Upgrade or Buy New

I just finished the previous post and at the bottom of the post I included the analogy I use when I explain to clients about upgrades and why RAM is the most effective upgrade that you can do to most PCs. Then I got the idea that I should expand on that (and also keep it from getting buried in another post) by creating a separate post for it.

I often get asked if people should upgrade their PCs or look at buying a new one. My answer is that depends. Does your PC do everything now that you want it to but maybe is just a little slow? What has to replaced? How old is it (yes this is a factor as older RAM is generally more expensive than current RAM and some parts may not even be possible to find)?

Two things that I advise clients to look at for new PC purchases or upgrades are: The amount of memory that is in the machine and the monitor. The same would apply to upgrades in most cases.

This is the analogy I use to explain how PCs work and to show how RAM upgrades usually trump all other upgrades.

Think of an office desk as the amount of RAM that you have in your computer, then a filing cabinet (or a bookshelf) as your hard drive, your eyes as the display and you are the processor. You can only open so many files (or programs) on the desk before you start running out of desktop space (remember your operating system uses some of this desk too). When the desk fills up with stuff, you have to start putting stuff in the filing cabinet. You get up move stuff to the cabinet then sit down. When you are dome with something you put it back in the filing cabinet. This is what happens on your computer. When the physical RAM fills up (opening programs and files) it starts to store open data on the hard drive, which is slower. Think of a RAM upgrade as an upgrade of your desk. If you double the amount of memory in your PC, you essentially are doubling the size of the desk. Now you can open more work and still have space left on the desk. You can switch back and forth between programs and files faster than if you had to run to the filing cabinet every time to get something.

Before you upgrade your RAM though there are a few things that you have to consider. What type of RAM is in the machine? There are some types of RAM that are so hard to find and when you do find it is ridiculously expensive that it makes no sense to upgrade it. Specifically I am thinking about RD RAM that was used in some early Pentium 4s. If you have RDRAM you are better off buying even a used system than trying to find any of this stuff. PC100 and PC133 RAM is a little more expensive vs. todays memory, but it’s not that bad. An example You can get a 2 GB kit of DDR 2 Kingston Value RAM (667 PC 5300) for about 80.00 in Calgary now (a few stores). 1 GB of PC3200 RAM (DDR) is anywhere from 110.00 to 120.00 for Kingston Value RAM and a 512MB stick of PC133 (SDRAM) is about 75.00. 256 MB of RDRAM is closer to 150.00 and 512MB is 260.00. Hardly worth spending the money when you can find a used PC with a P4 and 512MB of Ram and Windows XP for 250.00 to 350.00 in the city. Another factor is to try and get as close to matching your existing memory as possible. My own experience of a recent memory upgrade using the same part numbers from Kingston (but different density memory) led to some strange problems (see my previous post).

Displays… Unless you’re designing and launching space missions, playing the absolute latest 3D games at their highest resolutions or creating a Hollywood Feature or Animation on your PC, no one really needs most of the systems that are out there (not even me). Most people surf the web, do email, play the occasional game, home accounting and edit some pictures with their PCs. I often will advise my clients to make sure that they make sure to spend a little more on the display for their system rather than focusing on the processor speed. You don’t look at the system you look at the display. There are some very cheap LCDS panels out there and that is exactly what they are cheap. Cheaper displays tend to come with lower resolutions, lower brightness’s and less contrast than some that are as little as 50.00 more. The monitor is your key interface between you and your system. When thinking of upgrading a monitor, think of it as getting better glasses for your eyes. A good quality monitor will give you excellent clarity and resolution that allow you to sit at your system longer and be a more enjoyable experience. The nice thing about a good monitor is that you can move it to another system or use it as a secondary display later if so desired.

Other upgrades.. There are other upgrades that are really no brainers and if you have to do them you can. A good example is Hard Drives and DVD Burners. If you are running out of space you can replace or add a second hard drive for usually well under 100.00, or add a DVD burner 40.00 to 50.00 (if your PC will handle it) and archive off some of your data. At least with a hard drive you can take the upgrade out of the machine and put it in an external enclosure later to hook up to a new machine. Video cards you have to be careful on and unless you can find one for under 100.00 that will work with your PC it is not worth upgrading either.

At last alternative if you do not want to upgrade hardware but want to upgrade from an older legacy PC with unsupported OS (Windows 9X or ME), consider going to a Linux Distribution. Linux distributions like Ubuntu are getting more and more user friendly, are free and will often work on older less capable hardware. You often get everything you need on the CD and they are continually supported in regards to security. As I write this now I have Ubuntu running off a Live CD on another PC.

Please feel free to contact Sysguy Consulting if you want to know if you should or could upgrade your existing PC. We make house calls!

Stephen

 

Ram Upgrade Issues

I recently decided to upgrade the amount of RAM in my primary PC from 2 GB up to 4 GB. I have received a copy of Adobe Photoshop CS3 Extended upgrade and would like to work with as much RAM as possible. As well I will be doing some Video Editing on my primary PC as well (while my Video Editing Station is down waiting for its upgrades). DDR2 Ram is also very cheap right now so I decided to take advantage of it.

When I built the PC a few months ago I installed 2 GB of Kingston DDR2 533 RAM in it and it has been working well. I ordered 2 GB of DDR2 667 RAM for a new AMD machine I am building soon, then with the low prices I decided to order a another 2 GB of RAM. I figured I would put the 4 GB of 667 RAM in my main machine and put the 533 in the AMD machine I am building. The first two sticks of Kingston Value Ram I ordered turned out to be Double Sided memory (Ram chips on both sides of the chips), the second set (same part numbers) was single sided. The Intel manual for the board said it could handle both, both so I went ahead with the upgrade. The machine was working well but then the processor would start to spike at 100% usage and the system would lock up for up 2 to 3 minutes (and as long as 5 minutes) from time to time. I removed the new RAM put the old RAM back in and everything was fine again. I then tested each pair of RAM individuals (DS and SS) and again everything tested and worked fine again. I went back to the 4 GB and the system started on the processor spikes again. The motherboard bios correctly detected all of the RAM 4096MB and Windows Vista Ultimate saw the 3508 MB of RAM (explanation of why down below).

Next I tried changing the order of the pairs on the motherboard and while the system was a little better, it would still spike the CPU every so often. In frustration I picked up 2 more GB of Kingston Value RAM again yesterday but this was a matched RAM kit and was double sided. I removed the Single Sided sticks of RAM, installed the new Double Sided, restarted and everything was fine again and has been running without the CPU spikes.

My motherboard is an Intel DG695WH (one of their higher end desktop boards) and it did indicate that it could handle both types of RAM. The manual says nothing about installing Single Sided and Double Sided RAM together. Nor would it work with the Double Sided 533 DDR2 and the Double Sided 667 RAM either (which in theory all 4 sticks should have run at 533).

So while everything appeared to be fine with the mixed types of RAM it wasn’t. This may not happen on all motherboards, but to be safe if you are planning an upgrade of your memory, or are having problems after a RAM upgrade, ideally try to get identical RAM if you can (if you have DS RAM, get DS sticks).

I indicated earlier that Windows Vista Ultimate only sees 3508 MB of RAM while the motherboard sees the full 4096 MB. This is a function of any 32 bit operating system, and the same thing would happen if I did this to a Linux machine or a Mac. The operating system cannot see memory above the 4000MB mark. If I go ahead and install a 64 bit version of Windows or another OS on this machine, it would see the entire amount of RAM. This is something that you should keep in mind when doing upgrades as well.

With the extra RAM that I have now (4 GB) I am going to build and AMD machine with an Asus motherboard to see if 1) it will run with 533 and 667 DDR2 RAM and 2) if it will run with the double and single sided sticks. The plan is to also install a 64 bit version of Vista on the system as well. Otherwise it looks like my Media Center PC will get the additional 2 GB 533 RAM and the AMD will run with only 2 GB.

Remember that the best upgrade you can do to virtually any computer is to upgrade the amount of Memory in it to improve performance. I use this simple analogy to explain hoe memory upgrades work for my clients.

Think of an Office desk as the amount of RAM that you have in your computer, then a filing cabinet (or a bookshelf) as your hard drive, your eyes as the display and you are the processor. You can only open so many files (or programs) on the desk before you start running out of desktop space (remember your operating system uses some of this desk too). When the desk fills up with stuff, you have to start putting stuff in the filing cabinet. You get up move stuff to the cabinet then sit down. When you are dome with something you put it back in the filing cabinet. This is what happens on your computer. When the physical RAM fills up (opening programs and files) it starts to store open data on the hard drive, which is slower. Think of a RAM upgrade as an upgrade of your desk. If you double the amount of memory in your PC, you essential double the size of the desk. Now you can open more work and still have space on the desk. You can switch back and forth between programs and files faster than if you had to run to the filing cabinet every time to get something.

I am going to create another post with this analogy soon as I like this one too much to bury it solely in this blog post.