ddrueding
Fixture
Santilli said:Ok:
Being cheap is my specialty.
Now I'm definatly a pot calling a kettle black, but IIRC you are a fan of SCSI and Supermicro, correct?
Santilli said:Ok:
Being cheap is my specialty.
CougTek said:Ugly liar. You have the Seasonic S12-600HT, which is a 600W PSU, not the 430W model from Seasonic. I'll tell your mamma.Santilli said:Try and get a 400w or 500w, if you are going dual core, Seasonic power supply. More expensive, but great specs, and the 400W is silent, at least in my machine.
ddrueding said:Santilli said:Ok:
Being cheap is my specialty.
Now I'm definatly a pot calling a kettle black, but IIRC you are a fan of SCSI and Supermicro, correct?
Howell said:ddrueding said:Santilli said:Ok:
Being cheap is my specialty.
Now I'm definatly a pot calling a kettle black, but IIRC you are a fan of SCSI and Supermicro, correct?
What Santilli meant is that his specialty is being irrationally cheap. Santilli would dumpster dive for MB screws to mount his Supermicro motherboard.
Howell said:Santilli would dumpster dive for MB screws to mount his Supermicro motherboard.
I agree with pretty much everything Greg said in this post.Santilli said:Drop the dual core cpu. They are WAY too expensive right now. They should drop considerably, and, it appears currently, the AMD 3000+ Venice core is the sweet spot for value and performance. You can always add dual core later.
Saves about 500 dollars.
I've been experimenting with XP 64-bit on an nForce 4 rig with Radeon X300 PCI-e graphics, and had no problems whatsoever with drivers. I have to ask, why would you need a driver for a 3Com 3C905? The nForce 4 integrated gigabit adaptor is far, far superior.Bozo said:I'd stay away from XP 64bit for awhile. I have tried both it and 2003 Server 64bit and drivers are almost non-existent. I could not find a driver for a 3Com 3C905C NIC. Pathetic.
Videodrivers are iffy...
mubs said:Santilli, you keep harping that dual-cores are expensive. Did you even read my last post, just before you made the first of your big ones?
Will Rickards said:I was thinking of a small scsi drive (18-36GB) for booting from and various other uses. Just seems a lot of money to invest to go there. Maybe I will invest in everything else (monitor, disk subsystem, video card, case, burner, etc) and kind of go cheap on the processor and ram for now. The new AMD socket wasn't bothering me - I wouldn't mind being outdated in an x2 4400+. But you all are starting to make some sense. I could always swap motherboard, ram and processor later.... I'll crunch some numbers this weekend and plot out my options.
A brainless reviewer said:Single core are history.
Remarkably perspicacious for someone with orange hair.Tea said:In this game, you never, ever fix next year's problem with this year's money.
This is exactly what I've been wanting to tell Will, but the little orange one has been very eloquent while I struggled to crystallize my thoughts. I can vouch for Tea's perspicacity (nice one, Time; that one went into my passive vocab many decades ago); I've actually been there, done that, and know now that "upgrade later" just really isn't going to happen for a host of reasons.In this game, you never, ever fix next year's problem with this year's money. You wll spend a heap, get no immediate benefit from it (except the usual small volume bleeding edge grief), and by the time you buy that second processor (if you ever buy that second processor):
* the board will be out of date
* the current equivalent will be half the price and twice as reliable
* the CPU to match your current CPU will be out of date (if you can still get one at all).
Santilli said:Video cards are going to PCI-E 16X. ANOTHER AREA of bleeding edge.
Ape, PCI-E ain't PCI-X. PCI-E stands for PCI-Express, while PCI-X means only PCI-X. Do not confuse them or you'll confuse us.Fur ball said:Tannin is happy to build systems using PCI-X. That means that, by defenition, it ain't bleeding edge, and is probably horribly out of date already.
Bozo said:2. We have over 100 PCs with the 3C905 cards installed...
3. We use a program for backups over a network that has limited NIC drivers. The 3C905 being one of them...
I have yet to get the NIC that is built into the Intel MBs to work either...
Tea said:Tannin could count the number of PCI-X systems he has built, seen, played with, or watched go past on a delivery truck quite easily without taking his shoes and sockz off...
Most people are still buying VESA...
Tea said:Tannin is happy to build systems using PCI-X. That means that, by defenition, it ain't bleeding edge, and is probably horribly out of date already.
Spend big dollars to buy a dual proc motherboard and only put one CPU in it? You'd be mad! In this game, you never, ever fix next year's problem with this year's money. You wll spend a heap, get no immediate benefit from it (except the usual small volume bleeding edge grief), and by the time you buy that second processor (if you ever buy that second processor):
* the board will be out of date
* the current equivalent will be half the price and twice as reliable
* the CPU to match your current CPU will be out of date (if you can still get one at all).
Tell that nasty Santilli man to take his snake oil somewhere else. You've already got a bridge.
Tea said:Most people are still buying VESA
Tea said:Tea said:Most people are still buying VESA
Aggggargh! I didn't even have any scotch Mr iGary! I'm just getting all my words confuddled up lately. I meant the outgoing standard video thingie (AGP), I juzt slipped into the wrong decade. Besides, the word "VESA" is easy to mix up with the word "AGP" because they are both sort of pointy on the first letter. (OK, they are not actual words, but don't split hairs on me.)
PS. READ MY SIG.
blakerwry said:were you ripping the same DVD, using the same program/settings, and do both NEC drives have the same firmware?