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Member
(05-05-2012, 03:39 AM)
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#101
People in this thread comparing home-built stuff to this - it's not really fair. I mean, this has a significant amount of engineering applied to it. It's not something you can build yourself. Granted, it's not too far off of what you could build yourself - but the form factor and other minor things would be lacking. It's like comparing a MacBook Pro to a PC laptop. Ha. |
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Member
(05-05-2012, 03:45 AM)
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#102
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Member
(05-05-2012, 04:02 AM)
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#103
i52500=$200 Motherboard=$100 8GB Ram=at least $50 Power Supply=$50 Decent case=$50 Decent GPU $200 OS (if you're not pirating) $100 Optical drives=Some more $ (at least one version of X51 comes with Blu Ray right?) 1TB Hard Drive=$100 That's $850+whatever for the optical drive. Granted your CPU would probably be slightly superior, and in a real case you could overclock it, etc, but still. The X51 video card is kind of weak, stock, but that's understandable. |
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I'm taking it FROM here
(05-05-2012, 04:09 AM)
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#104
Didn't I just do that on the previous page? Even if you include Windows with my build I'd say it still qualifies as "way less". I don't want to derail the thread, but isn't it enough to say that the X51 is a nice alternative for people who don't want to build their own and/or really want a form factor smaller than ITX? -- while accepting that you do pay quite a bit for that form factor and convenience.
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Member
(05-05-2012, 04:31 AM)
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#105
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Mawio Gawaxy iz da Wheeson hee pways games
(05-05-2012, 04:39 AM)
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#106
This sort of system is great at this point in the life cycle of consoles. Problem is that no game is built for what this thing is truly capable of. If you designed a game from the ground up to match the specifics of this box only, the graphics would look way, way better. Basically right now what you are getting is a supped up version of the console experience (which is why I am doing PC now as well at the end of the console experience with the exception of exclusive titles).
Once the next-generation consoles come out, PC ports are going to struggle just as they did when the Xbox360 and PS3 launched. The reason is that it's much easier to maximize the performance of one set of hardware than to try to accommodate a wide range of different PC specs out there even if plenty of people will have components strong enough to outdo the next-gen when it comes out. I've feel I've said this so many times but for those that are not in games development and understand how it works, it might seem easy to just compare specs and say A > B but it doesn't work like that when A has a million configurations and different drivers. Right now, for the next year and a half, PC is the best place to be if you want a smooth framerate, great picture quality and superior graphics all around. But I still want to stress that a game done exclusively for the box the OP bought would look insane compared to what you are seeing in today's games. It's just wouldn't be a smart move if you want to break even or even hope to make a profit. |
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Banned
(05-05-2012, 04:47 AM)
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#107
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Member
(05-05-2012, 07:19 AM)
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#108
All I can do is go by american prices. Where the X51 tops out around $999 I believe, and the build I specced runs $850. Though you could probably shave some off that. Going by google telling me one pound=~1.6 american dollars, chittachong paid some $1800 for his X51+7850. There's the root of the problem. Also these comparisons arent fair to the X51 because it comes with a video card, then to put the 7850 in you have to buy another, so you end up with two video cards, a major cost difference. Since you are building something similar to X51 (EG, using a cheap micro ATX board which isn't normal) you should also have to buy a GTX555 equivalent video card to compensate. At the very least he could sell his GTX555 for some $. Or you could compare the X51 cost alone (no 7850) to a build with a single GTX555 class card to be more fair. Also the PSU in your build looks dodgy, never heard of that brand. You always want to start with a quality name brand PSU. I mean I realize that's not entirely fair either.
Last edited by specialguy; 05-05-2012 at 07:29 AM.
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Member
(05-05-2012, 12:04 PM)
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#110
1. look at what the base X51 I have costs at US Dell, ie the i5 + GTX555 2. build a similar system from US - i5 processor stock clocked at 3.0GHz - use GTX560 SE as a proxy for the GTX555 (OEM only part) - include 8GB RAM, two sticks - include a 7200RPM 1TB HDD - include a slot loading DVD drive - include Windows 7 Home Premium - include a quality PSU - choose a decent quality case - remember to include 3 fans and CPU heatsink - include a decent wired USBkeyboard and mouse - include a motherboard with WIFI and HDMI out, 8 USB slots There is no need to include the HD7850 to the comparison since the price would be same in both. Clearly it will be still more expensive to get the Alienware X51, but the difference is nowhere near as big as comparing the UK price I paid to partial list of components in the US suggests. EDIT: changed the graphics card listed as suggested
Last edited by Chittagong; 05-05-2012 at 12:52 PM.
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I am full of shit.
Rich, smooth, creamy shit. (05-05-2012, 12:27 PM)
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#111
Ok so the i5 with GTX 555 plus custom GPU you're looking at $1,000+. If I went PC route I'd want to play games at 1080p. I want something substantially better than what I have with PS3/360 and really want to take advantage of my 1080p TV.
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I'm taking it FROM here
(05-05-2012, 12:40 PM)
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#112
I'd do a US build, but (a) I don't know the best shops there and (b) I don't really care that much. The real points to consider when deciding to buy this or not are: - do you really want the case (it's smaller, but in many ways -- e.g. heat, noise, expansion options -- that's worse rather than better) - are you happy with the performance ceiling achievable on the system Only if you answer both of those with yes should you start to deliberate whether the convenience of it is worth the price (and compare that directly to the alternatives you would consider). |
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Member
(05-05-2012, 12:45 PM)
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#113
I do not get why 7850 level is not allowed when buying the X51.
The Geforce 555 is the kind of GPU, OEM gets at very discounted prices making them huge profits. It is like "we build a gamer PC, but put a card you do not want to have inside". Also, the X51 is not a silent PC; for that price, I do not want to hear it. |
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morphix's brother
(05-05-2012, 03:17 PM)
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#115
I have the i7/gtx555 one and the most demanding game I own is witcher 2. It auto sets to high setting and runs fantastic at 1080p. Can't tell ya the frame rate but it's much smoother then my x360 version. I'd guess 50s
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Member
(05-05-2012, 03:20 PM)
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#116
Of course, any ambitious game, modified or not is another gen / current consoles. |
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Member
(05-05-2012, 03:34 PM)
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#117
Have no idea what US prices are, but are two sticks of 4GB 1333MHz (X51 uses this) that expensive?
Edit: It's kinda tall and a little expensive, but comes with a 600W PSU, has space for 680/7970 (blowers are strongly recommended) and positive pressure with dust filters (one for 140mm intake fan, one for the GPU getting fresh air from the outside). It also has a slim spot for optical drive which means you can easily put a slot drive. Excellent if you want a compact high end gaming system and probably a lot more silent than the X51, especially if you get a third party CPU cooler (not a tower). Cable management is a little bitch though :P ![]() Tons of builds and questions asked here.
Last edited by Ty4on; 05-05-2012 at 03:46 PM.
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Member
(05-05-2012, 10:25 PM)
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#118
Since I've got still a bit of Zelda: Skyward Sword to finish I decided to give Dolphin a go. So now my Alienware X51 is a Wii HD.
Game runs like a charm, performance seems fantastic (despite what it says on the screenshots, it runs locked at 30FPS 1080P with 2x internal res, 4xAA and 4xAF). I can't believe how great Wii looks. I might even need to buy some of the games I've missed out on because I couldn't stand the SD mess. I'll keep updating the OP with new pics and figures, will add these too. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Still have figure how to bring over my save files from Wii, though.
Last edited by Chittagong; 05-05-2012 at 10:29 PM.
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Member
(05-05-2012, 11:11 PM)
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#119
Get out of here with that nonsense. Alienware is usually overpriced but their X51 is the exceptional case. If you actually built computers you would know the X51 in the US only have a little over a 20% markup compared to building it yourself. I didn't bother doing the math for UK since I don't live there.
Last edited by wildfire; 05-05-2012 at 11:13 PM.
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Member
(05-06-2012, 12:24 AM)
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#120
isn't the 7870 2.56TFLOPS? the 7850 is 1.76TFLOPS. Upon saying that however I believe this product does have its place for those no fuss console gamers wishing to jump into pc gaming. All you need to do is replace that graphics card after two card generations with a similar TDP card and you are pretty much set for over 5-7 years of AAA pc gaming. Being a perfect WiiHD machine is also a great bonus. |
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Member
(05-06-2012, 12:31 AM)
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#121
I blame AMD and their lazy spec sheets! http://www.amd.com/us/products/deskt...on-7850.aspx#3
5-7 years you say...? Wow, I would have been happy with 4 years already. Didn't realize CPUs, RAM and GPUs maintain motherboard standards for that long... and the board wouldn't run out of, eh, bandwidth or something? |
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Member
(05-06-2012, 02:33 AM)
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#122
I won't be getting the x-51 but I will be making something along the same lines next year using a mini it-x form factor and maybe a HD8870 or the nvidia equivalent as they will look like the best bang for buck. We should know the specs of all three consoles by then so buying a pc specced to run the multiplatform console games released on the pc should be easy to figure out by then. While the next gen consoles will run games at 720p60 or 1080p30 comparable to current pc high settings by todays DX11 standards, I will hope to run my games at 1200p120 at high settings as well maybe even 1200p60 at enthusiast or 1200p30 at ultra settings for non fps games. |
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Member
(05-06-2012, 03:44 AM)
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#124
I've been very interested in building a small and graphically powerful PC to use on a TV, because I'd love to put it in my backpack, bring it to friend's houses, and play local multiplayer with them over LAN. I thought it would use much more power than the OP describes, so I didn't pursue it.
I might not do it, since I don't play too many PC games anyway. Mostly the oldies. But the OP is inspiring me...
- Dump your nand using Bootmii - Extract your nand on your PC - Copy the extracted "title" folder to overwrite Dolphin's "title" folder. (If you copy all folders, you can emulate the Wii system menu as a bonus.) That'll copy all your saves, guaranteed. However, you might be able to use a Wii homebrew called Savegame Manager GX, too. I haven't messed with it too much, so I'm unsure.
Last edited by Why would you do that?; 05-06-2012 at 03:47 AM.
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Member
(05-06-2012, 04:06 AM)
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#125
As for memory, it's about $45 for the average 2x4GB DDR3 1333Mhz from NewEgg.com. When the X51 came out a couple months ago I priced what it would cost to replicate the system using a compact case, and it was about $150 more than Dell was charging at the time. Which isn't a huge deal. |
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My Contribution
(05-06-2012, 04:07 AM)
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#126
yeah, that's my setup right there. even fit a nice after-market cooler with hope of overclocking for dolphin-use this year. the stock fan is great, as well as airflow, so since that cooler went in, temps have been really impressive given the size & components within - kinda wish idve waited for sandy bridge though, i'm instead gonna have to push this i5-760 from 2.8 to hopefully somewhere around 3.6ghz.
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Member
(05-07-2012, 07:27 AM)
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#127
took the plunge and bought the x51. 2 weeks till delivery. went for the mid range option tho.. which is the i5, gt 545, 4gb. hoping it will run diablo 3 and the newer total war games decently :/. been a console only gamer all this while so pretty clueless about all things PC
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Member
(05-09-2012, 07:09 AM)
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#128
![]() A few more ports, a little less power (500W PSU), almost the exact same size if I read the spec sheet correctly. |
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Member
(05-09-2012, 12:04 PM)
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#130
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I am full of shit.
Rich, smooth, creamy shit. (05-09-2012, 07:17 PM)
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#131
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Member
(05-09-2012, 07:38 PM)
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#132
I am actually impressed with my x51. I heard some people saying gtx555 is a bad card so I was thinking of instant upgrade to HD7850. But it seems to be running games I want (Diablo3, Blade&Soul at the moment) very well. Maybe I will hold on untill GTX660 release to get either 660 or HD7850 price drop.
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Member
(05-09-2012, 07:48 PM)
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#133
If this thing turns out to be sturdy enough, I might look into picking it up. I need a new PC but I travel for work enough that spending a bunch of money on a huge tower I can't bring with me isn't gonna be worth it.
The form factor's certainly helpful. If I can be confident it's not gonna break on me, it might be exactly what I need. |
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MrArseFace
(05-09-2012, 07:55 PM)
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#134
Something like this is fine if you don't want to build yourself. It's clearly a lifestyle PC with some power and there is a market for that.
Building your own isn't that difficult, but finding the right combination of parts to play nice together can take time. And there are plenty of nice cases around - the sonata or Lian Li on the previous page, I had a silverstone LC17 which was like any full size AV receiver. None would look out of place in a neat lounge. |
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(05-09-2012, 09:49 PM)
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#137
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Member
(05-09-2012, 10:00 PM)
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#138
For a retail box, especially an Alienware machine, its a great price. Especially for the HTPC/Console PC crowd.
What I want to know is if the GTX 680 could run on the low end PSU the X51 uses. The 670, from what rumors are saying, might be a better fit. Anyone know for sure?
Last edited by xemumanic; 05-09-2012 at 10:02 PM.
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(05-10-2012, 02:44 AM)
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#139
If you have access to AAFES they are having a Mother's Day sale on Dell hardware.
If you do not have access to AAFES it looks like the X51 currently includes a Dell gift card?
Quote:
Slick Deals Someone sort out the details, but for now I'm fairly certain you can buy this system at a price less than has been quoted as the typical Alienware markup. |
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I am full of shit.
Rich, smooth, creamy shit. (05-10-2012, 02:47 AM)
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#140
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Member
(05-10-2012, 02:49 AM)
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#141
I will wait and see how GTX 660ti comes out, which is mostly likely the highest nvidia card that can fit in x51 safely. |
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Member
(05-10-2012, 07:10 PM)
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#143
Wonder if these are selling? |
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Member
(05-10-2012, 07:16 PM)
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#144
I wonder if the shorter GTX 670s would work? They don't look like they draw too much power and are only 6.5" long. There should even be single slot versions.
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Member
(05-10-2012, 07:21 PM)
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#145
jk. The easier way is to copy your save to an SD card from the file system then import the file from there on your pc. I think Dolphin has a utility to help you with it, but i forgot. |
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Look!
A crack addict with a tag! (05-10-2012, 08:19 PM)
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#147
I wish there were rumors regarding an update. |
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He's not our sharpest knife. In fact, he's one of our dullest.
(05-10-2012, 08:26 PM)
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#148
This is exactly the kind of machine people like me will buy to get into pc gaming:
Is it the most powerful? No Is it more expensive than building one? Yes But I have yet to see another commercially available desktop that is as appealing as the X51's are at this point. The only thing that worries me is the availability of new gpu's that will fit in the smaller case. :( |
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He's not our sharpest knife. In fact, he's one of our dullest.
(05-10-2012, 08:30 PM)
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#150
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