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  1. ddrueding

    Evidently, I will be buying a $100 sound card in 2005

    I'm actually waiting for this one. Though it says it uses a creative chipset...
  2. ddrueding

    Something Random

    Hardly ;)
  3. ddrueding

    Something Random

    Groping at public venues and other naughtiness maintains excitement in a relationship, and that is important to keeping a relationship healthy/successful. The occasional reach at a cafe, restaurant bathroom, or backseat on a long drive is important! ;)
  4. ddrueding

    AMD launches K10 dual core

    That was my thought. I have never been this uninterested in a new chip.
  5. ddrueding

    Something Random

    The screaming monkey in your luggage is not amusing airport security, your plug is too short (not reading into this one ;)), and you need a doctor?
  6. ddrueding

    32"-37" LCD HDTV Choice

    My goal is to not be able to see the pixels. My 1024x768 projector throws a 70" image, and with my vision and our normal viewing distance, they are barely visible. Therefore having just a little more resolution, or a slightly smaller image would be ideal. If the pixels on a 720P screen at your...
  7. ddrueding

    End of the World As We Know It

    I'm still thinking that the bottom will be about Dow 7400 in mid-2010. Of course, the climb out will be painfully slow (5%?), and then we'll do another bubble.
  8. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    Neither do I, I'm hungry enough for conversation to welcome it from anywhere. Though I must admit, I don't read completely through all the posts.
  9. ddrueding

    32"-37" LCD HDTV Choice

    Borderline, but OK. Mainly, look at the size of the pixels, and figure out if you can see something that small from your average viewing distance.
  10. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    Go to settings and options, and there is a line "edit ignore list"
  11. ddrueding

    Useful SATA utility for hotswapping

    Very interested, thank you. My system has an eSATA plug on the back, and I use it to work on bare drives pulled from other systems (data recovery, cloning, virus removal, etc). Having to reboot my main workstation always annoys me.
  12. ddrueding

    Do you think Sony will kill Blu-ray?

    Not really. HD was broken much sooner, and permanently. It may have claimed to have DRM, but it didn't stop me, and that is why I chose it. Now that BR has been re-sealed, I have once again put off making the switch. If they had left it alone, I would already have a 1080P projector and be buying...
  13. ddrueding

    New VMWare Server

    Yup, I don't like how it sinks it's claws into everything all the time, but I think they all do that.
  14. ddrueding

    RFQ: DIY driving simulator

    The GT5 is interesting, but that projector is awesome. $100k for 4096 x 2160 (8.8MP) @ 10,000 lumens, just a lens for it is $10k. Farking awesome.
  15. ddrueding

    RFQ: DIY driving simulator

    I almost bought a PS2 just for the GT action; I didn't want anything else, just that. It pisses me off that they don't have a PC version.
  16. ddrueding

    New Server Systems

    What I really like about VM is that it provides the fastest and most complete backup solution of all time. Just backup the entire VM nightly, and know that you can get their server up and running within minutes. Just install the player on a workstation and load it up; sure it will be slow, but...
  17. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    I actually have a complaint about it for games. Many of the games I've played recently have useful hints and storyline items on the loading screen, and I never see them. I think that is a nice problem to have, but still annoying on some level.
  18. ddrueding

    New Server Systems

    I'll second Howell's VM recommendation, and point out that ESXi is also free for 2 sockets, though I know you don't like the UI.
  19. ddrueding

    USB-to-NAS device

    I doubt that. There are some real dogs in the SSD world, and I bet that the USB port is not the restriction in this device. It also uses some of the strong points of solid state; silence and low power consumption. I am interested in this thing.
  20. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    Same here. SP3 all around, no issues.
  21. ddrueding

    Netbooks?

    For the record, performing just the first fix on the list fixed the wireless: sudo aptitude install linux-backports-modules-intrepid This is the laptop that I wanted when I paid $2500 for the ASUS R2H-A1 a year ago (that is now serving as a glorified remote control and sometimes camera remote...
  22. ddrueding

    Netbooks?

    Meh, the tweaks show how to make it work. I don't get the spiffy indicator light, but it can only be a matter of time.
  23. ddrueding

    Seagate: now with less warranty

    They are right, 3 years is the standard. But this means they are no longer trying to maintain the image of a superior product. Either they can't afford to, or they know they don't have one, and can't afford to.
  24. ddrueding

    Netbooks?

    I now have an Acer Aspire One (1.6Ghz Atom, 8GB SSD, 512MB RAM) and a 1GB chip is on the way (1.5GB total). The OS that it shipped with would be satisfactory for non-geeks in a stand-alone environment. It had direct links to all the common tasks, and it booted within seconds. Of course, I'm...
  25. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    There also seem to be a number of large folders that are 64-bit specific.
  26. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    Wow, it scrambled that big-time. A decent sized PNG got shrunk and JPGed...ouch. I'll try again:
  27. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    Well, here is my windows folder...any clues?
  28. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    My windows folder is 5.8GB, and games these days seem to be in the 5GB (latest NFS) -10GB (GRID) range. 32GB would be tight, but 64GB doable I think. Merc, did you slipstream all the updates and drivers onto that install? I wonder if there are less temp\setup files on there...
  29. ddrueding

    New Server Systems

    I had a Compaq Proliant 7U server out here, and it was the most reliable thing I'd ever seen. Shut down twice in 8 years for relocation and never rebooted (windows 2000 and never on the internet). In fact, it was still running brilliantly the day I had it hauled away. We overpaid for reliability...
  30. ddrueding

    New Server Systems

    Yeah, it just isn't cost effective to move to Xeons or FBDIMMs. The cost per Core/Mhz or GB of RAM goes off the charts once you go there.
  31. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    I've only had spacemonger crash when I delete stuff from inside it. For just displaying the relative size and navigating, I haven't had it crash yet.
  32. ddrueding

    New Server Systems

    All the Tyan barebones I've seen use 3.5" SATA disks. Do you have a link for the 32GB variant? I might have to take a look at those... They are a minor PITA to open on the rack. When they are slid out to the stops, the single screw at the rear is just obstructed by the item above it on the...
  33. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    In case anyone doesn't have it, here is spacemonger. I can never seem to find it online. IMHO, it is very useful for identifying missing GBs.
  34. ddrueding

    New Server Systems

    Sorry, I must have underestimated their computing needs. I couldn't imagine an office of 10-15 people putting a dent in even what I listed, considering just one of them is handling exchange, AD, and an accounting system for 300 in seperate VMs.
  35. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    I noticed your windows folder alone is over 4GB, so is mine. I assume Merc knows some things that we don't?
  36. ddrueding

    New Server Systems

    I've had really good luck with SATA drives in server environments. IMHO, SAS is only needed in the top 10% of performance cases (and in those cases, just make the jump to SSD). I've found that as quad-core CPUs became available, multi-socket motherboards (and the chips that run them) have...
  37. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    Spacemonger says the bulk of it is games. Codemasters: GRID, Need for Speed Undercover, Red Alert 3, and Sins of a Solar Empire. But Photoshop CS4 isn't small, either. Then there is the working space for my photo stitching and scratch disk (~20GB). The advantage is that there doesn't seem to be...
  38. ddrueding

    Something Random

    Well, happy 32nd anyway. May the best be yet to come.
  39. ddrueding

    Way to install SCSI boot disk w/o a floppy drive?

    It's called "slipstreaming". The easiest way to do it is with nLite. Here is what it involves: 1. Copy the entire OS CD to disk 2. Download the floppy driver to a location on the hard drive. 3. Run nLite, point it towards your installation, and add the driver when it tells you 4. Burn the...
  40. ddrueding

    RFQ: DIY driving simulator

    Funny how certain people keep saying that, and I find it not to be the case. Maybe it's an audiophile thing? I have had a fair number of mid-range speakers before; everything from base level Samsung theater-in-a-box to midrange Onkyo stuff, to the stupidly overpriced Bose gear. The quality of...
  41. ddrueding

    New VMWare Server

    VirtualBox is probably better for that purpose.
  42. ddrueding

    RFQ: DIY driving simulator

    I have a thing for AQUOS just because I've had better experience with them than the others I've tried. They likely won't be the final choice, but they are a good midrange placeholder until I find one with a smaller (unmarked, all-black) bezel. Those seats are not normal seats. They are...
  43. ddrueding

    New VMWare Server

    I haven't used it, but isn't that what the VM Player is for? Is it any better for your purposes?
  44. ddrueding

    RFQ: DIY driving simulator

    Fortunately, that is after penalties and interest.
  45. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    Not as quick as my 16GB Mtron parts; they went from $1300 to spares on my shelf in about 8 months.
  46. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    I use the double-sided tape with foam in the middle. It made more sense when I was doing it with spinning 2.5" HDDs (vibration isolation), but I still use the same stuff now.
  47. ddrueding

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    I've grown into my 80GB Intel SSD, and my current install is about 60GB. There is no way I'm scaling down to 32GB. 64GB, maybe, but I don't know if the mothboard soft-RAID could handle the 400MB/s of a RAID-0.
  48. ddrueding

    dSLR thread

    I actually meant the 14-24/2.8, though he also had the 28-70/2.8, and the already mentioned 85/1.4. I think he shot about 30GB of 12MP RAW while he was here.
  49. ddrueding

    dSLR thread

    When I said, "only guy around here" I meant literally around here. I knew two others who had Canon gear, and we would swap lenses and try out stuff, but one got out completely and the other switched. I still think the 5DII is the right camera for me, but I don't know when I'll be able to try one...
  50. ddrueding

    dSLR thread

    Bah, the guy ditched all his Canon gear and brought a pair of D700s and an army of lenses I wasn't familiar with. There was an 18-something F2.8 and an 85/1.4 that were very good. Now I'm the only guy around here with Canon gear. He specifically said that Canon can do 80% of what Nikon can do...
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