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Ask Jack

This article is more than 18 years old
Jack Scofield
Send your questions and comments to Jack.Schofield@guardian.co.uk. Published letters will be edited for brevity, but include full details with your query. Please visit our Ask Jack weblog for daily updates

PC shopping

My five-year-old desktop PC has died, and I want to buy something new. I am confused that, in some brands, there seem to be more Celerons than Pentium 4 chips. What should I be looking for?
Gordon Murray

Jack Schofield replies: PCs are now so fast that almost any machine will perform well for general purpose computing, assuming it has enough memory. Windows XP SP2 will run in 128 megabytes, but 256MB is now a practical minimum, and 512MB or more is recommended. People doing heavyweight tasks such as movie editing and professional desktop publishing often go for 2GB.

Memory is also crucial to processor performance, and in general, faster Intel chips have more built-in cache memory. Celerons have least, and Xeons have most, with Pentiums in the middle. Intel sells the Celeron line as a budget version of the Pentium, and sometimes errs by making the chips either not powerful enough or too powerful. Today's Celeron D 336 is slower than a Pentium 4 but reasonable value for most purposes, apart from serious gaming. See http://theinquirer.net/?article=26628 for more.

The cheapest PCs are built down to a price, and often economise by using motherboards with built-in sound and graphics. These are certainly good enough for most business purposes, but if you are planning to use your PC for entertainment, it's worth getting one with separate sound and graphics cards - and it may be worth paying a bit extra for better loudspeakers. (Vista, the next version of Windows, needs a 3D graphics card compatible with DirectX 9 and a recommended 128MB of memory for the full Aero Glass user interface.)

Another thing that makes a big difference is the size and quality of the screen. A PC becomes much more usable if you can have multiple programs spread out, and movies, of course, look much more impressive. The arrival of mass-market LCDs means big screens no longer take up a ridiculous amount of space, so get the biggest and sharpest you can afford. To make maximum use of your screen, add a Freeview TV tuner card.

Unwanted files

My Windows ME computer contains hundreds of files with names that range from CA00.IDX through to CHFF.IDX. Can I delete them?
Trevor Owen

JS: These sound like temporary index files created by a program such as Nero when burning a CD. Usually they are deleted when it completes the process. It's never a good idea to delete unknown files out of hand, but you can move them all to a temporary folder and see if any program misses them. If nothing complains after a week or so, delete them.

Rich text

Is it safer to share documents as .rtf than .doc files?
William Thomas

JS: Yes, it's more secure to save documents as .rtf (Rich Text Format) files rather than .doc, Microsoft's Word document format, because this avoids the risk of so-called macro viruses. The last significant infection was Melissa in 1999, and it's a long time since I've seen one in the wild. Bear in mind that if you receive an RTF file, you can't assume it's safe. Anyone can rename a .doc file to end with .rtf and Word will still load it. The only way to be sure is to look at it in text editor, such as Notepad: RTF is a textbased format whereas .doc files are binary. Finally, while RTF workswell with text files, complex illustrated Word documents can become very large .rtf files.

Backchat

· Last week, Martin King asked about transferring cassette tapes to CD. Rod Warrington says he found it easy with Magix Audio Cleaning Lab software. Robert Shaw points out that you can fit a PlusDeck 2 cassette deck to your PC - it fits a 5.25in drive bay - to simplify the process. Rod Bushell bought a Sony RCD-W3 compact disc recorder for his hi-fi, making "excellent tape-to-CD copies" without using a PC at all.

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