The DFI board is a good one but be advised if you are new to computers the BIOS will not be "plug-n-go" You will need to set it up correctly andit WILL take knowledge of a clocking BIOS.
Also, verify the memory is CERTIFIED to run on that board. One thing I have learned about DFI is they ARE BUGGERS when it comes to memory. Even OCZ has trouble with them. Is this the memory?
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6820220082If it is and the memory is known for working withthe DFI board you selected then it is a decent buy. It is rated 1T which is critical for AMD64 performance.
The only other item I think you should consider is the hard drive. What you choose is a good name in drive but it is not much faster than any good SATA 150. Also, I need to look at the DFI board because a SATA 3 drive will revert to SATA 150 if the board controller does not support it.
I would recommend you consider a single WD RAPTOR and be careful about choosing one because they are NOT made the same. The best bang for the buck and quiet is this one:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 682213601210,000 RPM
@ Average Seek Time 4.6ms
@ Average Write Time 5.2ms
@ Average Latency 2.99ms
it will wipe the drive you choose off the board for speed.
Dont fall for the 300 and SATA3 gimick. What makes a hard drive fast is:
1. Faster Rotation
2. Lower Seek, Write and Latency times
3. Lower Access time
If 150GB is not enough capacity, my advice would be to buy the 150GB as the Windows/Programs work-horse drive and buy a cheap SATA or even ATA for storage of software, documents and backups.
Make sure you get the latest processor driver and dual core optimizer from the AMD website. It will NOT come with the motherboard drivers on the CD.
Assuming the board comes with an older BIOS than what is available at the manufacture website, and many of them do,... Always go to the motherboard website and download/flash the latest OFFICAL (not beta) BIOS for the board and set it up correctly BEFORE installing Windows.
Never use the Motherboard CD for drivers and utilities. Most of them are outated and I have rarely ever seen a utility off a motherboard disk that was worth installing. Allot of those utilites do nothing but use up memory and cpu cycles.
For motherboard drivers, ALWAYS go to the manufacture of the chipset for those. If its a NF4 board, go to Nvidia and get the latest motherboard drivers, NOT DFI.
Motherboard drivers are the FIRST thing installed after Windows is installed. Then the AMD driver/optimizer. After that a trip to Windows update for all the critical updates.... and finally the rest of your drivers with the Video card drivers installed absolutely LAST.
ALWAYS reboot between each driver install and ALWAYS reboot twice after the video card drivers are installed.
After the video card drivers you can install the rest of your software.
Last edited by NicksFXHouse on Tue Aug 29, 2006 10:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.