Gaming Computer

 

Gaming Computer:

What is Gaming Computer?

A customised personal computer called a gaming computer, commonly referred to as a gaming PC, is made for playing video games at very high settings. Gaming PCs often differ from standard personal computers in that they typically have more powerful video cards, more powerful CPUs with a higher number of cores, and more powerful RAM. Gaming computers are also employed for more taxing jobs like video editing. Overclocking CPUs and GPUs is a popular choice among gamers and computer enthusiasts to increase performance. Overclocking either processing unit frequently necessitates additional cooling, commonly accomplished by air cooling or water cooling.

 

Gaming Computer



As of 2021, 65.1 million gaming-related devices had been sold worldwide, of which 17.5 million gaming desktops, 19.7 million gaming monitors, and 27.9 million gaming notebooks.

 

Background:

The Nimrod, created by Raymond Stuart-Williams and John Makepeace Bennett, was displayed at the 1951 Festival of Britain and is regarded as the first game computer ever created. Bennett did not intend for it to be a true gaming machine, though; it was meant to be a mathematical exercise and a demonstration that computers could "carry out really complex practical issues," not only for fun. Following this, gaming consoles like the Magnavox Odyssey (1972) and the Atari 2600 (1977) paved the way for the future of gaming PCs as well, thanks to their rising popularity among families all over the world.The Atanasoff-Berry Computer, the first "modern" computer created in 1942, is the ancestor of contemporary computers as we know them today (ABC for short). The ABC was a massive device that was "1,800 square feet... weighing approximately 50 tonnes," far too large to be used by one person, unlike contemporary PCs and laptops. Personal computers didn't start to appeal to the general public until the 1977 and 1982 releases of the Apple II and the Commodore 64, respectively. The Apple II cost $1,298 to purchase in 1977, or $5,633 when adjusted for inflation in 2021, yet its overall computational power, efficiency, and compact size was a significant improvement over even the earliest personal computers.Gaming computers are now available from a wide range of businesses in various configurations. Acer has their special product lines, Predator, that coexist with the rest of their line-up, Dell has their gaming computer division, Alienware, which was founded back in 1997, HP has theirs, OMEN, whose lineage dates back to 1991 under the defunct brand VoodooPC, Lenovo has theirs, under Legion, Asus has theirs under TUF and ROG, and many more. All of these companies aim to capture a portion of the market through features, performance, build quality, cost, or a combination of these factors.

 

Gaming Computer



Hardware:

The Commodore 64, which had a MOS 6510 processor and 64 kb of RAM, was a potent computer for 1982. On its 320x200 resolution screen, it could show up to "40 columns and 25 lines of text" and 16 different colours.  These specifications became obsolete as technology advanced, and computer hardware continued to advance beyond what was previously conceivable. The Lenovo Chromebook C340-11, for example, has 4 GB of RAM, 64 GB of internal storage, a dedicated graphics card, an Intel Celeron N4000, and a screen with a 1366x768 resolution. Some variants of this model also have a touch screen. Today, many modern general-use computers have basic specifications for the average user.The Alienware Area-51M R2 Gaming Laptop, for example, has the newest Intel Core i9 processor with 10 cores, a dedicated graphics card with 8 GB of VRAM, 16 GB of RAM, and 512 GB of internal storage. Gaming laptops take these specifications to a higher level. Since touch screens use a lot of energy to operate, gaming laptops typically do not include them because this can slow down the game's speed and frame rate.

 

 

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