Both processors AMD and Intel work fine for me. When choosing a PC, first I have to decide what I would do with it - games, movies, work, programming, photoshop, design programs and so on and so forth. Then according to my requirements I would be looking for the proper parameters computer.
The manufacturer is also important - I would prefer Dell, Lenovo, Apple. The guarantee period should be also taken into account. The price is also very important.
The most important are parameters, manufacturer and price.
First ask yourself what you'll be using it for, e.g. Buying a high-end Intel i7 PC is a waste of money if all you'll be doing is surfing the net and downloading emails in which case an affordable netbook or nettop would do just fine.
Processor is the most important, check this hub.
AMD is often actually faster than Intel. You can also unlock its cores to make it even faster. Intel, on the other hand, is compatible with most, if not all, applications and games designed for Windows while AMD may encounter problems with some.
Whatever it is, you may want to consider these: hubpages.com/t/23ffdb :).
When I buy any computer I see the specs of that particular computer. The motherboard, processor, ram, DVD/CD/Combo/Super Drive as well as casing of CPU. These are the main things to focus on while buying a computer.
I will prefer Intel. The well known company. INTEL board will be preferred.
When choosing a computer to buy the most crucial thing should be value for dollar.
While it seems important to some to have the best of the best; whether it be the processor (type or speed) and others a logo (dell, apple, ibm, intel, etc. ) the most logical thing is the value for dollar.
To me it is not prudent to empty my bank account for any apple product when they can be emulated using a pc configuration (google hackintosh for more details) or pay extra for a graphics card I don't need for business use.
A guarantee is pointless in my view as the majority systems will be out benchmarked before the hardware starts failing on you.
Tomygun is right about one thing; deciding the use for the system. Do a little researching on what will fill that need at a the right cost!
To summarize I feel it is crucial to do a little research and get the best value for dollar on the system that fits your needs best.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.