I might be getting an older (~5yo?) desktop given to me, and without knowing the specifics of its motherboard, etc, I want to talk about order of operations for upgrading it.
Define your terms is always first. Intent and goals. Realistic expectations.
Identify the motherboard is probably second. This will determine what slots are available and what components are supported.
Cooling is most likely next. This is probably going to be plugged into a TV in the living room, so maybe a stand-alone liquid cooler, because they are quiet? I don't need anything fancy, so space available may dictate what goes in there more than anything else.
RAM. All of it. Obviously more is better, get the most that will fit.
From here, there are a few different paths that one could pursue...
The CPU.
The graphics card.
SSD/HDD space.
I imagine that the CPU may have to be upgraded in order to support better graphics cards. So it probably goes CPU>graphics card>hard drive space... like I have them listed. But I don't know.
What do you look for in a CPU?
If the motherboard is capable of supporting it, would it be worth holding on to the old graphics card and running it piggyback/bridged with the new one. Are two heads better than one? How difficult is it to run two graphics cards (assuming the motherboard can support them both)?
This will mostly be an extension of a smart TV, not necessarily a gaming PC... although it will probably get games like Morrowind/Oblivion/Skyrim/Fallout4 on it. I can't afford 4k TV's, so I don't expect 4k graphics. Some of the games are over 10yo, so it's not like the graphics are going to impress anyone anyways.
Define your terms is always first. Intent and goals. Realistic expectations.
Identify the motherboard is probably second. This will determine what slots are available and what components are supported.
Cooling is most likely next. This is probably going to be plugged into a TV in the living room, so maybe a stand-alone liquid cooler, because they are quiet? I don't need anything fancy, so space available may dictate what goes in there more than anything else.
RAM. All of it. Obviously more is better, get the most that will fit.
From here, there are a few different paths that one could pursue...
The CPU.
The graphics card.
SSD/HDD space.
I imagine that the CPU may have to be upgraded in order to support better graphics cards. So it probably goes CPU>graphics card>hard drive space... like I have them listed. But I don't know.
What do you look for in a CPU?
If the motherboard is capable of supporting it, would it be worth holding on to the old graphics card and running it piggyback/bridged with the new one. Are two heads better than one? How difficult is it to run two graphics cards (assuming the motherboard can support them both)?
This will mostly be an extension of a smart TV, not necessarily a gaming PC... although it will probably get games like Morrowind/Oblivion/Skyrim/Fallout4 on it. I can't afford 4k TV's, so I don't expect 4k graphics. Some of the games are over 10yo, so it's not like the graphics are going to impress anyone anyways.
Comment