Showing posts with label best gaming computer manufacturers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best gaming computer manufacturers. Show all posts

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Full list of computer manufacturers?




Patrick


I already know of these: Dell, Hp, Apple, Asus, Acer, Gateway, Sager, Alienware, Toshiba, Sony, Samsung, Lenovo, and MSI. I'm trying to see all the options for getting a new laptop, my main requirement is graphics everything else is variable. I need at least ATI Mobility Radeon 4650 or Nvidia 9800m GS. Any laptop with at least that graphics is almost certainly powerful enough in all other aspects.


Answer
Best laptop gaming computer brands

Gateway - FX Series
Abbcore Technologies - Velocita
Alienware - Area 51m, Alienware Sentia and Aurora m, M15x, M17x
AVADirect
Dell XPS - M1730 (laptop), and M1530 (laptop)
Falcon Northwest - DR6800, TL2
iBuyPower
Vigor Gaming - Atlantis, Augustus, Artorius, and Aegis
WidowPC

The vast majority of laptops on the market are manufactured by a small handful of Original Design Manufacturers (ODM).

Major relationships include:

Quanta sells to (among others) HP/Compaq, Dell, Toshiba, Sony, Fujitsu, Acer, NEC, Gateway and Lenovo/IBM - note that Quanta is currently (as of August, 2007) the largest manufacturer of notebook computers in the world.

Compal sells to Toshiba, HP/Compaq, Acer, and Dell.

Wistron (former manufacturing & design division of Acer) sells to HP/Compaq, Dell, IBM, NEC, Acer, and Lenovo/IBM.

Flextronics (former Arima Computer Corporation notebook division) sells to HP/Compaq, NEC, and Dell.

ECS sells to IBM, Fujitsu, and Dell.

Asus sells to Apple (iBook), Sony, and Samsung.

Inventec sells to HP/Compaq, Toshiba, and BenQ.

Uniwill sells to Lenovo/IBM and Fujitsu.

Would you consider my computer as a Gaming Computer?




Sraxion


Manufacturer:
MICRO-STAR INTERNATIONAL CO., LTD

Processor:
Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU T6600 @ 2.20GHz (2 CPUs), ~2.2GHz

Memory:
4096MB RAM

Hard Drive:
624 GB Total

Video Card:
NVIDIA ION

Sound Card:
Realtek Digital Output(Realtek High Definition Audio)

Keyboard:
USB Root Hub (Wireless)

Mouse:
USB Root Hub (Wireless)

Operating System:
Windows 7 Home Premium K 64-bit



Answer
A gaming computer is based off of building your own computer, or paying way too much for an in the box computer. Keyboards, mice, hard drive, and sometimes manufacturer is irrelevant.

Nvidia is the chip set maker, not the actual product maker, so that says very little, though Nvidia is very reliable in my experience And the Ion line seems to be good enough for decent WOW type games. A core2 might get you by on some older games, but it cant compete with some other newer processors that run at higher speeds. You've got enough ram, I've never needed more than 4 gigs. Its a good computer, but I'm not sure I'd call it a gaming computer.




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BUYING GAMING COMPUTER!?




Thomas


Hey guys i want to buy a gaming laptop but im not sure what to buy. What is the best laptop that can play WoW and Elder Scrolls nothing heavy but just a decent gameing laptop for as cheap as possible? Hopefully 1500 or less (the less the better)
I need a mid lvl gaming laptop that will be pluged in about 70% of the time for 1000 or less hopefully want to run wow n oblivion



Answer
For only games like World of Warcraft and Elder Scrolls, I would not buy Alienware. Well, I would never buy Alienware, but I think they're just overprices (they are).

For the games you listed, almost every 'mid' laptop from Dell or any other major manufacturer will do, but..

Is this going to be plugged into the wall 90% of the time, or on-the-go most of the time?
Do you have a $$ preference?
Do you record videoes in WoW?

Really, 2gigs of ram, and an ATI or Nvidia mobile card in any newer laptop (not netbook) will run both games fine, its just a matter of preference for screen size, battery life, etc.

Is this a good gaming computer?




Best Bug-n


A friend of mine want's to buy a computer similar to mine but he is asking is my computer good gaming computer?So i don't know.My PC can run games like COD:MW3, PES 12, FIFA 12,etc.Here's my specifications :

CPU:
Name: AMD Athlon 64 X2 4450e
Specification:AMD Athlon(tm) Dual Core Processor 4450B
Core's 2

Mainboard:
Manufacturer:FOXCONN
Model:A7VML/A76ML Series
Bios:
Brand:American Megatrends
Graphic Interface:
Version:PCI-Express

Memory:
3 GB DDR 2

Graphics:NVIDIA Ge Force 210 512 MB (I wanna change this with this graphics card:GT 630 2048MB SDDR3 DVI/HDMI (VGA-630-A1-2048)



Answer
Your computer would not be classed as a Gaming computer ,its very old and outdated .




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Friday, November 15, 2013

What's a really good custom gaming computer set up? Please name parts?

best gaming computer manufacturers
 on ... ProGaming AX720 Headset (PS3/Xbox 360): Amazon.co.uk: PC & Video Games
best gaming computer manufacturers image



Legoooo


I'm willing to spend up to 1500.
I was really trying to game in high definition, without lag, and overall really good performance.
Please list parts and such for a really good custom gaming computer with the lastest parts.



Answer
This question is legitimate, but having built a computer previously, I would adopt a different approach. If you are going to spend this much money on parts for a computer you want to build, you should know what's going in it. If you need to ask people to tell you what to put in it, you probably don't know enough about it be comfortable putting a PC together yourself.

If you find taking hours out of your life to learn about various parts and technical details is too much for you, consider buying a high-end rig from a major manufacturer. If you do want to learn how to build on yourself, read on.

Buy all of your parts from NewEgg. The service is excellent and the prices are always fair. They also have everything you need.

Processor: Buy something recent from Intel. AMD makes cheaper processors, but the performance isn't as good as Intel's processors.

Motherboard: The socket type on the CPU you selected previously determines what motherboards you have to choose from. I wouldn't pay less than $100 for a motherboard. Pay attention to the reviews as getting a defective or poorly made board is no good.

RAM: The kind of RAM you need is determined by the motherboard you've chosen. RAM is dirt cheap. Buy some better stuff, at least 8 GB.

Hard Drive(s): Solid state drives are faster than regular drives but fill up quickly and are pricey. If you want to go with a solid state drive as your main drive, by a decent sized one and then a 1 TB drive for your less used applications and files. If you don't want to pay for solid state, just get the number and size of drives you want.

Optical Drive: You can buy a Blu-ray drive if you want (I have a Pioneer that is pricey but excellent) but in my experience the software for playing back Blu-ray movies just isn't there yet.

Power Supply: NewEgg has a tool that can help you figure out how big of a power supply you need. Come back to this at the end. I purchased a quality Corsair power supply and don't regret it at all.

Keyboard and Mouse: If you want a gaming rig, now might be a good time to get a gaming keyboard and gaming mouse to match.

Monitor: If you have a small or really old monitor, consider getting a newer one. Technology in this area moves quickly.

Graphics card: For me, this came down to price. I bought the third best Nvidia card out there at the time and it still works just fine. I would advise sticking with an Nvidia card because ATI drivers are usually terrible.

Audio card: Believe it or not, this can make a difference. If you are big into music, have a look at some dedicated audio cards. I have a fairly recent Creative card and enjoy it very much. The drivers could be better.

Case: Buy something you like, and don't spend less than around $100. I would advise buying a large case with proper ventilation. I would also advise NOT buying one that comes with a power supply. The power supplies included in bundle deals are usually terrible and could fail, taking expensive parts with it.

NewEgg also has helpful videos that will show you how to put a computer together. Check them out.

How good is my Cyberpower pc gamer ultra 7215 computer?




sebby


I just recently bought this computer and was wondering how well it stands up against other normal computer. (Dell, Sony, Acer, Gateway, etc.)
I know it is a gaming computer but i use it for alot of video editing type things. I was wondering how this computer stands up against other ones that go for around $600.
Leave your rating of this computer and normal comps. Thanks



Answer
This PC would be roughly equal to a $600 system you would buy from a major manufacturer. I built my own for about the same price with more power, but that's usually the case with buying prebuilt gaming systems; you pay a little extra for the performance.

Athlon II x2 245 2.90GHz, GeForce GT 220 video card, 4GB DDR3, 500GB hard drive for the 7215 model.




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