English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

11 answers

needs, power and affordability.

theres your criteria.

You tell them the 1st, they should tell you the 2nd and you agree on the 3rd.

2007-08-21 00:33:14 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

How will you use your computer? If you are a gamer, then your critera will be different from someone who will run a website. If you will use your computer for general use (web surfing, email, spreadsheets, etc), then again, your criteria will be different.

Also, how much do you want to spend? A gamer will want the fastest processor, high-end dual graphics card, fast disks, as much memory that can fit into the computer, and perhaps even water cooled.

Please give us more info on how you will use your system and I bet we can come up with something you'll be happy with.

Good luck!

2007-08-21 00:39:08 · answer #2 · answered by Dennis R 5 · 0 1

That's it? That's the whole question?

Here we go then:

1. Price - how much can you afford
2. Make - is this important to you
3. Use - what do you need it to do?
4. OS - which one do you want to use
5. HDD capacity - will you need to store a lot?
6. Tower or desktop - which do you have room for
7. Pre-installed applications - is this important to you?
8. Warranty - is a long/onsite warranty important to you?
9. Intel or AMD - is the brand of CPU important to you
10.Quiet or normal - is it important to have a very quiet machine
11.Future upgrade ability - do you need to plan for future upgrades
12.Gaming machine?- is it important to have very high Graphics capabilities?
13.Backup - is it important to be able to back up applications routinely
14. Monitor size and type - TFT/CRT size?
Etcetc

2007-08-21 00:37:34 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

If you are a road warrior, get an Ultra Mobile. If you are a gamer, choose GPU first, then CPU second. If your laptop will mostly stay in your room, get one with at least 15" or 15"Wide screen. If you run heavy applications, dual core is best. If you are just a casual user, even a fast single core will do. Get one with at least 1Gb RAM.

2007-08-21 00:37:58 · answer #4 · answered by Karz 7 · 0 1

What do you need it for? Are you going to use it as an office computer? Emailing, writing letters etc.

Are you going to use it for watching movies, playing or editing video etc

Or do you need a top-of-the-range best of the best computer that will cost a fortune, but the components that make it up will devalue quite quickly?

2007-08-21 00:35:10 · answer #5 · answered by Wattsie 3 · 1 1

Hi madam

Make sure :

it has minimum 1 gb ram and a hard disk of 160GB or more, and the processor is genuine intel,

Then you don't need to worry about category because categories are a way of decieving the general public espcially novices.

good luck
aurevoir

2007-08-21 00:35:15 · answer #6 · answered by jam 5 · 1 1

Choose your computer based on your needs.

2007-08-21 00:34:29 · answer #7 · answered by Karl L 3 · 1 1

Depends on what you wish to do with it?

-Internet only?
-Spreadsheets?
-Burn cd's / Dvd's?
-Play games?

Make a list of all the things you require then pop to pc world and have a chat with the staff, they can help find / build a pc / laptop to suit your individual needs...

2007-08-21 00:34:34 · answer #8 · answered by Chuck Norris 2 · 1 1

your a woman, go for the fashion, pink with flowers on will be ideal. who cares what it does.
You will look good

2007-08-21 00:36:43 · answer #9 · answered by wonderingstar 6 · 0 2

Under your umbrella-ella-ella-ella-ey-ey-ey-ey

2007-08-21 00:34:23 · answer #10 · answered by spick&span 4 · 1 2

fedest.com, questions and answers