well.
Avoid Dell like the plague it is--they are totally custom, hence difficult (near-impossible) to upgrade--and you are limited to what Dell sells: Intel only.
Most of the negative stuff about HP and Compaq is based on the old-generation equipment. While I might not use them myself (I build my own these days), I have, in fact, recommended the newest generation of Compaqs to some users.
My recommendation is that you find a local shop with a good reputation and pick off-the shelf components. If there are computer trade shows in your area, go to one. You can usually find them listed in the classified section of your local newspaper. You can talk to local dealers side-by-side. Another tactic is to find a local computer user group and ask their opinion of local dealers.
I feel, quite strongly, that AMD processors offer a far better value dollar-for-dollar than Intel, and a better roadmap for the future. AMD is now the acknowledged leader (evidence: Intel is adopting AMD's x86-64 architecture for some of it's high-end processors, the AMD-64 is making progress in the marketplace, the Opteron drastically outselling the Itanium family, and Prescott is over-hyped crap).
nVidia , VIA , and SiS all have good chipsets for AMD processors.
Some of the leading motherboard and graphic-card manufacturers include (in no particular order) Albatron , Gigabyte , ASUS , Abit , and MSI
I prefer graphic cards by nVidia over ATI. They are very close in performance, but the nVidia driver model and Linux support are both much better, and this will count in the long run. The newest nVidia cards outperform ATI head-to-head.
Get a good-quality case and power supply. Antec is a good brand, Chieftec is one of their OEMs, Chenbro has some interesting-looking ones. My rule of thumb for almost any power supply I buy for somone else: if I can't find the brand name and background on the Internet, I won't buy it. This is a good first-pass filter for quality.
Hard drives are an interesting area. I have no stand-out preferences there with regard to brand or interface. Serial ATA does have a speed advantage over standard IDE. Larger on-board cache and higher spindle RPMs are Good Things.
My preference for value in DVD drives is Lite-On . Sony agrees; their next-generation DVD-burners will be made for them by Lite-On. You want a DVD-burner that will support both DVD-R/RW and DVD+R/RW standards. Having a "plain" CD-ROM or DVD-ROM in addition to the burner will reduce wear-and-tear on the burner itself.
Sound cards: except for the nVidia nForce SoundStorm stuff, I recommend strongly against the AC '97 on-board sound; the hardware is part of the chipset, but the processing is entirely handled by the CPU. This steals cycles from other applications, no matter how powerful the processor is. Even most of the cheapest sound cards have some processing power of their own. My recommendations: either the Creative Labs SoundBlaster Audigy 2 or one of several boards based on the Envy24HT . If you go for the SoundBlaster line, make sure that you get the "Audigy 2" and not the vastly-inferior first-generation Audigy.
As far as monitors go, unless you have an ovewhelming need or desire for an LCD screen, go with a CRT. See my article for more on this.
Software: spend a little more and go for Windows XP Professional over Home. The Home Edition is, in essence, crippleware--it's missing some useful stuff, including true backup capabilities. Unless a decent word processor or office suite is bundled, you can download OpenOffice.org and you can use The GIMP for your graphics manipulation, etc. See my software lists for more.