Recommended Posts

Asus A8N-SLi Deluxe

AMD64 3000+ Winchester (at least until I can get an AMD64 x2 4800+ ^_^)

2x 256mb DDR Corsair XMS3200XL Platinum TwinX 2-2-2-5-1T (Dual Channel)

XFX GeForce 6600GT 128mb PCI-e

2x 120gb Maxtor Diamond Max Plus 9 (7200, 8) @ Raid 0

Antec Neopower 480

Asus 1608P DVD+/-RW DL

Audigy 2

3.5" Internal 9 in 1 Card Reader

Dell 17" TFT

Cooler Master Centurion Case With Cooler master True power 450 watt PSU

AMD Athlon 3500+ S939 (Oc'ed to 3700+. Zalman Cu CPU cooler)

1024mb PC3200 Corsair DDR SDRAM

160GB Maxtor 7200RPM SATA HD

Asus A8V Deluxe Mobo

16X Sony DVD+/-RW DL

Soundblaster Audigy 2 Gamer

XFX 6800 GT (Oc'ed To Ultra clocks. Used w/ Zalman VGA cooler)

Logitech X-530 Speaker system

Saitek Gamers Keyboard/Logitech MX510

Used Dell 19 inch CRT monitor (Hey, it may be a dell, but it's nice!...)

I love my pc. <3333 :p

Opteron 144

ASUS SK8N

WD Caviar SE 250GB x 2 (no raid, need the storage)

Maxtor 120GB

2GB(4x 512 in dual channel) PC3200 ECC Crucial RAM

GeForce 6800 Ultra

nVida Quadro2 MXR (on PCI)

Pioneer A05 DVDRW Drive

Creative Audigy 2 ZS Platinum

Lian Li PC60 case w/ Antec 550w PSU

Windows 2003 x64/Windows XP (32bit)/Ubuntu AMD64

AMD Athlon 64 3500+ (.90nm) @ 2.8GHz

DFi Lan Party nF4 Ultra-D (SLi modded)

1GB (2 x 512MB) OCZ PC3200VX @ 250FSB w/ 2-2-2-5 (1t)

X850XT @ 640/650 (PCI-E)

(x2) 120GB Seagate on Raid 0

250GB Western Digital (backup)

(x2) NEC ND-3520A 16x Dual Layer

Creative Labs Audigy 2 ZS

Antec NeoPower 480

Lian Li PC-75B

(x2) Danger Den Black Ice Xtreme 120MM Radiator

Danger Den s939 TDX Block

Danger Den Maze 4 GPU Block

Danger Den 5 1/2" Single Bay Res

Danger Den DD12V-D4 Pump (1,400 Liters Per Hour / 370 Gallons)

Tygon Tubing through out

Lights On

100_0822.jpg

Lights Off

100_0834.jpg

Enjoy ;)

too bad the CPU's arent TRUE 64bit processors...

585846270[/snapback]

Errr.. why would anyone want a true 64bit cpu? Maybe in couple years.. but for now AMD's solution is pretty much ideal.

Made some changes to my system (most parts arrived now, cpu, lcd and a raptor sata drive will arrive on monday)

3700+ San Diego (2200MHz, 1MB L2)

DFI LanParty NF4 SLI-DR mobo (geez, dfi packed insane amount of stuff with it)

OCZ GoldVX PC4000 Dual Channel kit, 2X512MB

eVGA GeForce Ultra

Just ordered me a new notebook with the following:

Microsoft Windows XP Professional with SP2

AMD Athlon 64 4000+ (2.4GHz/1MB l2 Cache)

15.4" WXGA BrightView Widescreen (1280x800)

128MB ATI RADEON XPRESS 200M w/Hypermemory

2.0GB DDR SDRAM (2x1024MB)

80 GB 5400 RPM Hard Drive

DVD+/-RW/R & CD-RW Combo w/Double Layer Support

54g Integ. Broadcom 802.11b/g WLAN & Bluetooth

2x 12 Cell Lithium Ion Battery

I'm probably going to install Windows XP Professional x64 and Ubuntu 5.04 x64.

Just ordered me a new notebook with the following:

Microsoft Windows XP Professional with SP2 

AMD Athlon 64 4000+ (2.4GHz/1MB l2 Cache) 

15.4" WXGA BrightView Widescreen (1280x800) 

128MB ATI RADEON XPRESS 200M w/Hypermemory 

2.0GB DDR SDRAM (2x1024MB) 

80 GB 5400 RPM Hard Drive 

DVD+/-RW/R & CD-RW Combo w/Double Layer Support 

54g Integ. Broadcom 802.11b/g WLAN & Bluetooth 

2x 12 Cell Lithium Ion Battery

I'm probably going to install Windows XP Professional x64 and Ubuntu 5.04 x64.

585887546[/snapback]

Sounds more like a desktop :p

The parts haven't arrived yet, but this is what I will be building in the next few days:

Athlon 64 3500+ Socket 939

MSI K8N Neo4 Platinum

ATi Radeon X850XT 256mb PCI-E

1GB of Kingston PC3200 (2x512MB)

Zalman CNPS7700-AlCu

80GB Seagate Barracuda (7200rpm)

40GB Maxtor (5400rpm)

400W PSU

17" Samsung SyncMaster 753s Flat CRT

Lite-On CD-R/W (48x12x48)

16x DVD-ROM

The harddrives, optical drives (CD-R/W and DVD-ROM), PSU and monitor are from my old computer. I'm going to be replacing the harddrives with a 160GB SATA drive and the CD-R/W with the LG GSA-4163B DVD burner in the near future. Those parts were a little out of my budget when I ordered the other parts. :(

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Linux 7.1 arrives with an NTFS overhaul and major hardware performance boosts by Paul Hill The founder of the Linux kernel has just announced the availability of Linux 7.1. This is a stable version of the kernel that will now be tested by various Linux distributions before it is shipped to users through update managers. Some users, like those on Debian, for example, might not get it for a long time, if at all, while Fedora users can expect it in the near future. With Linux 7.1 out on time, the merge window for Linux 7.2 is now open, giving contributors the opportunity to send in major new features that have been waiting for the last two months. Torvalds warned that he is currently travelling and will be in another timezone, so timing for the merge window may be irregular due to timezone differences and limited internet access. Torvalds said that he has already fetched early pull requests to allow him to do some offline work, but the travel could still cause disruption. Right now, he is not planning to extend the release, but did consider it. He said he might later regret not extending, though. In terms of this last week of development for Linux 7.1, Torvalds said there were no major or alarming changes. This week consisted mostly of smaller driver updates to GPU, networking, and sound, networking fixes, trace tooling fixes, and misc minor fixes. The shortlog this week lists fixes for driver bugs, memory leaks, I/O and USB fixes, networking and RDMA fixes, DRM/graphics fixes, and tooling and verification improvements. Specific fixes include USB series heap-overflow and buffer overflow fixes, and multiple use-after-free, memory-leak, and refcount corrections across subsystems such as i2c, zram, gpio, and net. There are fixes for graphics drivers, including amdgpu, i915, and virtio, as well as hypervisor and virtualization tweaks affecting mshv, vmbus, and hyperv. According to Phoronix, anyone running Linux 7.1 should look out for the new NTFS driver, Intel FRED for improved performance on Panther Lake and future CPUs, faster graphics with Intel Arc Battlemage, and improvements for older AMD Radeon GPUs. If you are running Linux on your computer and everything is fine, then you don’t need to worry about updating to Linux 7.1 as a priority; just wait for it to be pushed to you. If you have tried Linux on hardware but it didn’t work properly, trying again with a distro that uses Linux 7.1 could cause Linux to work on your machine, thanks to the new hardware support.
    • you can also do this with this tool: PowerSettingsExplorer made by mbk1969 at 3dguru forum.. I found it by accident researching on modern standby and annoying quirks of it in 2022
    • AB Download Manager 1.9.1 by Razvan Serea AB Download Manager is an open-source, feature-rich download manager designed to accelerate downloads, organize files efficiently, and provide seamless control over downloads. With support for multiple connections, resume capability, and an intuitive interface, it enhances the downloading experience for users seeking speed and reliability. The software integrates with various browsers, enabling quick link grabbing and batch downloading. It supports HTTP, HTTPS, and FTP protocols, ensuring broad compatibility with different file sources. Users can schedule downloads, set speed limits, and categorize files automatically for better organization. AB Download Manager is lightweight yet powerful, making it a great alternative to proprietary download managers. Its open-source nature allows developers to contribute, customize, and improve the software as needed. Whether you're downloading large files, managing multiple downloads at once, or seeking an ad-free experience, this tool offers a practical and efficient solution. Key features of AB Download Manager: Multi-Connection Support – Accelerates downloads by splitting files into multiple segments. Resume Capability – Allows paused or interrupted downloads to be resumed without starting over. Batch Downloading – Supports downloading multiple files at once for improved efficiency. Browser Integration – Captures download links directly from browsers for seamless operation. HTTP, HTTPS, and FTP Support – Ensures compatibility with a wide range of file sources. Download Scheduling – Enables users to automate downloads at specific times. Speed Limiting – Lets users control bandwidth usage for optimized performance. File Categorization – Automatically organizes downloaded files into designated folders. User-Friendly Interface – Simple and intuitive design for easy navigation. Cross-Platform Compatibility – Works on multiple operating systems. Ad-Free Experience – No intrusive ads or tracking for a clean user experience. AB Download Manager 1.9.1 changelog: Added An option to customize notification sounds (#1259) Fixed Ongoing notification was laggy on Samsung One UI devices (#1269) Improved Updated Translations Minor UI/UX improvements Download: AB Download Manager 1.9.1 | Portable | ~80.0 MB (Open Source) Download: ARM64 | Portable ARM64 | Android Links: AB Download Manager Website | Github Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • watching him because of the Mr Klinton cat
    • yup dude, ADS on this website are terrible
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      rolfus earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Leroy Jethro Gibbs earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Conversation Starter
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Month Later
      AndreaB earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      agatameier earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      506
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      196
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      140
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      90
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      81
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!