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Subject: Re: Question refinement.....

Author: stuart taylor

Date: 07:42:00 12/13/04

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On December 13, 2004 at 09:21:24, Joachim Rang wrote:

>On December 12, 2004 at 06:46:47, stuart taylor wrote:
>
>>On December 12, 2004 at 06:01:36, Ray Banks wrote:
>>
>>>On December 12, 2004 at 05:54:02, Frank Quisinsky wrote:
>>>
>>>>The most interesting chess system is since Pentium III a dual system. Much more
>>>>interesting to look after a dual system. Believe me, you will have much more fun
>>>>with your hobby.
>>>
>>>Or better still a Dual Athlon. I have 2 of them exclusively for ponder-on chess
>>>tournaments :-) But if you also want it for gaming, or other uses, it will be
>>>disappointing. The dual Athlon motherboards and chipsets are very dated - no
>>>SATA, firewire, USB2 etc
>>>
>>>Dual Opteron would be fantastic as would a dual Xeon set-up, but horrendously
>>>expensive
>>>
>>>If you want a general purpose machine (i.re. not juyt for chess) then an
>>>Athlon64 is the way to go in my view
>>
>>Me too, I'm hoping to get a best general purpose machine which gives the best
>>possible for all-round chess [esp. the top programs, and playing and analysing]
>>within a reasonable budget (best value for money).
>> Does this point to Athlon 64, one of the fastest (well, ALL of them are one of
>>the fastest as there are not so many different Athlon 64's, I suppose).
>>
>>If that is difficult to obtain for any reason, what would be second best?
>>S.Taylor
>
>
>Best value for money is currently an Athlon AMD 64 3000+ in 90 Nanometer
>(Winchester-Core) for about 160 $. You might consider to buy an 3500+ which runs
>at 2.2 GHz (compared to 1.8 for 3000+) for about 270 ยง. I too would recommened
>the Winchester-Core as it consumes less energy and runs cooler.
>
>regards Joachim

Thanks for making it simple for me. That was what I wanted!
S.Taylor



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