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Survey Results

What is the minimum spec machine you would buy today?   [Edit]

Survey period: 19 Jan 2003 to 26 Jan 2003

New games, new OS's, new .NET. They all mean our kick-ass box of 2 years ago is now obsolete. What CPU/RAM specs are you choosing today?

Q1. CPU speed (in total, adjust for dual proc)

OptionVotes% 
under 1GHz1496.85
>= 1GHz53924.79
>= 2GHz1,10550.83
>= 3GHz23010.58
>= 4 GHz1516.95

Q2. RAM

OptionVotes% 
under 256 Mb642.94
>= 256 Mb50923.41
>= 512 Mb1,15052.90
>= 1 Gb35016.10
>= 2 Gb1014.65

Q3. Any must-have's?

View optional text answers (547 answers)


 
GeneralFast is Better Pin
Renjith Ramachandran23-Jan-03 4:21
Renjith Ramachandran23-Jan-03 4:21 
General400Mhz can get the job done.. sometimes. Pin
Eric Anderton22-Jan-03 8:25
Eric Anderton22-Jan-03 8:25 
GeneralRe: 400Mhz can get the job done.. sometimes. Pin
Anthony_Yio22-Jan-03 17:28
Anthony_Yio22-Jan-03 17:28 
GeneralRe: 400Mhz can get the job done.. sometimes. Pin
murjev22-Jan-03 20:32
murjev22-Jan-03 20:32 
GeneralRe: 400Mhz can get the job done.. sometimes. Pin
Eric Anderton23-Jan-03 5:49
Eric Anderton23-Jan-03 5:49 
GeneralRe: 400Mhz can get the job done.. sometimes. Pin
michaelhc23-Jan-03 17:36
michaelhc23-Jan-03 17:36 
GeneralRe: 400Mhz can get the job done.. sometimes. Pin
Eric Anderton24-Jan-03 6:44
Eric Anderton24-Jan-03 6:44 
GeneralRe: 400Mhz can get the job done.. sometimes. Pin
jelaft26-Jan-03 11:11
jelaft26-Jan-03 11:11 
GeneralBad news for the Chip industry Pin
jhwurmbach22-Jan-03 1:40
jhwurmbach22-Jan-03 1:40 
GeneralRe: Bad news for the Chip industry Pin
#realJSOP22-Jan-03 2:22
mve#realJSOP22-Jan-03 2:22 
GeneralRe: Bad news for the Chip industry Pin
jhwurmbach22-Jan-03 2:28
jhwurmbach22-Jan-03 2:28 
GeneralRe: Bad news for the Chip industry Pin
Anonymous22-Jan-03 8:09
Anonymous22-Jan-03 8:09 
GeneralRe: Bad news for the Chip industry Pin
Anthony_Yio22-Jan-03 17:25
Anthony_Yio22-Jan-03 17:25 
GeneralRe: Bad news for the Chip industry Pin
Matt Philmon24-Jan-03 2:56
Matt Philmon24-Jan-03 2:56 
GeneralRe: Bad news for the Chip industry Pin
jhwurmbach24-Jan-03 3:07
jhwurmbach24-Jan-03 3:07 
GeneralRe: Bad news for the Chip industry Pin
Matt Philmon24-Jan-03 3:34
Matt Philmon24-Jan-03 3:34 
GeneralRe: Bad news for the Chip industry Pin
jhwurmbach24-Jan-03 3:51
jhwurmbach24-Jan-03 3:51 
GeneralRe: Bad news for the Chip industry Pin
Stan Shannon24-Jan-03 3:34
Stan Shannon24-Jan-03 3:34 
GeneralRe: Bad news for the Chip industry Pin
Chris Hansson25-Jan-03 10:14
Chris Hansson25-Jan-03 10:14 
GeneralWhat if..... Pin
Jon Newman21-Jan-03 8:14
Jon Newman21-Jan-03 8:14 
GeneralRe: What if..... Pin
Jim Crafton22-Jan-03 6:51
Jim Crafton22-Jan-03 6:51 
GeneralRe: What if..... Pin
zenboy22-Jan-03 10:44
zenboy22-Jan-03 10:44 
GeneralThe need for speed Pin
nickntg21-Jan-03 5:15
nickntg21-Jan-03 5:15 
Well, my previous computer was a P3-800Mhz running Win2K, with 512MB RAM, 240 GB of disk space and a 19'' monitor. I've used that to develop web apps (ASP.NET/VB.NET), all kinds of Win apps (whether single or multi threaded, database frontends, network apps, CGIs, Fast CGIs, hardware control apps for card embossers and check printers - all using VB.NET, VB6 and Delphi 3), ASP and HTML sites, and finally to open telnet sessions to a Stratus box running VOS to develop using C, PL/I and COBOL (yeah, the real dinosaurs).

I bought a new one a few weeks ago (P4-2.4 Ghz, 1GB RAM, RAID controller, 0.3 TB disk space Roll eyes | :rolleyes: , kept the same monitor and Win2K). However, I have to admit that I could get my job done pretty well with my old PC, plus I could run Counter Strike and TFC perfectly. I got the new one just to satisfy my geek factor.

One thing that I found out over the years is that it's ok to have the fastest/best PC around to do your development (whether "best" means a fast or dual CPU, lightning-fast hard disk I/O and 21'' or dual monitors - it all depends on what you're working on)...BUT at some point you really need to test on the actual PC or range of machines that your application is going to be used on in the real world.

For example, your spec might be for an application that will read a proprietary flat file 2GB large and create an excel spreadsheet out of it along with an HTML report page, and all that is going to run on Bank X (where you know that they'll install it in a PII-400 box). In this case, I doesn't really mater if your app takes 30 second to finish on your dev box if it takes half an hour on the production box (in this case, you may have to go back to the code and make a better algorithm that will work decently on real-world PC's - unless of course you have already put in the extra effort to do that). Also, it doesn't matter if your HTML report looks really cool on your screen with 1600x1200 analysis displayed by Internet Explorer, because some poor chaps at the customer's site are going to view it under 640x480 or 800x600, using both IE and NetScape.

To summarize: yes, as far as developers are concerned, the fastest a PC is, the better. We just need to recognize the geek factor inside ourselves and appreciate the fact that sometimes we can do the job without a P-7 35Ghz box. And IMHO it's also important to be aware of the capabilities of most hardware used in the real world.

Cheers,
NTG

"Feel the force...read the source"
Generalredundant??? Pin
Marc Clifton21-Jan-03 1:04
mvaMarc Clifton21-Jan-03 1:04 
GeneralGroup and sort optional answers, please ... Pin
A.Wegierski20-Jan-03 18:44
A.Wegierski20-Jan-03 18:44 

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