Picking a home PC platform
In my home, I a bunch of computers.
ENVY - used by everyone, has the best CPU, RAM, video card, monitor, etc.
WRATH - alternate PC for when ENVY is busy. Usually running Age of Mythology for my 5yo.
PRIDE - sits OFF most of the time, but is available when there are suddenly a lot of people in the house
LUST - a tiny Sony Vaio laptop, usually OFF because it's way too slow running WinXP. Sometimes useful for MS Streets & Trips in the car.
HTPC1 - The media center PC. Primarily for DVD & music playback.
JAYBAZ_HOME - a Microsoft-owned laptop that I use to work from home.
SERVER - A, uhh, server running Windows Home Server Beta 2 (which is, like, totally awesome)
Only two of these PCs are the same model (WRATH and PRIDE). Each of the others is something different. Some can boot from USB, some can't. One is free of PS/2 slots, so I keep a spare USB keyboard in the closet just for that one.
Each one has exactly 1 hard drive in it, except for SERVER, which is filled to the gills. Each has exactly one optical drive - some are CD/R, some are DVD. Each desktop is a full-sized tower, which is way overkill for what I'm doing.
Keeping track of which PC can do what is a hassle. So is making sure they all have the latest BIOS. WRATH has trouble going in to standby on Vista, but the others are fine. Etc.
I'm thinking I'd like to move to a single PC platform (excluding laptops for now) for the whole home, to keep things simpler. I'm thinking:
Small is important to me, and shouldn't be hard:
- Only one HD required
- No floppy allowed!
- Optical drive space is optional, as I have an external DVD RW drive that I can card around if needed.
- Card readers are not required, as my Dell 2405FPW has them built-in
Motherboard with the following features:
- video at least as good as an nVidia FX5200 (DVD playback)
- VGA and DVI out
- Gigabit ethernet
- Generous USB front and back
- 1 or 2 expansion slots
- able to take both cleap & fast CPUs
I want to be pretty low power, and very, very quiet. (Hey, while I'm at it, can it be cheap, too?)
For most roles that I described above, this PC is fine - add HD, RAM, and CPU and you're done.
For the main PC, I'd add a strong video card, and upgrade the CPU, HD speed, and RAM size. Some motherboards have onboard multi-channel audio, which might be nice. Alternatives include an internal sound card, and external (USB) sound "card", or a USB speaker set (e.g. these). The last one is nice because it leaves me with one less component.
One day I'm sure I'll want to do HD-DVD playback on the media center, at which point I'll upgrade the video, CPU, RAM, and HD on that box as well. But for now, the basic config is fine.
In the server role, I would take advantage of the incredible shrinking HDs (750G units are $300 these days), and either 1-2 USB enclosures, or a 4-drive enclosure if I really wanted a lot of space.
I'm hoping there's a barebones SFF PC that meets these requirements, and has good build quality, works out of the box with Windows XP and Vista, and is generally trouble-free.
The future
We're approaching the end of days for the desktop PC. To be less sensational: the desktop case will continue to be important for both commodity PCs (they're cheap) and high-end PCs (room for high-end components) for a long, long time. However, unless you're playing the latest games (can't wait for HL2:EP2!), or processing lots of video, or something, you don't need the fastest that PCs have to offer.
For many years, the "good enough" PC was $2000 - that was the minimum you'd spend to get a PC worth spending money on. The PC that you really wanted was $5000.
Today, the "good enough" is more like $400-$500, and the PC you really want is $1000-$1500. It's hard to get a PC for more than $2000 without getting exotic.
Meanwhile, laptops have come way down, too. Instead of paying $1000 for a laptop that wasn't quite as good as your desktop, now the difference is only a couple hundred bucks. When you consider the savings in space, power, cooling, clutter, etc., the difference looks even smaller.
With that in mind, I think that I'm about 2-3 years away from a strict laptop-only diet. You might think that the media center PC would need to be a desktop to hold a tuner card (I don't watch TV) or lots of storage (I keep it on the server). You might think the server should be an exception, but remember that laptops come with built-in battery backup, and a compact keyboard/mouse/monitor that is good for a console you rarely touch. (Storage goes can go external, still.). Even the gaming PC could be an exception, but consider the Dell XPS M2010, with a Core Duo CPU, 20" widescreen LCD, a full-sized bluetooth keyboard, dual DVI out, 7.1 audio out, built-in subwoofer + 8 speakers, up to 4GB RAM, dual hard disks. Sure, it's $4000 when decked out, but that's still less than the $5000 "PC you really want" price of the early 90s. And the specs will continue to improve, and prices will continue to drop. In 2-3 years, it won't seem outrageous to get a laptop like that even for gaming, I suspect.
(Also, note that 3.5" hard disks will probably be phased out, even in desktops, in the next couple years. Consider how price, speed, power draw, noise, and heat are playing together here.)
Comments
Anonymous
March 13, 2007
Well, if we are talking about names of home network machines: ARJUNA ("The Warrior"; founder of Hinduism) Internet gateway BUDDHA ("The Enlightened one"; founder of Buddhism) Database server MOSES ("The Lawgiver"; founder of Judaism) ActiveDirectory Controller MLUTHER (publisher of the 95 these; founder of Lutheranism) Web Server. LAOTZU (founder of Toaism) My desktop PC (I'm a close toaist) ZOROASTER (author of the Gathas hymns; founder of Zoroastrianism) Network Attached storage (home of the 30GB MP3 collection) NANAK ("The Wanderer"; founder of Sikhism) Laptop.Anonymous
March 14, 2007
>> LAOTZU (founder of Toaism) My desktop PC (I'm a close toaist) ooops... Like I said, I'm a Taoist (A Confucianist, on the other hand, would be concerned with following the rigid norms of spelling)Anonymous
March 14, 2007
Nice. I'm always looking for good naming models. This one (sins) is not my choice, actually. My brother moved in for 4 months, bringing a bunch of computers and triggering a repurposing of existing hardware. I decided to follow his naming scheme. Previously, I was strictly role/location based: JAY1, JULIE1, HTPC1, KITCHEN. I don't like the numbering, but it (or was) required at some point so the user names & machine names don't clash. Appliances are the worst - the Media Center, for example - as they only have one user, and it really wants to be named the same as the machine. I'm still looking for a good way to approach this problem.Anonymous
March 14, 2007
The comment has been removedAnonymous
March 14, 2007
it would not be terribly difficult to move to less machines. You could combine the server and htpc easily enough. I've seen these little guys: http://www.dell.com/html/us/products/optiplex/sx280.html They're pretty small, I dont remember the noise they made but for the size...Anonymous
March 19, 2007
>> Appliances are the worst - the Media Center, for example That's part of the reason why I picked "Zoroaster" for the NAS -- it's does sound a bit like "Toaster"Anonymous
March 28, 2007
In Picking a home PC platform I described my requirements for my ideal home PC platform. I've put together