General Gaming Article

General Gaming Article


Build a PC on Any Budget: Three Builds from $500 to $2000

Posted: 02 May 2012 12:58 PM PDT

Note: This article originally ran in the May 2012 issue of Maximum PC--some pricing information may have changed since.

We won't blow smoke up your PSU: Spending more money on a PC generally gives you a better computing experience. But that doesn't mean that anything short of an exotic $7,000 PC can't be fun and fulfilling, and it doesn't mean that folks on a very lean budget are doomed to a piss-poor computing experience. So for anyone who isn't flush with cash, we've laid out three nicely configured PCs—one for every budget.

The first is a sub-$500 rig that offers more gaming performance than a top-of-the-line gaming GPU... from 2007. The second PC, for just $1,300, is an everyman's PC that's sure to make Joe the Nerd a happy camper. The third PC is an honest-to-goodness enthusiast-class PC at the down-to-earth price of $2,100.

If you're itching to build a rig, the time to do it is now!

Pick Your PC Poison 

The beauty of a PC is scale—in both performance and price

The What Recovery?! PC

We all have friends who will stand in line for hours and lay down top dollar for the latest brushed-aluminum gadget, but the truth is, for a lot of people, the recovery ain't here—not by a long shot. 

The light at the end of the economic tunnel might just be a train.

For these folks, every dollar is precious and even a $700 PC seems extravagant. But we didn't want tough times to quash the hopes of an aspiring PC builder. Thus we set out to see what's possible at the $500 mark. Mind you, this would be the second-cheapest PC we've ever spec'd out. The cheapest was the $340 Ultra Budget PC from the September 2011 issue, but that was essentially a calculator on steroids. For this box, we wanted better‑than‑integrated graphics, if possible. We'll admit right now that hitting our goal was a tall task given today's hard drive prices and the cost of the OS, but we thought it a worthy effort. What's interesting is that once you get into the $500 range, every component has to be weighed carefully and justified. Were there corners cut and risks taken? Certainly. You can't eat Doritos without getting synthetic cheese all over your hands, but the final product ain't bad.

The Sweet Spot PC

Have you heard of that PC hacker named Goldilocks? She wandered into the Maximum PC Lab one day when no one was around, started using the What Recovery?! box, and immediately proclaimed it was "too damned low-budget for her needs." She then wandered over to the high-end Tax Refund PC and again turned up her nose in disapproval. "Why the hell would I pay a premium for LGA2011 when I'm never going to need quad-channel memory or buy a $600 hexa-core chip?!?"

As Goldilocks would say, "It's just right...."

Well G-locks, the Sweet Spot PC is just the right PC for you, and most enthusiasts, for that matter. At roughly $1,300, it's fast without being overkill, it's stylish without being ostentatious. It also hits all the modern enthusiast must-haves: must have super-fast SSD, must have upgrade path to next-generation CPUs, and must have support for a future multi-GPU upgrade. Hell, it even overclocks nicely without disturbing the church-mouse‑quiet nature of the box. This is a sweet box for the price and probably enough machine for 80 percent of folks. It's so nice, in fact, that most of you probably don't need to look at the Tax Refund PC at all.

The Tax Refund PC

We didn't know when we started spec'ing out our high-end build that the average tax refund in the United States is $2,100. So when our PC ended up at that price point, we knew the configuration was right on target. Sure, those of you whose heads were turned by the promise of our Sweet Spot PC are scoffing at the frivolity of the extra cubits we dropped on this box. But we actually think of the Tax Refund PC not as the PC you need, but the PC you want.

The PC you want, not the PC you need.

First, it's faster. From compute-bound chores to gaming, that extra $800 gets you eight threads instead of four, the current reigning champ in single-GPU graphics, and the ability to play and burn Blu-rays. This is also the only machine here that will let you run more than four cores. Granted, not everyone needs six cores, but if you're the kind of person whose livelihood relies on a speedy PC, having the ability to upgrade to a six-core Sandy Bridge-E processor today or even an eight- or 10-core with Ivy Bridge-E tomorrow, makes this box worth its weight in silicon. If that's not enough… it's red!

Keep reading for full parts lists, our decision making process, and the benchmarks!


 

The What Recovery?! PC

At this price, most people expect sucktastic integrated graphics, but we prove you can get your (moderate) game on for less than five Benjies.

PSU/Case

The first compromise you always make with any budget box is the PSU. Here, we go with a bundled Rosewill 450‑watt PSU that came free with the Rosewill R218 case. We don't normally trust free power supplies, but we're comforted by the fact that the unit carries a one-year warranty and the website is based in the U.S.

CPU

To get below $500, a budget CPU was key. For that, we turned to Intel's 2.4GHz Celeron G530. We know, you're thinking, "Celeron! Whaa?" Relax, this isn't a warmed-over Pentium III core; it's actually a Sandy Bridge chip. Well, a Sandy Bridge chip with a lot switched off—there's no Hyper-Threading, no QuickSync, and no Turbo Boost 2.0. The cache is also a bit smaller at 2MB vs. 3MB for a standard dual-core SNB part, but it's not a bad CPU.

GPU

Integrated graphics is normally a typical component of ultra-budget boxes. While Intel and AMD's integrated graphics have come a long way, they still, well, stink when compared to a discrete card. Gigabyte's HD 7750 easily makes a monkey out of any integrated graphics out today—and it sips power, which is crucial given our freebie PSU. 

Motherboard

We had to make a compromise with our Gigabyte GA-H61 mobo, but it's probably fine. The problem relates to Intel's H61 chipset, which deletes support for SATA 6Gb/s speeds (thanks, Intel!). However, the board does get us into LGA1155 for $54, and is someone with an ultra-budget box really going to buy a $200 SSD, anyway? Probably not.

RAM

A pair of 2GB Kingston DDR3/1333 DIMMs does the job. The Celeron actually throttles the RAM to DDR3/1066, but it's tough to even find that clock RAM today.

Hard Drive

For $20, we could have doubled our capacity with a WD Caviar Green, but we opted for a 500GB WD Caviar Blue because we believe that having a 5,400rpm primary boot drive is too painful. No, it's not a Black drive, but at least it runs at 7,200rpm.

OS

Today's youths probably wonder why the tech world once trembled at the mere mention of Microsoft's name. Our budget build lays it out nicely, though: When broken out as a percentage, the $99 spent on Windows 7 Home Premium is 20 percent of the system budget. 

Keep reading for the Sweet Spot PC, the Tax Refund PC and the benchmarks!

 


 

The Sweet Spot PC

This rig is just right for most people's budgets, offers just the right amount of performance, and just the right acoustics, too

Heatsink

Cooler Master's Hyper 212 Evo continues to offer the best cooling at a price that doesn't break the bank, or the ears, and lets us maintain our 4GHz overclock in peace and quiet.

CPU

On Valentine's Day we sent flowers and chocolate to Intel's 3.3GHz Core i5-2500K. Yes, we love it that much for giving us so much joy and happiness for so little money. We took the chip from its stock 3.3GHz to a very moderate overclock of 4GHz to keep within our plan for a fast and quiet PC.

Motherboard

News flash: You can get a cheap LGA1155 board, but you can't get a cheap board that supports SLI and CrossFireX. Gigabyte's GA-Z68XP-UD3 is about the lowest-cost board around that still gives us the capability to run SLI or CrossFireX while offering all of the Z68-goodness such as QuickSync and SSD caching.

GPU

EVGA's GeForce GTX 560 Ti 448 is perhaps the best bang for the buck right now without leaping beyond $300 for a GPU. Ours, for example, can be found on sale or with rebates for $269. Don't confuse it with the FTW or Classified editions, which fetch a bit more.

PSU

Corsair's TX750M gives us enough juice to support a second GPU in the future, and with rebates it's a darn good deal.

RAM

A pair of 4GB Patriot DDR3/1600 DIMMs hits the price/performance ratio for us and is low‑profile enough to fit under the cooler.

SSD

What's not to love about the OCZ Agility 3 drive? It packs 120GB of MLC NAND, has a SandForce 2 controller, and can be found for a mere $130 after rebates.

HDD

With the OS running off of our speedy SSD, we fell back on an affordable and quiet 2TB WD Caviar Green drive for storage duties.

Case

It used to be that $99 got you a razor blade shaped like a case, but Fractal Design's R3 (on sale from $109) is simply an amazingly well-designed, elegant case that's quiet as hell. 

OS

For this config, we're going to save $30 by buying 64-bit Windows 7 Home Premium, but anyone who expects to run more than 16GB should buy Windows 7 Professional instead.

Keep reading for the Tax Refund PC and the benchmarks!


 

The Tax Refund PC

They say money won is sweeter than money earned. If that's true, then any tax "refund" is about as tasty as okra covered in cod liver oil. Still, we can't complain about the PC we get out of it.  

Cooler

The push-pull configuration of NZXT's Havik 120 gives our Tax Refund PC top-notch cooling at an affordable price. With the auxiliary cooling we're running, we pushed our Core i7-3820 to 4.7GHz effortlessly. 

CPU

Intel's 3.6GHz Core i7-3820 gets us to LGA2011-land without having to sell pints of blood, and despite its lack of a "K" or "X" designator, it still overclocks nicely. We took our chip from its stock 3.6GHz to 4.7GHz on air with no issues in our benchmarks at all.

Motherboard

X79-based motherboards aren't cheap, but at least you get features. Asus's Sabertooth X79 gives us multi-GPU support, a nifty BIOS update feature that doesn't require a CPU, and a ton of thermal sensors. 

GPU

AMD's Radeon HD 7970 gives us the single-fastest GPU in the Tri-state area, is the first to offer native PCIe 3.0 speeds and DX11.1 support, and can even be considered power-friendly for its class. 

Case

It's hard not to see the NZXT Phantom 410 and think of the Emperor's badass Royal Guard. A Royal Guard who doesn't take a coffee break while he's being thrown down an exhaust shaft, that is. The Phantom offers front-panel USB support, fan options galore, and tidy cable routing, too.

ODD

If you spend more than 2K for a box, it would be a shame not to be able to play Blu-ray discs; this LG drive lets us do that, and burn BD-Rs at 12x and DVDs at 16x.

RAM

In a really fun world, we'd be running 32GB using four 8GB DIMMs, but 8GB DIMMs have pulled a Where's Waldo act on us. Until they surface, we'll settle for the 16GB of Corsair DDR3/1600 Vengeance RAM using four 4GB DIMMs.

HDD/SSD

To keep our budget within reason, we simply cloned the storage options from our Sweet Spot PC. Yes, a much larger SSD would be attractive, but we think the 120GB SSD plus 2TB HDD combo is pretty tough to beat for the cash today.

PSU

Corsair's new 850HX is a single-rail design, offers 80 Plus Silver certification, and, more importantly, should provide enough horsepower to run two Radeon HD 7970 cards if you ever want to up your frame rate.

OS

Both of the lower-end rigs tap 64-bit Windows 7 Home Premium, but for any eight-DIMM motherboard, we recommend investing a bit more for 64-bit Windows 7 Professional, which doesn't have an artificial limit of 16GB. With 4GB DIMMs and eight DIMM slots, we don't want to leave memory capacity on the table.

Read on for the benchmarks!


 

Our Builds Meet the Benchmarks

Price lists are all well and good, but performance is where a config pays off

First, let's talk about how we priced our PCs. The figures we used are not made up. They were live prices from various etailers at the time of purchase. We also factored in rebate savings. Yes, some of you may cry foul at that, but if you do your part, rebates can actually save you money. The prices will also vary. For example, the Fractal Design R3 was on sale at a certain web store for $99. In fact, it's often on sale, but by the time you read this, it's possible it could have climbed up by $10. The prices of hard drives, too, can fluctuate greatly from day to day, and sometimes hour to hour. Still, the pricing templates are pretty close to what you can get and you can perhaps do even better.

For performance, we ran our standard system benchmark suite against all the PCs and also ran an additional battery of tests on the low-end PC so we could compare it to the more economical builds we've done over the last year or so.

The What Recovery?! PC

Of the three boxes here, the lowest-cost PC was the most challenging. There are simply so many compromises made to get it under $500 that most would say it's almost not worth the sacrifice in features. In fact, for many folks, taking our $667 PC from the August 2011 issue and upgrading it with a Radeon HD 6850 and an Asus P8H67-M (the original Gigabyte board is no longer offered) will yield better general performance for just a couple hundred bucks more than this budget box. You should also take a good look at our AMD-based machine from the March 2012 issue, which takes the budget to about $830 for a very respectable PC. But recognize that $830 is a world away from $480 to many people.

For what it's worth, our sub-$500 PC ain't bad. It slaps around the $340 box we built in September 2011—if you think $500 is tough, $340 is a serious kick in the performance nads. The Sandy Bridge-based Celeron G530 eats the $340 machine's Fusion APU as an appetizer and uses its single stick of RAM as a toothpick. In encoding, the Celeron G530 takes a quarter of the time as the $340 box, and in gaming it saw about eight times the performance as the integrated chip. But how does WR?! compare against something stouter? Say, the Core i3 2100-based $667 PC? Not exactly great. The Celeron G530 is about 30 to 50 percent slower than a Core i3 part in most of our application and encoding tests, and its lack of Hyper-Threading hurts it. You've got to take the Celeron for what it is: It isn't agonizingly Atom-slow, but it's certainly no Core ix chip. If we had more cash to spend, that would be one of our first upgrades. 

If you're wondering whether an integrated GPU would make more sense, we'd say it depends on your needs. AMD's A8 X4 3850 probably has the best IGP out today, yet it still only hits 3,702 in 3DMark Vantage. The HD 7750 spits out 8,664, which puts it in a better ballpark for light-duty gaming. For comparison, we dug around on the Internet and found people with scores of 7,000 using overclocked Core 2 Quads and Radeon HD 3870 x2 cards. We also found people reporting 3DMark Vantage scores in the 5,500 range with GeForce 8800 GTX cards. 

Yes, a fatter GPU almost always helps, but it's not always that simple. Dropping in a fatter GPU means having to think about a fatter PSU, too. Once you've crossed that line, you start to upgrade the case, the motherboard, and, well, you might as well build our Sweet Spot PC instead, or the $830 PC from our March 2012 issue.

Don't let this totally get you down. We ran our normal benchmarks on this budget box and were frankly surprised we could run everything. Both of our gaming benchmarks, for example—Far Cry 2 and STALKER: CoP—are run at 2560x1600. The HD 7750 managed both—not with stellar frame rates, mind you, but managed nonetheless. We don't even attempt these tests on machines with integrated graphics. 

The Sweet Spot PC

This PC is pretty much perfect just as it is. Sure, a 480GB SSD would be nice, as would a 7,200rpm drive, but this machine is just right for most enthusiasts who don't want to sink two paychecks into a PC. OK, if we had to throw a bit more cash at it, a Core i7-2600K/2700K and its extra threads would really help with the multithreaded task battle. Lack of Hyper-Threading, in fact, is probably the main contributor to the performance delta between this machine and the Tax Refund, and the reason even our elderly (but admittedly far more expensive) zero-point box holds its own in some tests against the Sweet Spot. As it is, the Sweet Spot is from 11 percent to 32 percent slower than the Tax Refund PC in our application tests. The biggest gap is in Sony Vegas, which is a thread monster. 

In gaming, it's also a given that a $270 GPU is not going to outbox a $570 GPU. In our STALKER: CoP test, the GeForce 560 Ti 448 was at a 41 percent disadvantage. In Far Cry 2, where it's more about the CPU, the GeForce 560 Ti 448 was only 27 percent slower. What would be a nice step up in graphics for this moderate machine? We'd probably spring for the Sapphire Radeon HD 7950 OC card that's reviewed on page 80. At $480, it's the cheaper alternative to Nvidia's top-end GeForce GTX 580 and not as cost-prohibitive as a full-tilt Radeon HD 7970 card. Beyond that, we'd probably look at amenities such as the same Blu-ray burner used in the Tax Refund PC. 

The Tax Refund PC

There is no free lunch, and getting performance costs money. If you want a faster computer, you have to pay for it. Thus, it's no surprise that the fastest PC here also happens to be the most expensive. But how much faster?

Compared to the Sweet Spot, the Tax Refund PC gave us up to 47 percent faster rendering times in Sony Vegas Pro 9, as well as 33 percent more speed in Lightroom and 31 percent more out of MainConcept in video encoding. In gaming we saw a 69 percent bump in STALKER: CoP and 38 percent in the more CPU-limited Far Cry 2 benchmark. We also ran an overall 3DMark 2011 on Xtreme and the Tax Refund PC produced 44 percent higher frame rates. Heaven 2.5 saw a 144 percent boost in frame rates. But you know this, man: More money spent on hardware means more performance.

We know what you're thinking, though: What else would we do with this box? Since anyone interested in the Tax Refund PC is already pushing his or her PC pretty hard in content creation tasks, a natural step would be to reach for a six-core Core i7-3930K chip. The only reason we didn't run with it now is because of the price premium it's fetching today. The chip would normally be less than $600 but a mysterious shortage of the CPUs has seen the 3930K selling for more than $725 on the few stores you can even find it. The usual storage updates also apply here, such as a 480GB SSD and 7,200rpm HDD, but those are mostly personal choices. If you're looking for pure fun, filling all eight DIMM slots with 32GB of RAM and running a 24GB RAM disk isn't quite as crazy as it sounds. Those bent on high-resolution gaming at 2560x1600 may want to consider dropping in a second Radeon HD 7970 card.  

Blizzard Drops Diablo III Teaser Trailer, In-Game Auction House Details

Posted: 02 May 2012 10:37 AM PDT

With May 15th less than two weeks away, it's no surprise that the Diablo III hype train is starting to chug along at full speed. Blizzard opened the game's doors to everybody with a Battle.net account for an open beta a couple of weekends back, and in the past few days, the company has released a slick new TV trailer and unveiled the fee structure for Diablo III's controversial auction house item-selling feature. (You know, the one that "forced" Blizzard to invoke always-on DRM, even for single player mode.) Are you ready to get gouged?

The how-to and FAQ pages Blizzard set up for the auction house contain a ton of nitty gritty details and a lot of fine print, but here's the gist of things: If you're selling weapons, armor, accessories or other unique items for real-world money, Blizzard will take one real-world dollar for every item sold. If you're selling gold, gems, dyes or other commodities for either real-world cash or in-game gold, the company yoinks 15 percent of the final sale price for the lot.

The company won't charge you if the item doesn't sell within its 48 hour auction window, but Blizzard will charge you an additional 15 percent of any real-world cash you transfer from your Battle.net account to a third-party payment provider like PayPal. That doesn't include any fees charged by the payment provider, either. (See what we mean about being gouged?) If you want to skip the transfer charges you can use your Battle.net balance to buy in-game items or other Blizzard products, instead. 

Your Battle.net account has a soft $250 cap; once a sale pushes you over that total, you can't list any more items until you bring your cash reserve back down below that amount. That $250 figure is the most an item can sell for in real-world cash, as well. Sellers will be able to have 10 different items or commodities up for auction simultaneously. If you sell items for in-game gold rather than real-world cash, Blizzard still takes 15 percent of the final sale price off the top, even for unique items.

Buyers, meanwhile, can pay for items with their Battle.net balance or using a credit card or PayPal account associated with their Battle.net account.

But enough financial talk! Have a gander at the awesome trailer Blizzard whipped up for Diablo III, which doesn't appear to contain any in-game footage whatsoever. (Boo!)

Verizon To Start Delivering 4G LTE Broadband To Rural Houses Across America

Posted: 02 May 2012 10:03 AM PDT

If this was Twitter, we'd be tempted to slap a #firstworldproblems hashtag on all our complaints about data caps and download speeds. There's two problems with that idea, though: 1) This isn't Twitter, and 2) data speeds can't even be called a #firstworldproblem when plenty of folks in the rural U.S. don't have access to broadband Internet whatsoever. Verizon's looking to change that tomorrow, however, with the rollout of its "HomeFusion Broadband" service, which brings Big Red's mobile 4G LTE network to stationary homes across the nation.

The concept's pretty simple: a $200 4G LTE antenna gets slapped on the side of your house and delivers the connection to a broadband router that acts as your home's gateway to the Internet. Verizon says customers can expect download speeds between 5 and 12 Mbps and upload speeds between 2 and 5 Mbps. Not too shabby for folks who can only receive dial-up Internet in their location! (Assuming the signal holds up, of course.)

It is kind of shabby for anyone with any other broadband options, however, namely because of two glaring #firstworldproblems: hard data caps with a sky-high cost. Sixty bucks nets you a whopping *cough* 10GB of data a month; dropping $90 and $120 ups the cap to 20GB and 30GB, respectively. Overage charges clock in at $10 per GB. Plus, you have to sign up for a two-year plan to get HomeFusion, but hey, Verizon will up your data allowance by 50 percent for the first two months of your subscription.

Nevertheless, HomeFusion could be a handy option for would-be rural Internet users. You can find more information on the Verizon website (somewhat ironically). HomeFusion goes live nationwide tomorrow, on May 3rd.

Now that 4G is making it into homes, we have to ask: isn't there supposed to be a mobile bandwidth crunch?

Sony Announces Vaio T11/T13 Ultrabooks, Available Early June 2012

Posted: 02 May 2012 07:00 AM PDT

Sony's taking its sweet time punching a ticket on the Ultrabook bandwagon, but come early June 2012, it will hop aboard with the Vaio T13. The Vaio T13 is Sony's first Ultrabook model and show up to the party wearing a "tough magnesium and aluminum" shell with a brushed aesthetic. Vaio T13 models rocking a solid state drive (SSD) will boast up to 9 hours of battery life on a single charge, and up to 90 days in Sleep Mode.

It will have a 13.3-inch display with a 1366x768 (16:9) screen resolution, an Intel Core i3 2367M processor, 4GB DDR3-1333MHz memory, optional hybrid storage (320GB HDD + 32GB SSD), Intel HD Graphics 3000, 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0, a single USB 2.0 port, a USB 3.0 port with USB charge, HDMI output, media card reader, GbE LAN, 1.3MP webcam, and of course Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit.

Sony will also release the Vaio T11, an 11.6-inch Ultrabook model with as-yet unannounced specs. No word on how much either model will cost.

Image Credit: Sony

Asus Sets Ambitious Goal of Ruling the Android Tablet Roost by Year-End

Posted: 02 May 2012 06:43 AM PDT

Somebody went and spiked the water cooler that Asus CEO Jerry Shen drinks from, which is the only logical conclusion as to why he suddenly believes he has a shot at making Asus the world's largest Android tablet PC maker by the end of the year. Crazier things of happened -- Think Like a Man is No. 1 at the box office for two weeks running, for example -- but unless Amazon makes a series a serious missteps, it's hard to imagine the Kindle Fire being usurped.

First things first. According to DigiTimes, Mr. Shen told investors that his company is on track to grab the most global Android tablet PC market share by the end of 2012. He has eight months left to make good on that prediction, and it's a bold one. How so?

Well, comScore recently laid out the figures, and according to the research firm's data, the Kindle Fire dominates the U.S. Android tablet market with a 54 percent share, followed by the entire Samsung Galaxy Tab family in a distant second (15.4 percent), Motorola Xoom (7 percent), and finally the Asus Transformer (6.3 percent). Granted, these figures only represent the U.S. market, but it's a big one, and Asus has a lot of ground to make up.

Things aren't much different globally. According to International Data Corporation (IDC), the Kindle Fire holds a 16.8 percent share of the entire tablet market (all OSes), well behind the iPad (54.7 percent) and ahead of all other Android tablet players, including Samsung (5.8 percent). IDC didn't even mention Asus, presumably because it's a blip on the radar.

Some will argue that the Kindle Fire isn't really a tablet, that's it more of a glorified eBook reader, and there's some merit to that argument. Perhaps that's how Mr. Shen sees it, too. Semantics aside, the Kindle Fire is the world's leading Android tablet or tablet-like device, and it doesn't appear that's going to change within the next several months.

Image Credit: Asus

Instagram Surges to 50 Million Users, Growing a Clip of 5 Million Per Week

Posted: 02 May 2012 06:08 AM PDT

Facebook's $1 billion adopted baby is growing up fast and may end up making the social networking site look like savvy parents with an real eye for potential rather than a silly entity that spent ten figures on a camera app with social features baked in. Before we get too far ahead of ourselves, however, let's look at what Instagram has done, starting with its fast growing userbase.

According to Mashable, Instagram now has more than 50 million users and is adding news ones at a rate of 5 million per week. Instagram's growth is staggering, especially in light of the fact that it had 30 million users at the start of April and 15 million users at the start of the year.

Realistically, it will be difficult for Instagram to maintain that momentum over the long haul, and it's also worth mentioning that the app was only recently made available for Android after sitting pretty on the iOS side of the fence for two years. Still, at this rate, Instagram should end the year with 100 million members, and perhaps many more, depending on what Facebook does with it. Perhaps spending a billion dollars wasn't such a silly idea, after all.

Motorola Convinces German Court to Ban Windows 7, Xbox 360 Console

Posted: 02 May 2012 05:51 AM PDT

Motorola Mobility has won an injunction against several Microsoft properties in Germany, including Windows 7, Internet Explorer, Windows Media Player, and even the Xbox 360 game console. After initially postponing the ruling, Judge Dr. Holger Kircher of the Landgericht Mannheim (Mannheim Regional Court) issued his ruling on four of Motorola's complaints against Microsoft, ultimately awarding the mobile device maker an injunction against Microsoft on two patents.

Foss Patents, which first reported on the ruling, says the patents pertain to an "adaptive motion compensation using a plurarlity of motion compensators" and an "adaptive compression of digital video data." These are a pair of old patents that are tied into the H.264 video codec standard.

Winning the injunction came easy, according to Foss Patents, and the real challenge will be in actually enforcing the ban of Microsoft's four popular products named above. It's a given that Microsoft will appeal ruling, and by doing so, Motorola would be on the hook for any damages that arise from a premature enforcement if a court later decides the injunction was bogus. If Motorola wants to take that risk -- and it's a big one -- the company would have to pony up a security bond worth "hundreds of millions of euros."

Foss Patents had plenty more to say on the matter, which you can read here.

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