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COMPUTER CHOOSING THE PARTS

Before you jump onto the web and start spending lots of money on expensive computer parts,there are two important questions you should answer which will guide your purchases:1. What are you going to use your new computer for?2. Will parts be available to use from your old computer--or do you want to reuse parts fromyour old computer?(Often, you will either want to hand your old computer down to someone else, in which caseyou must keep it functional, or it may be so old that you don't want to use any parts from it,because they will slow down your new machine too much.)What Operating System am I going to use?Before you buy components, be sure that they are supported by the operating system you planto use. Almost all current, commonly available devices have drivers available for currentversions of Windows (generally, anything 2000, XP or newer); if you want to run an alternativeoperating system, you'll have to do some research -- many alternatives have extensive'Hardware Compatibility Lists'.Windows hardware support listsMost processors and motherboards based on the i386 or x86_64 architectures are supported byWindows XP. Put more simply, this means all available consumer processors (especially fromAMD or Intel).For other hardwareMicrosoft Compatible http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/hcl/default.mspx/BSDs hardware support lists•DesktopBSD, see FreeBSD 5.4/i386 http://www.freebsd.org/releases/5.4R/hardware-i386.htmland FreeBSD 5.4/amd64 http://www.freebsd.org/releases/5.4R/hardware-amd64.html•Dragonfly BSD http://wiki.dragonflybsd.org/index.php/Supported_Hardware•FreeBSD http://www.freebsd.org/platforms/•NetBSD http://www.netbsd.org/Hardware/•OpenBSD http://www.openbsd.org/plat.html•PC-BSD, see FreeBSD 6.0/i386 http://www.freebsd.org/releases/6.0R/hardware-i386.html

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