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Apple iMac 20" 2.4GHz 1GB RAM 320GB HDD Superdrive

Apple iPhone 8GB Jailbroken + Unlocked

Wacom Bamboo tablet

Hyundai 32" 1080i HDTV

XBOX 360 Pro w/HDMI

Some Doors albums

Photography coursework workbook

:D

sexy keyboard :drool: :woot:

couldnt you just easily do that in photoshop?

Yes you can - there's a tool in Photoshop called Photo Merge. If memory serves me correctly, it's under File -> Automate -> Photo Merge. All you do is select the photos you want to use, and Photoshop does the rest. :)

Here is my Not so special POS desk that I got around the same time last year from staples for $70. Great deal, good desk but not good enough for me. This is my 7th desk I went by now. Well Staples being the nice guys, they sent me a $25 gift certificate good towards any purchase over $50, So tomorrow I will get a new desk.

Anyway back to the good parts, here is my desk as you can see what ever is on the picture with my perfume collection that I never get to use.

dsc01042ry3.th.jpg

Your going to love this one, check out what happened to this desk. My printer used to be under there somewhere, took it out so it wouldn't get damaged when I am pounding my.... ok back to the story.

dsc01041xy9.th.jpg

and this infamous shot, look at that!!! damn I never taught a female body could be this strong..

dsc01040kp6.th.jpg

and for the website it is poopreports, some crazy stories over there if you want to read.

Here is my Not so special POS desk that I got around the same time last year from staples for $70. Great deal, good desk but not good enough for me. This is my 7th desk I went by now. Well Staples being the nice guys, they sent me a $25 gift certificate good towards any purchase over $50, So tomorrow I will get a new desk.

Anyway back to the good parts, here is my desk as you can see what ever is on the picture with my perfume collection that I never get to use.

Your going to love this one, check out what happened to this desk. My printer used to be under there somewhere, took it out so it wouldn't get damaged when I am pounding my.... ok back to the story.

and this infamous shot, look at that!!! damn I never taught a female body could be this strong..

and for the website it is poopreports, some crazy stories over there if you want to read.

I enlarged the first pic and looked at the wall,door and knew you had to live in nyc.....

then i looked at your location.....(and i was right)

PS.wat do you do with ur desk, do you punch it wen your mad

I live in NYC as well.

here is my new desk & chair (got it yesterday)

100_2059.jpg

100_2070.jpg

100_2073.jpg

yes i always keep it that way, just so you don't think I prepeared everything for the shots. all I have is

Emporio Armani glasses and case

PSP

Sony Ericsson W580i

HP laptop

modem

linksys wrt54G

First off, here is what I set up in the kitchen, figuring as I never use the kitchen table to eat, might as well use it to nerd out.

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From the back.... cable management is redundant considering the lack of places to put it all.

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In the family room, where I watch the tube, I set up a projector off my DVR. I also have my Wii and dusty PS2 hooked up to it. I am going to eventually put a Mac Mini (with EyeTV) in here and dump the DVR. I guess this doesn't exactly qualify as a workstation until I hook a computer to it, sorry to bend the rules a little.

2287650000_512eb339f0.jpg

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Here is the wall that the projector hits, I painted it white using a primer paint known as Killz (sp)

Turned off, so that you can get a reference:

2287650708_15e2ec5090.jpg

Turned on (CSI Season 8 premiere episode)

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Then, on to the upstairs, where most of the real work happens.

From the left, there are domain controller/file server, development box, work VPN box and flavor-of-the -month box. On the floor is a G4 800 that I cheated to get Leopard to install via the firmware mod. The 5 MyBooks all connect into the file server. Airport extreme on the shelf upstairs, Airport Express on the projector downstairs. I use WDS to keep them interconnected, there is a switch by the projector that connects to the Airport Express, hence, anything that I plug into the switch is on my LAN. Everything else is wireless.

2287651618_785081560b.jpg

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This mess is 2 years in the making, yet I still have more things that I want to do when I have a bit more cash.

Enjoy!

pdmcmahon, I love your projection tv setup! Couple of questions, Does it work well in the daytime with natural lighting conditoins? Also approx how much does the projector cost? I would really like to do something like this in my living room, but we have alot of light during the day (several skylights throughout the house).

Congrats on your setup!

pdmcmahon, I love your projection tv setup! Couple of questions, Does it work well in the daytime with natural lighting conditoins? Also approx how much does the projector cost? I would really like to do something like this in my living room, but we have alot of light during the day (several skylights throughout the house).

Congrats on your setup!

Thanks, I forgot to mention that. Basically, the back of my house faces due south-west and it gets all of the evening sun. The blinds that you see on the back door are the kind that attach to an existing window, I hung some material similar to the drapes between the existing glass and the after-market blinds.

Also, on the back windows, I have horizontal blinds as well as the dark drapes.

Even with all of that, I still have issues from 2:00 PM until about 4:00 PM. Sundown this time of the year is around 6:00 PM, but the sun is out of sight around 5:30 or 5:40. In the evening, it is perfect. I can watch in the daytime, but just not during that time frame.

Also, painting the section with white primer made a huge difference in my opinion. When I bought the projector 2 years ago, it was 999$ US, but that same model can be had for 500$ if you look hard.

I am still on the original bulb also, pushing 2000 hours, go figure!

I live in NYC as well.

here is my new desk & chair (got it yesterday)

100_2059.jpg

100_2070.jpg

100_2073.jpg

yes i always keep it that way, just so you don't think I prepeared everything for the shots. all I have is

Emporio Armani glasses and case

PSP

Sony Ericsson W580i

HP laptop

modem

linksys wrt54G

I hope you've got some Tomato action on that WRT !!!

dsc01118kw0.th.jpg

NEW DESK. NEW COLLEGE. NEW LIFE.

Got a second monitor it's an AOC can't remember the model of it it's a 19 inch monitor that suits my needs. Also I finally got around to set up my surround speakers that where gathering dust in the back of my closet.

Also purchased a 320 GB external harddrive.

Same printer. HP F4180. (It's behind the fan :p )

Logitech MX 518.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
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    • AMD RX 9070 GRE AI, Blender benchmarks vs 9070 XT, 7800XT, Nvidia RTX 5070, 4070 by Sayan Sen Earlier this week, we shared the first part of our review of AMD's new RX 9070 GRE. It was about the gaming performance of the GPU, and we gave it an 8 out of 10. As a follow-up, similar to how we did with the 9070 XT and non-XT, we are doing a dedicated productivity review for the RX 9070 GRE as well, where we compare it against the 9070 XT, 9070, 7800 XT, as well as Nvidia's 5070 and 4070. This will include AI, rendering, compute, and more benchmarks. AI performance, especially, is a very important metric in today's world, and AMD also promised big improvements thanks to its underlying architectural improvements. We will be pitching it against the data we already have for the RX 9070, and RX 9070 XT, but also the Nvidia 5070 FE, MSI GeForce RTX 4070 VENTUS 2X 12G, and Gigabyte Radeon RX 7800 XT GAMING OC 16G as they are in a similar price class, but also because we do not have a comparable 5060 Ti card lying around here that we can compare it against. Before we get underway, this is a collaboration between Sayan Sen and Steven Parker, who lent me his test bed. Also, there was no editorial input from AMD. First up, the specs of the RX 9070, 9070 XT, and 9070 GRE, which were given to us by AMD: Radeon RX 9070 GRE Radeon RX 9070 Radeon RX 9070 XT Boost Clock: Game Clock: up to 2.79GHz up to 2.20GHz up to 2.52GHz up to 2.07GHz up to 2.97GHz up to 2.40GHz Stream Processors 3,072 (48 CU) 3,584 (56 CU) 4,096 (64 CU) Ray Accelerator 48 56 64 AI Accelerator 96 112 128 ROPs 96 128 Texture Mapping Units 192 224 256 Memory 12 GB GDDR6, 18Gbps Clock, 192-bit Bus 432 GB/s 16 GB GDDR6, 20Gbps Clock, 256-bit Bus Effective Memory Bandwidth: 640 GB/s Infinity Cache 48 MB (3rd Gen) 64 MB (3rd Gen) Card Bus PCI-E 5.0 X16 Output 2x HDMI 2.1b 2x DisplayPort 2.1a Power consumption 220W 304W Recommended PSU 650W 750W Slot width 2x 3x Price (SEP) $549 $599 As you can see from the specs above, it is less than the standard RX 9070 in every way that counts, except for slightly higher Boost and Game clock speed. Design Moving on, the RX 9070 GRE we were given is an XFX Swift triple-fan, dual-slot design with two 8-pin connectors. At 30cm (self-measured), it will fit in most systems easily. There is no RGB either. The AMD Radeon RX 9070 GRE by XFX from all angles. Test system Our test system consists of the following: Lian Li O11 Dynamic Mini V2 Flow (Amazon|Newegg) ASUS Z890 ProArt Creator WiFi (Amazon|Newegg) Intel Core Ultra 7 270K Plus (Amazon|Newegg) Thermal Grizzly KryoSheet - 44x37 (Amazon|Newegg) 2x 16GB G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB (7200 MT/s in XMP) (Amazon|Newegg) Sabrent Rocket4 Plus 2TB SSD (Amazon) Windows 11 25H2 (Build 26200.8246) AMD shared a press driver based on the recently released Adrenaline 26.5.2 that we were required to use. We now move on to our benchmarks. First up, we have Geekbench AI running on ONNX. For some reason, the 9070 GRE does exceptionally well here in both half-precision (FP16) and single-precision (FP32). It manages to beat the RTX 5070 and RX 9070 non-XT, and is only behind the 9070 XT. Since Geekbench runs in short bursts instead of continuously hammering the graphics card, it seems the GRE's faster boost clocks are helping here. Next up, we move to the UL Procyon AI test suite, starting with the image generation benchmark. We chose the Stable Diffusion XL FP16 test since it is the most intense workload available on Procyon. The Nvidia cards do very well here, as even the 4070 out-muscles AMD's best fairy easily. The positive thing about the GRE is that it gets quite close to the 9070 non-XT in this test; this indicates that the VRAM does not play a very big role here, as SD XL relies on float16 (FP16). So this is something to keep in mind again. If you wish to work with float32 AI workloads, graphics cards with larger than 12 GB buffers would likely emerge as victors. Regardless, the gains are still massive on AMD's 9000 series compared to the 7000 series. Following image generation, we move to the text generation benchmark. This is one test where the 9070 GRE struggled, quite a lot. It seems that the 12 GB VRAM and lower memory bandwidth of the new Radeon 9070 GRE are hurting it quite a bit; the split is massive, especially in a test like Llama2, which packs 13 billion parameters. As such, in all the tests, the 9070 GRE is the slowest of the lot. Next, we tried Blender, and here the AMD GPUs were beaten by Nvidia. Rendering is something the Green team has always had a lead over the Red side, and it has not changed so far. On the positive side, though, the 9070 GRE shows significantly better results than the 7800 XT, which means AMD is on the right path. Catching up to Nvidia, though, will require a lot more effort. And we hope HIP and ROCm can keep improving. Wrapping up AI testing, we measured OpenCL throughput in the Geekbench compute benchmark. The RX 9070 GRE alongside the 9070 did not fare well here at all, even falling behind the 7800 XT. Interestingly, even the RTX 5070 could not beat the 4070 on OpenCL, so perhaps this suggests that OpenCL optimization may not have been a priority for either AMD or Nvidia in the modern era. Conclusion We reached the end of our productivity performance review of the 9070 GRE, and we have to say it's a mixed bag. Unlike the 9070 and 9070 XT, the GRE excels in some areas while losing ground fairly easily in others. Similar to how it happened in gaming, any time the card's memory subsystem gets hammered, it tends to fall behind the others. This was the case with text generation, wherein we saw the VRAM sometimes hit its maximum available 12 GB of usage with larger model sizes. So what do we make of the RX 9070 as a productivity hardware? It can certainly be used, but you have to know it has its limitations. For those looking for a GPU that can deal with more, AMD recently unveiled the Radeon AI PRO R9700, which is essentially a 32 GB refresh of the 9070 XT with some additional workstation-based optimizations. On a similar note, the new Ryzen AI Halo platform is something you can consider if you want to set up a local AI processing station. Considering everything, we rate AMD's Radeon RX 9070 GRE a 7.5 out of 10 for its productivity performance. Price is less of a factor for those looking at productivity cases compared to those considering the GPU for gaming, and as such, we felt it did quite decently on many occasions and can be handy if you need a 12 GB GPU and, for some reason, don't want to get Nvidia. Purchase links: RX 9070 / XT / GRE (Amazon US) As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
    • Does anyone here know if these updates are integrated into the UUP dump isos?
    • Motrix Next 3.9.4 by Razvan Serea Motrix Next is a modern, open-source cross-platform download manager built as the official next-generation successor to the original Motrix project. It has been completely rewritten using Tauri 2, Vue 3, TypeScript, and Rust, while still relying on the powerful Aria2 download engine for high-speed multi-protocol transfers. The app supports HTTP, HTTPS, FTP, BitTorrent, ED2K and magnet links, offering advanced features like multi-connection acceleration, task scheduling, bandwidth control, and batch download management. With a significantly reduced install size (around 20MB), it focuses on being lightweight, fast, and resource-efficient compared to traditional Electron-based download tools. Designed for Windows, macOS, and Linux, Motrix Next delivers a clean, modern UI inspired by Material Design 3 principles, with smooth animations and a minimal workflow. It improves usability through better download organization, system tray integration, and enhanced torrent handling including selective file downloads and tracker management. Motrix Next features: Multi-protocol downloads — HTTP, FTP, BitTorrent, Magnet, .torrent, ED2K, and Metalink tasks BitTorrent — Selective file download, DHT, peer exchange, encryption controls, metadata caching, GeoIP peer flags, and tracker probing Browser extension integration — Embedded Extension API with independent authentication, download confirmation, smart auto-submit, filename hints, referer/cookie forwarding, and real-time controls (Chrome Web Store · Edge Add-ons) Safe filename handling — Content-Disposition, RFC 2047, non-UTF-8, percent-encoded, and extensionless URL resolution with path traversal sanitization Download organization — Favorite and recent folders, optional file-type categorization, stale-record cleanup, and completed history backed by SQLite Concurrent downloads — Independent controls for active tasks, HTTP connections per server, segments per file, and BT peer limits Speed control — Global and per-task upload/download limits with day-of-week and time-of-day scheduling System integration — Tray operation, optional tray speed display, macOS Dock badge/progress, protocol handlers for magnet://, thunder://, and motrixnext:// Lightweight mode — Destroys the WebView on minimize-to-tray while Rust keeps the engine, task monitor, notifications, history, and extension routing alive Notifications and power options — Native task start/complete/failure notifications, keep-awake during downloads, and optional shutdown after completion Network controls — Scoped proxy support for downloads, app updates, and tracker updates, plus system proxy detection Auto-update channels — Stable, Beta, and Latest Across Channels policies with separate download and install phases Diagnostics — Structured logs, exportable diagnostic ZIPs, database integrity checks, automatic DB rebuild, and Linux GPU rendering fallback Personalization — Light/dark/system theme, 10 color schemes, 26 languages, and first-launch system language detection Motrix Next 3.9.4 changelog: Motrix Next 3.9.4 promotes the 3.9.4 beta cycle to stable. This release refreshes bundled engine binaries, improves task detail readability and copy actions, expands link handling for magnet and ED2K workflows, polishes responsive navigation and text wrapping, updates browser extension documentation, and refines network preference controls. New Features Task Detail copy actions — Added copyable values for task metadata and reusable render functions for long text fields. Magnet and ED2K lifecycle support — Added task lifecycle handling for magnet and ED2K links. History cleanup for deleted tasks — Deleted tasks can now remove matching history records. User-Agent management — Added user-agent management and improved related network preference controls. Browser extension documentation — Added the Firefox Add-ons link for the Motrix Next extension. Improvements Engine binaries — Updated bundled binaries for supported architectures. Task Detail readability — Long task names, URLs, tracker values, and copyable metadata now render more clearly. Deletion messaging — Refined localized task deletion text for clarity and consistency. Text wrapping — Improved URI input wrapping and task name multiline display. Navigation layout — Improved sub-navigation responsiveness. Disk allocation default — Changed the default file allocation method to trunc. Proxy controls — Improved proxy button styling in network preferences. Download: Motrix Next 64-bit | ARM64 | macOS ~20.0 MB (Open Source) Links: Website | macOS / Linux | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • NVIDIA officially supports Ubuntu, as linked above with the GeForce NOW Hands on I did in collaboration with Paul Hill.
    • TO be clear I am not running linux today, however I keep thinking about it. And I want to make sure there are minimal obstacles if I decide to make that switch in the coming months.
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