orcishgamer: Those are pretty bad ass. Who makes the better ones? Sapphire?
Any cheaper recommendations that are workhorses? I'd rather not go more expensive.
I decided to pull the trigger on a 2600K and the ASRock Extreme 7, which is ridiculously overpowered I know. I'm actually thinking about one of the 600 USD comps prebuilt for my daughter since I can fix/mod it as I need. Looking at it I kept thinking "man if you're putting a SSD in there anyway you're at 700 USD or so already, just get what you want". Probably not my most economical or researched purchase, but I've been hemming and hawing over building this damned thing for 8 months or so now.
Memory heat spreaders are probably only worth the money if you're going to overclock your RAM. Since RAM is solid state you don't have to worry about heat damage nearly as much, so most RAM can quite happily cook along at 70-80C without any long term damage as long as there's basic airflow. (As an aside, my professors at college ran a high temperature lab to test the long term function of routers, switches, and servers at temperatures well above what's recommended by the vendors. I wouldn't throw a space heater by your PC just for grins, but they found that at 160 F there were no performance hits or heat damage to servers, and the routers and switches were good to 180 F with a consistent 500 CFM airflow)
And if you're considering a SSD, also consider a SSD hybrid. I was skeptical of them for the first year or so, but Seagate has done a tremendous job with their Momentus model. An 8 gig cache loads up your O/S and your commonly used programs at solid state speeds, and you still get the high read-write cycles of magnetics for storage, which is plenty fast enough for loading up video game data, movies and video clips, music, and the like. Plus SSD hybrids fail over to passthrough, which means that four years down the line when you're upgrading your storage and you relegate your old drive to secondary status, you've got the years of use on the magnetics even if the SSD cache fails. No such luck on a pure SSD, which fails over to "screw you, buddy."
Sixteen gigs of RAM is cheap. That's the best upgrade for any new desktop that you can make, honestly.