Ain't so bad. It's the stuff in the bathtub that's weird. I wouldn't post something you wouldn't click, Lunar.
Oh I see. 500 lbs. was the mass of the gel, not the mass of the test subject.
Ain't so bad. It's the stuff in the bathtub that's weird. I wouldn't post something you wouldn't click, Lunar.
Is that you in the lower right flying the drone?
When the largest EC2 instance isn't enough....this is going to stay pegged on this process for 40 hours+
View attachment 1015
This family includes G2 instances intended for graphics and general purpose GPU compute applications.
Features:
- High Frequency Intel Xeon E5-2670 (Sandy Bridge) Processors
- High-performance NVIDIA GPUs, each with 1,536 CUDA cores and 4GB of video memory
- Each GPU features an on-board hardware video encoder designed to support up to eight real-time HD video streams (720p@30fps) or up to four real-time full HD video streams (1080p@30fps)
- Support for low-latency frame capture and encoding for either the full operating system or select render targets, enabling high-quality interactive streaming experiences
Model GPUs vCPU Mem (GiB) SSD Storage (GB) g2.2xlarge 1 8 15 1 x 60 g2.8xlarge
4 32 60 2 x 120
Thankfully no.Anybody ever have the non Hopkins lymphoma? Several employees and former seem to be getting it lately.
I got hit with Microcenter's odd CPU buying policy today. :skepo: The sales guy told me I could only buy one CPU and wouldn't sell me both CPUs I wanted (two different models). I challenged him a bit and said the website would let me buy both (I could add both to my cart for in store reservation and check out). He went to check and came back and said their policy is one CPU per customer per month. Their flyer says, "Limit 1 per household at this price.". The website says, "...When an item is limited, the number of items you’ll be able to purchase cannot exceed the quantity limitation, whether you choose in-store pickup or shipping. This limit encompasses all orders placed under the same customer name, credit card number and/or shipping or billing address. If the stated limit is exceeded, your order will be adjusted or cancelled so that all customers have an equal chance to purchase these amazing deals." Both of those make it seem per CPU model, not one total CPU. :scratch:Yeah but Fry's definitely isn't so bad when it's selling an i7 CPU for $100 less than Amazon or at least price matching what the local Microcenter is doing. Which is really handy since Microcenter doesn't like selling anyone two of the same CPU in a month.
If anyone here has any socket AM2 CPUs could they send me a PM? I'm in somewhat desperate need of an upgrade.
I went back after work and picked up the 2nd CPU. It was waiting for me at the pickup desk. I paid & left. No one said anything.Yup. I used to buy one and get right back in line to buy the next. Same cashier, still doesn't care. Just can't be on the same receipt.
So, then what do you mean by glacially slow?
BTW, how do you know your eMachines will support any of these faster CPUs?
You never know for sure with Lunar...I doubt you're pregnant.
Slower at what?It's... well, it's much slower than I was expecting from any sort of dual-core machine. Honestly, this feels slower than a Pentium D, and almost as bad as one of the old dual-core Atoms. I'd compare the two but I don't have any suitable motherboards for my Pentium D 820 CPU.
It's hard to say. If they didn't offer the CPU in a configuration from eMachines, I wouldn't bet on it being supported. It might be, it might not be. It also might not have enough current capability or a power supply capable of feeding a faster chip that uses more power.EDIT: I actually did find some board literature. Here. It doesn't go into specifics of what exactly it supports as far as CPUs go, but I think it's reasonable to assume that it would at least operate with faster Athlon 64 X2s in place, isn't it? Or am I completely wrong here?
Slower at what?
It's hard to say. If they didn't offer the CPU in a configuration from eMachines, I wouldn't bet on it being supported. It might be, it might not be. It also might not have enough current capability or a power supply capable of feeding a faster chip that uses more power.
You're 17. You can get yourself a part time job, save some money from that job, and buy yourself a decent computer. A nice i3, 8gB DDR3, a decent motherboard, and a good ~250gB SSD shouldn't cost you more than about $350.
It just feels rather sluggish in general. I can't really put it into words, it makes me feel like the whole thing is... bloated.
You're probably right about the board. It seems rather hit-or-miss. I don't want to get something only to have it not work correctly or at all.
You make a fair point about the job though. As soon as I have my permit, that's what I'm going to do. I'm hoping to save the money up until the middle of this year and put together something that will last me a good five years or so.
Why does it have 2 PERC 6i cards? With only 8 HDDs you only need 1. Or did it used to have more than 8 HDDs?NAS system:
CPU: AMD X2 4600+ (Windsor)
Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-M57SLI-S4 Motherboard
Memory: 2x 1GB Corsair XMS DDR2 800 (4-4-4-12)
Memory: 2x 2GB Crucial Ballistix DDR2 800 (4-4-4-12)
Power: PC Power & Cooling Silencer 750 Quad
Case: COOLER MASTER Centurion 590 (black)
IcyDock: 2x – MB455SPF-B 5 in 3 SATA Internal Raid Back-plane
Storage: 8x Samsung 1.5TB 5400 RPM EcoGreen F2 HD154UI
2 x Dell Perc 6i RAID Controller with battery backup
4x SFF 8484 SAS to SATA Cables
2x PC Bracket back plates that fit the Perc 6i into a standard slot in a case.
2x Scythe 40mm chipset fan (for Perc 6i)
I'm still not sure I understand exactly. I used Windows 8.1 on a Celeron 2557U with 8GB of DDR3-1600 and a 250gB Micron BX100 mSATA SSD and it was quick and responsive. I gave the system to my parents to use as their primary computer. Sure, I wouldn't want to use it for any CPU intensive tasks like x264 encoding or the like, but for surfing the web and what not it was just as usable and snappy as any of the i7 or i5 systems I have.It just feels rather sluggish in general. I can't really put it into words, it makes me feel like the whole thing is... bloated.
Why does it have 2 PERC 6i cards? With only 8 HDDs you only need 1. Or did it used to have more than 8 HDDs?
I'm interested in the two IcyDock MB455SPF-B 5 in 3 SATA Internal Raid Backplanes if you're looking to get rid of them.
I have a few extra 5i and 6i's lying around. I have two of the 6i's in use, and have at least one spare. All of my 5i's are out of use except for one which is in an infrequently used system. I have two of the M5016's. I will probably pick up a 3rd. My backup server is going to need a capacity upgrade too using the 2nd card, and I'll want to have a spare card in case one dies.I originally planned to run 12-16 drives but never got around to making it work so I kept the extra Perc as a backup. It's sat idle for the most part except when I upgrade firmware.
Sure, shoot me a PM with what you want for them.Sure, I don't plan on using the IcyDock bays any more so if you want them let me know. They worked fine for me and weren't too noisy but that's subjective.
If I took one of the boards, I'd have to have the case to go with it. I have no full ATX cases at the ready, though I have a couple mATX cases. The chip I wont need, because the board supposedly supports AM3/AM2+ chips (with the caveat that the system bus speed downgrades from HT3.0(5200MT/s) to HT1.0(2000MT/s). Basically, it will run the chip's hypertransport bus as fast as it possibly can for AM2. I have an Athlon II x4 thats sitting in a box and looking rather lonely and stupid just sitting there.
I may yet try to put that on this board, just to see what will happen. Worst case scenario, it blows up, but what's more likely to happen is that it just won't POST, and resumes working properly with the 4400+ back in. I should have updated my BIOS before moving to Linux, that might have made this a bit easier.
Don't worry too much about it. If I get the other chip working on this board, I'm just going to use that until I put together the new box in June or July. I'm graduating this year, too -- my family is big enough that all together I will probably have some sort of graduation gift. Could put that towards it too, but I'm more likely to put that in savings and keep it around in case I need it for something important when I'm living in the dorms at college.
Even if I don't get the chip working with this board, I'll probably just grin and bear it until I can get the new machine as well -- I completely forgot about this when I made the original request, stupidly enough. I feel like I've made a bit of an idiot of myself.
So that covers what, all the systems you've built in the last 6 months? :rofl:Cases are not mandatory. Only one of my last dozen PCs ever ended up in a case.