time said:
Surely Greg's sock puppet goes by the name "Rambo"?
Santilli said:
So, I hope the replacement works, since it's likely to sit in a box, until this P2 400mhz, 7 year old Dell dies, which thanks to a wonderful Intel 440BX chipset based motherboard, and passive cooling, seems will never happen.
I have a 7 year old P450/440BX - not a Dell or Supermicro - which ran 24x7 up until about a year ago (now I just turn it on occasionally).
Yes, I do wonder why you think sometimes value is in Supermicro :wink:
Time and labor are why I value Supermicro, and Intel stuff, if you'll excuse the pun :mrgrn:
By the way, that Dell XPS 400 was a little over 3000 dollars, and looking back, I could have put together a far better computer for a lot less money, if I'd known then what I know now. Or, I could have bought a Soyo motherboard, and had intermitent freezes and hangs, that I could never figure out.
By the way, I also have a P3 450, 440BX motherboard machine, put together out of parts from a failed startup in this area. I've put a Kyro II
in it, with an ATA drive, I think it's a Quantum LM, IIRC, and I use that as a gaming rig for my kids, and, it's worked out fine with games like Diablo II, etc. 512 mb of ram, and it was about 300 dollars. Great machine for a teacher, in a bad school...
Buck: I do seem to be cursed with ATA. Reminds me of the movie The Mummy Returns, where the guy is saying everything is cursed, but, my experience with ATA has been pretty close to that. I figure I've lost about 4000 dollars in labor, and parts, trying to do what I could have done for half that cost, using scsi.
It seems Gigabyte also was concerned, since when I checked, ewiz said Gigabyte wanted to test the board to find out why the ATA channel had failed. I thought it might have been a Windows XP 64 driver problem, and I told them that.
My SO is very hard to work with on computers. It seems everytime I try something on her machine, I either end up reinstalling windows, or get some sort of weird conflict, and this can extend to software as well. I try and keep it minimal, since the machine doesn't have a lot of ram, 384, or
processor speed.
She thinks the Antec P 160 case is REALLY cool, and that's the machine I'm typing on right now. Down the road, I'll have to go for the bling bling Antec case, use the Gigabyte motherboard, and probably XP Pro, but, the more I think about it, I might just stay with 2000 on her machine.
Anyway, all I need is a LSI 320 scsi card, avaliable around 100 bucks, and I have the cable, terminator, and 4 Cheetah 15.2 18 gig drives, actually maybe 5, and one more 36 gig refurb 15.3 Cheetah.
Probably put the 18 gigs in her machine, since she doesn't use more then around 9-10 gigs of software.
That should be a bump that lasts her a long while...
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