Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Do you kiss your motherboard with that mouth?

Newegg
The economic principle I’m exploring is: People gain when they trade voluntarily
My research question to help me study the economic principle is: How do consumers of computer parts know that they are getting the best price?
The article published in “tom’s Hardware” titled (How to Choose a Motherboard ) demonstrates this economic principle because it argues/shows that when picking a motherboard it’s important to go off of your other parts such as your graphics card and CPU.
First, the motherboard is seen as a connector, because without it then all those parts become useless. The motherboards purpose is to bring together the parts to be greater than previously possible.

Second, when choosing a motherboard it’s essential to keep the parts you already have such as the CPU and graphics card. Because in the current market most, if not all, motherboards are either, like referenced in the last article, AMD or Intel and so will only work with either one or the other with very limited exceptions.
Third, a motherboard is the quintessential part of a computer, without it you have nothing just expensive boxes of metal.

In my next blog post I will research: Computer Cases

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