Ah Sony, you never quite got the PC did you? The Vaio range of laptops were nice-looking and all, but overpriced lumps might be best used to describe them. And now you're making a PC-based console in the guise of the new PlayStation 4. At least it'll mean all the poorly coded console ports we've cursed our way through ought to be a thing of the past as everybody will essentially be writing for PC hardware now. Good times. So, with this "next-gen" future now so very close on the horizon with Sony finally kicking off the great closed-box bun-fight, what will it take to build a PlayStation 4-a-like PC? Sony announced the PS4′s general system specs today: an 8-core x86 CPU, an "enhanced" PC GPU (read: physics acceleration), and 8 gigs of GDDR 5 RAM. Using a little detective work and some creative thinking, I've put together an idea of what you can build now that will give you comparable or better performance. Processor – AMD FX-6300 – $130 / £105 The reason it's such a low-speed part is because it's one of AMD's ultra-mobile parts running at just 18W in dual-core guise. That power draw will rise with this touted eight-core version however. In our PC world though I couldn't possibly recommend that family of chips for a competing machine, and in a desktop rig, constantly plugged into the wall, you don't need to bother jamming in a mobile chip. The silicon I'd put up against this is the AMD FX-6300. It may only be six-core, but it's already running at twice the speed of the Jaguar cores, and with more effective cores too, so it'll make sure your GPU is happily fed with data. Motherboard – Gigabyte GA-970A-DS3 – $80 / £52 Speaking of which… Memory – 8GB Crucial Ballistix Tactical LP – $53 / £56 Graphics – 2GB GeForce GTX 660 – $230 / £178 Storage – Seagate 500GB HDD – $53 / £43 The rest I'm assuming you have a display, as I'd assume a PS4 buyer would have a TV, and you'll notice I'm not including a Blu-ray drive here. Not because I'm trying to stick to a price-point, but because optical media's dead, man. We've got digital downloads and operating systems that can be installed from USB sticks, so why would we? Total price: Around $600 / £430 Well, that's my two cents, but one of the beautiful things about the PC is the vast range of hardware at our disposal. We can create machines weird and wonderful from any number of lumps of silicon. This week I've been playing around with $3000 worth of graphics hardware in a three-way SLI GTX Titan rig, tacked onto a $2000 Xeon CPU as well as building a mini-ITX rig with that wondrous HD 7850 1GB card. No console has that range in performance. That's me though, what would you want to stick in your next console-beating rig? | |||
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miercuri, 20 februarie 2013
PC Gamer vs. PlayStation 4: How much does a comparable rig cost right now? g21
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