New home PC - where the hell do I start?
Discussion
Our ten year old all-in-one PC is running very slow. I’ve done a lot of reading but I’m ten years (at least) out of date. All the usual suspect reviewers end their reviews with a “but”. Lots of PCs look great until I dig a bit into the detail and I find stuff like laptop processors and basic graphics. It feels like retailers are just trying to bambosal buyers like me with stuff that looks good but will grind to a halt the next time Microsoft issues an update.
We want a good home PC that’s going to last. We don’t play games but don’t want the computer to fall over if we decide to play a round of solitaire. In Pistonheads terms I want a BMW 320d estate. Can somebody please tell me what the hell I should be buying? Budget including monitor is about £1000 but can go up if necessary.
We want a good home PC that’s going to last. We don’t play games but don’t want the computer to fall over if we decide to play a round of solitaire. In Pistonheads terms I want a BMW 320d estate. Can somebody please tell me what the hell I should be buying? Budget including monitor is about £1000 but can go up if necessary.
SonicHedgeHog said:
What do you intend to use it for?SonicHedgeHog said:
Yes - if you don't want to game, in 4K, at 160 Hz, then you do not need or want an RTX 5060 Ti , at all.You'll be happy with integrated intel graphics, or, something from the Nvidia 30 or 40 series, (3060?). Even that's an overkill for no gaming.
Acer Aspire C24, I bought this about 9 months ago, my use sounds similar to yours.
https://www.technoworld.com/acer-aspire-c24-1800-i...
https://www.technoworld.com/acer-aspire-c24-1800-i...
Shaoxter said:
I'd start with an Intel NUC or similar and get a nice monitor.
No need for a big case with an expensive GPU to play solitaire at 5000fps.
But the winning animation will be soooo smoooooth No need for a big case with an expensive GPU to play solitaire at 5000fps.

Seriously though, if you're genuinely not playing any demanding games on it, then a 30 or 20 series Nvidia (or Intel ARC/AMD equivalent) will easily manage doing day to day display stuff. The suggestion of a NUC (mini PC type thing) is a good one if you want something small and out of the way.
Otherwise, being realistic about what you want the PC to do is your best start. If you want to save a few quid, you can look at previous generation processors, as the new ones always come out at a bit of a premium but previous gens will more than suffice if you're just using it as a fancy word processor.
Edited by Sebbak on Wednesday 13th August 00:03
Ok, thanks, I feel like I’m getting somewhere now. Most of the time it’s Microsoft Word and Office with a bit of internet admin stuff that’s too fiddly to do on the iPad. But occasionally my wife might want to drop into something like Second Life where some old friends hang out. It’s rare but I’d like that performance headroom so that it just works without feeling like the PC is pushing the limits. I might only need a BMW 316 but I’d like the 330, if you know what I mean. I’m a bit wary of the mini PCs but that may be because I’ve never had one before.
I will need a monitor so maybe stick with another all in one like this spec?
https://www.hp.com/gb-en/shop/product.aspx?id=A9DN...
https://www.hp.com/gb-en/shop/product.aspx?id=A9DN...
Timmos1974 said:
Imac end of
Be careful saying stuff like this, apparently, if the OP isn’t specifically asking for Apple, this makes you some sort of madman fanatic, at least to some people in this sub.@OP. I’d go for the AIO. Your requirements aren’t very taxing amd easily handled by ‘mobile’ processing gubbins. Integrated graphics is more than good enough for many lightweight 3d games these days. You have speakers, cam all integrated.
I’d just drop the machine refresh to every 5 to max 7 years, to stay on the curve. 10 year old machine is like running an antique, everything inside will be magnitudes slower. I remember seeing a review, a top spec core i7 processor from several years ago was blown out of the water by the lowliest, upto date i3. Unless it’s sitting there in the corner, fired up once a week for emails, it’s a false economy. You are definitely going to feel that performance deficit, even just using Word.
I think the future proofing thing is a red herring for most. Doesn’t sound like you’d open up the case, start researching and upgrading components. I mean there is no need for that for your sort of use. Its not like you are mining bit coin or competitive gaming, need every ounce of performance and you just have to have the latest graphics card.
I used to have this future proofing mindset as well, and then discovered life was more important, than spending hours researching this and that graphics card, ram stick and PSU.
If you get separates, you are going to have to start researching webcams, monitors, speakers, mice and keyboards as well. Can you be arsed?
Edited by wyson on Wednesday 13th August 07:19
If you've got an iPad (and maybe an iPhone too?) just get a Mac Mini and the screen of your choice.
I looked at the current iMacs, but they only do a 24" screen version now. I wanted a 32" screen.
Ended up with a base model Mini, a third party expansion box (sits under the Mini, extra ports and storage expansion), a 2TB nvme "hdd", BenQ 32" monitor, Apple keyboard and Logitech mouse. The whole lot was about the same price as an iMac.
I've still got an old Mini (2012 model) that boots Windows 10 for the odd occasion that I need Windows. Still works perfectly.
I looked at the current iMacs, but they only do a 24" screen version now. I wanted a 32" screen.
Ended up with a base model Mini, a third party expansion box (sits under the Mini, extra ports and storage expansion), a 2TB nvme "hdd", BenQ 32" monitor, Apple keyboard and Logitech mouse. The whole lot was about the same price as an iMac.
I've still got an old Mini (2012 model) that boots Windows 10 for the odd occasion that I need Windows. Still works perfectly.
SonicHedgeHog said:
That’s a cracking PC that will still be running happily in 5+ years. I was thinking of going a bit down the price range if you want a monitor as well in the budgetThanks for all the replies.
Wyson, that’s a great post and really reflects where I’m at. 30 years ago I’d plough through PC PRO magazine every month and know what’s what. Now I just don’t care. I just want it to work.
Regarding Macs - we tried a couple of MacBook Pros about 12-15 years ago. They’re what lead to the all in one. Partitioning disc drives and switching between operating systems was a real mess and so many websites (especially my work) didn’t run properly if you didn’t have a work around. Even if it’s much better in 2025 we don’t want to go down that road again.
I’ll continue to utilise the Borg Collective on this thread. This afternoon I’ll research all in ones and ask if I should consider upgrading anything in the default spec.
Responses really appreciated.
Wyson, that’s a great post and really reflects where I’m at. 30 years ago I’d plough through PC PRO magazine every month and know what’s what. Now I just don’t care. I just want it to work.
Regarding Macs - we tried a couple of MacBook Pros about 12-15 years ago. They’re what lead to the all in one. Partitioning disc drives and switching between operating systems was a real mess and so many websites (especially my work) didn’t run properly if you didn’t have a work around. Even if it’s much better in 2025 we don’t want to go down that road again.
I’ll continue to utilise the Borg Collective on this thread. This afternoon I’ll research all in ones and ask if I should consider upgrading anything in the default spec.
Responses really appreciated.
Obligatory 'get a Mac' answer...
Apple MacMini M4 with 10-Core CPU, 10-Core GPU, 512GB SSD, 24GB RAM for £849
Apple MacMini M4 with 10-Core CPU, 10-Core GPU, 512GB SSD, 24GB RAM for £849
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