Entry Level System Summary


 Hardware  Component  Price
CPU & Cooling AMD Athlon XP 2000+ (cooling included) $56
Motherboard ASUS A7N8X-X (nForce2 400) $68
Memory 1 X 256MB Crucial PC3200 $49
Video Card 64MB ATI Radeon 9200SE $40
Monitor Samsung SyncMaster 17" Flat-Tube (model 763MB) $150
Computer Case CaseEdge TS1 Mid Tower plus 300W PSU $63
Sound Card Onboard sound $0
Speakers Creative Labs SBS270 2.0 speakers $20
Networking Onboard 10/100 Ethernet $0
Hard Drive Western Digital 800JB (80GB) $69
CD-RW Sony 52x32x52 CD-RW $31
Bottom Line - $546

$546 is the final price of this week's entry level system, not including any money that you'll spend on software (Windows XP Home or Professional, Office, etc.) or a keyboard and mouse.

Simply put, it's going to be difficult to find more value per dollar than you're getting right here. You may be able to find some good deals on pre-built, OEM systems if you look long and hard enough. But if you want the best combination of performance, price, reliability, and support/warranty, you're going to find it right here, right now; you won't have to wait.

So, go build your system and let us know what you think in our comments section.

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  • Z80 - Wednesday, July 7, 2004 - link

    Watch the Hot Deals forum and you can probably shave another $100 off the cost of this system as long as you don't mind hassling with rebates. I agree with Cocophone on using the Shuttle AN35N-Ultra instead of the Asus MB. It's $10 cheaper, supports dual channel memory and overclocks very well. Take that $10 and upgrade from an XP 2000 to an XP 2100, a proven overclocker's CPU.
  • Cocophone - Wednesday, July 7, 2004 - link

    For a budget system why should I pick the Asus motherboard over a Shuttle AN35N-Ultra.

    Neither board has firewire.

    I don't think a budget system would be overclocked, so alot of bios setting would not be used. I plan on dropping a 2000XP CPU and either 256 or 512 of ram and run with that.
  • computerfan - Wednesday, July 7, 2004 - link

    I can't wait for the overclocking and SFF guides. I just bought an Antec Aria, but haven't been able to find an amazing microATX mobo. I am very curious what you'd suggest. Something more high end that supports 400/400 MHz fsb dual channel.
    I'm actually thinking that with the SFF buyers guide, you'll need to make it low/mid range and then have the alternatives be for a high end SFF PC.

    Keep up the good work
  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Wednesday, July 7, 2004 - link

    canadianfbi

    You read our minds :) We will eventually have a SFF buyer's guide, but we're waiting to build up a few more SFF reviews before introducing it.

    Take care,
    Anand
  • canadianfbi - Wednesday, July 7, 2004 - link

    I'd like to add a vote for an SFF guide. The SFF system I want to build (with TV-out and possibly TV capture, using it as kind of a video/audio server for a home theater) is too specific to be in a guide I believe, but I'm sure there are plenty of people building SFF systems in general, and a guide would probably be especially helpful here given the relative newness of that area.
  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Wednesday, July 7, 2004 - link

    The overclocker's guide is coming, but it won't be published until the end of July. We wanted to get to it sooner but we've got a couple of big motherboard roundups that have to be published first which unfortunately pushed that buyer's guide back to the end of the month.

    On the bright side, since it'll be published at the end of the month the overclocker's guide will be able to be even more up to date with its recommendations as more parts should be available by then.

    Take care,
    Anand
  • lazerasa - Wednesday, July 7, 2004 - link

    I vote we need another overclocker system guide ASAP!
  • StormGod - Wednesday, July 7, 2004 - link

    I agree that these guides (especially the entry-level) are an excellent addition to AT but there is one very obvious omission from them. Specifically, a lack of actual benchmarking. We all know that AT has these parts being recommended on hand from previous reviews. Why not take the extra time to assemble both the primary and alternative recommended machines and run at least a small battery of benchmarks? Let us see first hand what spending $546 instead of the mid-level price means to real-world performance. At the very least, try it for a month and see what kind of response you get. I suspect that AT readers will overwhelmingly prefer to see actual performance data than to make a pick basically blindly.
  • gimper48 - Wednesday, July 7, 2004 - link

    WHERE IS OUR OVERCLOCKER GUIDES
  • U4EA - Wednesday, July 7, 2004 - link

    I built a system based on this guide a few months ago (interestingly enough, barely anything has changed in the guide) and am very happy with it.

    .. barring the borked WD harddrive which I had to get changed for a Seagate.

    I love these guides btw .. I think Anandtech is doing a terriffic job on them. My only gripe is that we keep hearing about the new guides that will be included once the schedule is finalized etc, but for the past 2 months or so, all we've seen are the high-end, mid-range and entry-level guides.

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