A few things I saw and need to ask. First off, it's only got 4 gb of RAM and that's the Max that motherboard will take. That means that you will never be able to upgrade the RAM in this PC without switching out the motherboard (which isn't recommended anyway with a prefab PC). It's also DRR2 RAM either 667/800, a bit behind the times on that.
Two, if you are doing any kind of video/audio editing, you really need something better than on-board video/audio. Usually onboard audio is subpar for editing (it's fine for listening to MP3s and audio CDs) and on-board video usually is not high-end. Most people that will be needing higher end graphics/audio go with separate cards. That's why you see so many gamers with PCI x16 video cards, those onboard jobs just can't cut it with modern video games.
What currency is this in? I am to lazy to try to convert it to American dollars so I can make a reasonable judgment on price. USA Dell/Hp/Gateway/Walmart $500 for a PC can get you on the net, let you play some games, word processing and other generic uses for a PC at decent speeds. They are not made for editing but it can be done. I think later on down the line you will kick yourself for buying it when you are waiting forever for any rendering to be done on your PC.
How much is your max you can spend on this PC? That's the best question for buying a new PC. Then figure out from there what you can afford for what you want to do.
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Originally Posted by Baraka_Guru
In my own personal experience---this is just anecdotal, mind you---I have found that there is always room to be found between boobs.
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Vice-President of the CinnamonGirl Fan Club - The Meat of the Zombiesquirrel and CinnamonGirl Sandwich
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