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Ars Technica System Guide: Four PC builds for spring 2023

Ars Technica System Guide: Four PC builds for spring 2023

a year ago
Anonymous $5YzO3NGzaX

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/04/ars-technica-system-guide-four-pc-builds-for-spring-2023/

It's a weird time to build a PC. That's partly because fewer people are doing it—sales for parts and prebuilt PCs are down across the industry, as people continue to make do with the stuff they bought early in the pandemic. And GPU prices, while closer to "normal" than they have been over the last two years, are still historically high.

But that doesn't mean it's a bad time to build a PC. Storage and memory are mostly cheap, and you can buy a lot of CPU power for not a lot of money (especially if what you're used to is an older quad-core processor you picked up five or six years ago). Intel and AMD have also released new CPUs since our last system guide update in July, and Intel has finally jumped into the GPU business after years of false starts and delays.

Ars Technica System Guide: Four PC builds for spring 2023

Apr 26, 2023, 2:24pm UTC
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/04/ars-technica-system-guide-four-pc-builds-for-spring-2023/ > It's a weird time to build a PC. That's partly because fewer people are doing it—sales for parts and prebuilt PCs are down across the industry, as people continue to make do with the stuff they bought early in the pandemic. And GPU prices, while closer to "normal" than they have been over the last two years, are still historically high. > But that doesn't mean it's a bad time to build a PC. Storage and memory are mostly cheap, and you can buy a lot of CPU power for not a lot of money (especially if what you're used to is an older quad-core processor you picked up five or six years ago). Intel and AMD have also released new CPUs since our last system guide update in July, and Intel has finally jumped into the GPU business after years of false starts and delays.