Quote from AC3:
Im saying with respect to the complete pkge that the OP had on page 1
Quote from tampatrader82:
wow I wasnt expecting all these responses. Thanks again everyone. I am probably gonna take down the processor which saves 1g, and get the monitors on my own. Other than that, I think I am keeping everything the same and will probably get XP..
Quote from gnome:
Then your solution is easy. A Dell Precision T3400 with 2 Quadro NVS 290 video cards running on WinXP is a no-brainer. (The XPS line has gaming motherboards.... not necessary for trading.) Dell offers the E8200 CPU upgrade at a right price. 1GB is RAM is probably plenty. However... just in case you're using some software which uses significant CPU time, before you buy you should check your Task Manager several times during the day to see what your CPU percent usage is and how much physical RAM you have available. This rig will cost you about $850 + whatever other upgrades you want.. though probably not necessary.
Quote from gnome:
The terms "heavy duty" and "intense computing" are subjective... they are properly defined by actual "CPU usage". (You can have 50 real-time charts open and not be "intense" on CPU usage.)
Check your task manager when you are "heavy" or "intense". If your CPU usage is low, then having a faster CPU won't help much. If your CPU often runs 40% or so, then a faster CPU will be a benefit.
Quote from CPTrader:
Thanks gnome.
1. "ff" means following
2. Yes heavy duty and intense computing are subjective phrases. To be precise I constantly have my CPU usage at 100% (even right now). Anytime I am running my research/backtesting platform my CPU usage goes up to 100% and using any other software app becomes quite difficult.
Given the above what are your precise recommendations. Thanks again.
Quote from gnome:
It's possible your software actually is pegging your CPU, but it's also possible your software has a problem which is causing the 100% use. (It is MUCH more common for a software problem to be responsible for 100% CPU rather than just designed intentional use of the CPU.) If it's the latter, getting a rig with more horsepower won't help much.. it will peg that one too.
You need to do some troubleshooting and analysis to determine the cause of the problem, if any, before deciding on what new hardware to buy.
Things to do...
1. Contact software maker and see if they have insight.
2. Get a 2nd hard drive and do a fresh install of your OS. Then add one program at a time and run it to see if you can find which program causes the CPU 100%.