On Sep 25, 2013, at 12:52 AM, Stan Hoeppner <s...@hardwarefreak.com> wrote:

>> 
> 
> There's a huge amount of what we call "channel" or "DIY" hardware out
> there that works fine with Linux.  The only real issues are
> 
> 1.  What's available in your local market and at what price point
> 2.  Choice of integrated GPU
> 
> For 'seamless' integration with stock Debian it's usually best to buy a
> GPU that's a generation or two older than the bleeding edge.  Same goes
> for the system chipset to a degree.  The newer the GPU the more time
> you'll spend fighting with installing experimental kernels, modules,
> x.org settings, etc.  If you need good 3D support you may have to do
> some of this anyway, unfortunately.
> 
> Reply, and CC me, with your basic requirements/needs and your locale,
> and I'll see if I can come up with a suitable parts list for you, and
> vendors where you can purchase them.  The more "remote" your locale the
> longer this will take as I have to first 'discover' vendors in your
> region.  If you have a preferred vendor and provide their web address,
> that'll make this quicker obviously.  If you're in the US, it'll be very
> quick indeed, as we have Newegg.

Stan, I thank you. I want a machine that has the capability to run World of 
Warcraft in Wine. So, I need decent graphics. Here is what I was thinking:

Haswell quad-core i5

MSI H87-43G motherboard

8 gig DDR3 1600 ram, Corsair (should I get 16 and use all 4 slots?)

onboard sound, Realtek ALC892

onboard NIC, Realtek 8111E

Radeon 7870 video card with 2 gig of video ram, probably Sapphire, -  avoiding 
the bleeding edge here. My Linux experience may be old and rusty, but I 
remember recompiling my kernel to get Soundblaster support. Use hardware with 
known drivers!

750 watt power supply (Coolermaster GX)

Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO cpu cooler

Lian Li PC-9N case

I have speakers, keyboard, mouse, monitor.

Please let me know if you think using the Haswell chip is unwise; I would 
rather buy the first chip that uses the new socket than the last chip, Ivy 
Bridge, using the old socket, for the potential of upgrading in the future.

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