Does anybody actually use anti static wrist straps?

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-----Original Message-----
From: "Christopher Sawtell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: linux-users@it.canterbury.ac.nz
Sent: 8/3/07 1:37 PM
Subject: Re: Advice on building PC?

On 8/2/07, Gauland, Michael <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> My fifteen-year-old son's running Ubuntu on a old eMac, and would like to
> switch to an x86 machine. He wants to "roll his own", rather than purchase a
> ready-built machine. This isn't something I've ever done, so I'm looking for
> advice on going about this.
IMHO, others may disagree, The best bang-for-buck is probably found by
buying an ~3 year old ex-lease machine, and then adding a bigger disk,
should that be desired. Sorry, but while the 'buy a kit of parts' has
educational value, it's not necessarily more economical. If you go the
assemble yourself route, remember that the value of an anti-static
wrist strap exceeds its price by at lease two orders of magnitude.


> Should he buy a second-hand machine to start with, so he test each component
> as he upgrades it?

> What does he need to consider to be sure he can upgrade everything easily?
It depends on the budget more than anything, can you mention a vague figure?

Just don't buy a totally non-mainstream machine. Asus make good
motherboards which run Linux well, as do many other manufacturers. The
"You get what you pay for" rule applies.

nVidea video cards go better under Linux than ATI ones.


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