We've only had the opportunity to look at one Origin PC so far, and while the performance was impressive the packaging was equally so—Dustin had to struggle to get the large wooden crate into his place. Origin does have some seriously high-end (almost ludicrously so) PCs that you can put together if you're willing to shell out, but some people just want a reasonably high-end PC that's ready to go with a minimum of fuss. And if you're thinking of getting something for the holiday season, a ready-to-ship system could be exactly what you need. Enter the Origin Millennium RTS.
Origin states that it will ship within one day of your payment being processed, and what you'll get is a pretty high-end setup ready to run all the latest and greatest games. Here's a quick rundown of the specs—the only area you can customize on the RTS build is the warranty.
Origin Millennium RTS SpecificationsChassisBitfenix Shinobi Red/BlackNoiseblocker fansProcessorIntel Core i5-2500K overclocked to 4.0-4.5GHzCoolingOrigin Frostbyte 120 Sealed Liquid CoolingMotherboardASUS P8P67 Pro B3 steppingMemory2x4GB Corsair Vengeance DDR3-1600GraphicsNVIDIA GeForce GTX 580 1.5GB GDDR5Power SupplyCorsair 1050W HX1050StorageCorsair Force 3 120GB SATA 6Gbps SSDOptical Drive24x CDRW/DVDRWNetworkingOnboard Gigabit EthernetAudioOnboard Realtek ALC892 HD AudioOperating SystemWindows 7 Home Premium 64-bitWarrantyStandard 1-year part replacement
45 day free shipping
Lifetime phone support
DVD image
Upgrade to 1-, 2-, or 3-year warranty with free shippingPricing$1,799 online, ships in one day from payment processing
If you're like me, the first thing you're going to do when you see the above list is to go spec out how much it would cost you to put everything together yourself. Never fear, I have already done that (substituting the Corsair H80 for the Origin cooler, as that seems to be similar), and my total price for the parts comes to $1,675, plus around $30 for shipping (with pricing predominantly coming from Newegg, linked for your convenience).
We might have a few quibbles with the parts selection—specifically, I'd like to see a large secondary HDD included, and while the Bitfenix Shinobi is a good case I'd be more inclined to go with a Fractal Design Define R3 personally—but overall this is a beefy gaming system priced just $100 over what it would cost for me to put together the same system. In fact, my own gaming/work PC is running a stock GTX 580 with a Core i7 CPU, and even with a 30" LCD I've found that the GTX 580 is able to handle nearly every game I've got at near-maximum details. Given that my time (and your time) isn't free, if you're happy with the part selections and you want your new gaming system ASAP, we have no qualms about recommending Origin's latest offering.
]]>Artikel Terkait:
- LabGuru Offers Project Management For Science People
- Kobo Touch With Offers Drops E-Reader’s Price To $99, Nook Going For $79 On Black Friday
- Floxx Pivots Towards Location-Based Offers
- #IswabbedforAmit Offers Up 20K To Find A Bone Marrow Donor For Startup Founder Amit Gupta
- ServerClub Offers Dedicated Server Hosting for Bloggers
- Kingston Wi-Drive Offers Wireless iPad Storage Expansion
- SmartFish Offers ErgoMotion Mouse to go with its Keyboard
- AVADirect Silent Gaming PC: An Exercise in Balance
- Alienware Releases The X51, A $699 Small Form Factor PC That Looks Like A Gaming Console
- Alienware announces Gaming console desktop called X51
- Joypad Turns Your iPhone Into A Remote Control; Launches New SDK To Bring iOS Gaming To Apple TV
- AVADirect Compact Gaming PC: Small Case, Big System
- Roku 2 XS Review : Streaming Videos and Casual Gaming on the Big Screen
- G1.Sniper 2 deemed a ‘Must Have’ for its gaming features at TweakTown
- MSI GE620DX 15.6-inch Gaming Laptop Announced
- Samsung 700G7A Laptop for Gaming
- GIGABYTE G1.Sniper 2 images revealed; Sandy Bridge for extreme gaming
- Using High Performance RAM with AMD A-Series APUs in DX11 Gaming
- Asus ROG G74Sx Gaming Laptop
- Acer Predator G5910 Gaming Desktop releasing in mid July
- Shuttle H3 6700G Gaming Desktop released date , specification, price
- MSI GT780R and GX780 17-inch Gaming Notebooks,
- Polk gaming and sporty headphone, generic ear-speakers
- iBypower Gamer 922SLCK Gaming Computer reviews
- WarFactory Sentinel: Gaming on a Grand
- Review of Asus G73JW-XA1 Gaming Netbook
- In-Win BUC PC Gaming Case Review
- MAINGEAR EX-L 18 Gaming Notebook
- Free to Play MMO Gaming
- Gigabyte GM-M6980 Gaming Mouse Review
- CyberPower's X6-9300 and MSI's GT680R: Fighting for Your Mobile Gaming Dollar
- Zalman Cpu Water Cooling System Reserator 1 V2 Intel P4 Amd Sempron Amd64 (Personal Computers)
- YC Alum Curebit Raises $1.2 Million For Online Referral System
- Snake Camouflage: Japan Gets Exclusive Metal Gear Solid 3DS System
- NetLED: Japan Gets Cloud-Based, Smartphone-Compatible LED Lighting System
- Dune HD Pro : A Premium Entertainment System using the Sigma Designs SMP8910
- 2GB kit (1GBx2) Upgrade for a Apple iMac 1.83GHz Intel Core Duo (17-inch) System (DDR2 PC2-5300, NON-ECC, )
- AVADirect Compact Gaming PC: Small Case, Big System
- 2GB Upgrade for a Apple iMac 2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo (20-inch) System (DDR2 PC2-5300, NON-ECC, )
- 4GB kit (2GBx2) Upgrade for a Apple iMac 2.66GHz Intel Core 2 Duo (20-inch) MB324LL/A System (DDR2 PC2-6400, NON-ECC, )
- 2GB kit (1GBx2) Upgrade for a Apple iMac 2.0GHz Intel Core Duo (20-inch) System (DDR2 PC2-5300, NON-ECC, )
- 4GB kit (2GBx2) Upgrade for a Apple iMac 2.4GHz Intel Core 2 Duo (20-inch) System (DDR2 PC2-5300, NON-ECC, )
- Nokia To Give Symbian Operating System Update April 12
- Windows 8: IE10, Touchscreen Keyboards and File System Access
- Computex 2011: Intel Demonstrates Fanless 95W TDP Sandy Bridge All-in-One System
- Logitech Speaker System Z623 Unveiled Complete with THX Cert
- Intel New Chip Logos and Star Rating System
- Antec Debuts Soundscience Rockus 3D 2.1 Speaker System at $249.99
- LG Introduces A New System To Protect Sensitive Information or data from Unknow people
- Budget System Builder’s Guide February 2011
- Sony PSP-1001K PlayStation Portable (PSP) System (Black)
- Steps for a Safe and Successful System Unit Assembly and Disassembly
- Operating System Installation Checklist
- CompuLab’s Fit-PC Slim: Tiniest Windows XP system
0 comments:
Post a Comment