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Originally Posted by Braineack
(Post 953617)
I have an 8600 GTS that I'm trying to off load for $free + shipping.
Originally Posted by thenuge26
(Post 953704)
I actually have a GT520 I got for $30, would be willing to let it go for free + shipping. Amazon link here. No heatsink = no fan noise. Oh and it is PCI :P
But man, it's fast and smooth when it's working. |
GTX280 is the better card of the free/almost free options, I'd do that.
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lol
Then again if he bought a big case and PSU then why not? |
Originally Posted by jeff_man
(Post 953561)
I would pick up a cheap video card in the $50-100 range. The HD 2000 will do a ok job but if you ever want to run more then 1 screen or play some 1080p video while doing anything else as it will use the CPU to GPU calculations and have to use system ram as vram. It's not a that big of deal but can slow things down. I have a HD6970 I'm trying to off load for $150. It's still in the top 20 best GPU chips on the market.
Originally Posted by Braineack
(Post 953617)
I have an 8600 GTS that I'm trying to off load for $free + shipping.
Originally Posted by thenuge26
(Post 953704)
I actually have a GT520 I got for $30, would be willing to let it go for free + shipping. Amazon link here. No heatsink = no fan noise. Oh and it is PCI :P
Originally Posted by jeff_man
(Post 953728)
GTX280 is the better card of the free/almost free options, I'd do that.
Originally Posted by thenuge26
(Post 953732)
lol
Then again if he bought a big case and PSU then why not? Overkill. Now I am starting to understand that my computer will be a Pagani Zonda with a 3cyl Geo Metro engine. All show, no go. lol |
Originally Posted by viperormiata
(Post 953843)
I'll have to google all this. I have no idea what I'm doing. I nearly melted my brain just doing this simple build.
Get your system up and running with the integrated graphics (just use the disc that came with the mobo) and make sure you got everything working nice and steady before adding more addon crap. I think i said this before. A good rule of thumb is to only physically install what you absolutly need to get the system running. Just because of simple process of elimination if something goes wrong. |
Parts are here, but I am still shopping for a wireless keyboard/mouse combo...and possibly a monitor.
First impression: This case is fucking HUGE. I had no idea it would be this big. But it looks so, so good. |
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Originally Posted by viperormiata
(Post 955582)
First impression: This case is fucking HUGE. I had no idea it would be this big. But it looks so, so good.
https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1354580845 |
Originally Posted by Erat
(Post 955606)
It will make your life easy. Trust me. It's better than being cramped on space.
https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1354580845 |
Getting ready to press the power button on dis negrodamus.
One thing I will need is a new wall-plug bridge ethernet setup. My current one is wireless only and my second ethernet wall-plug kicked the bucket after years and years of use. Any recommendations would be great. |
Originally Posted by viperormiata
(Post 978349)
One thing I will need is a new wall-plug bridge ethernet setup. My current one is wireless only and my second ethernet wall-plug kicked the bucket after years and years of use. Any recommendations would be great.
When I moved into this apartment last year, I decided that since I already had all the bits and pieces lying around, I'd just put a WiFi adapter on my main PC and use that. After suffering through that setup for about 10 months, I ran CAT5. Totally unrelated: A co-worker came ot me late last week saying that his old HP machine at home had stopped booting (WinXP) and asked if I could fix it. I hate working on other people's computers, but I said sure. I've got a build of WinXP-MCE that will run on anything. So this morning I fire it up, and yeah, it's totally hosed. It won't even start up in safe mode. First step- boot it with a LiveCD of Ubuntu so I can try and salvage his data. It recognizes the filesystem on the hard drive, and I copy it to a USB hard drive. At this point, I was about to re-format it, and I though "You know, just in case, I should do a Ghost image." I have no idea why I wanted to Ghost a non-booting machine, but I popped in the Ghost 11 CD and booted into that. Get to the point where I'm going to image the drive and Ghost throws an error. It suggests that I use Chkdsk on the drive. Chkdsk? Man, that's a blast from the past. It's right up there with Edlin and FDisk in terms of "stuff I almost forgot existed." Ok, so I go out to the GhostOS command-line shell, and run chkdsk /F /X. It grinds away for a while, and finishes. On a whim, I remove the CD and reboot the machine. It boots normally and pops straight into Windows. Everything is fine. Moral of story: remember your roots. Sometimes there really is a blindingly simple solution. |
Originally Posted by viperormiata
(Post 978349)
One thing I will need is a new wall-plug bridge ethernet setup. My current one is wireless only and my second ethernet wall-plug kicked the bucket after years and years of use. Any recommendations would be great.
Edit: also known as ethernet powerline adapters |
Joe, I'd rather not use my current wireless for the new PC. What is CAT5?
Originally Posted by UnknownPerson
(Post 978372)
Wall-plug bridge ethernet? Like ethernet over power? How far are you from your router? (I'm sure that you mentioned it earlier... please excuse my laziness)
Edit: also known as ethernet powerline adapters Now, I'd like a new wall bridge with an ethernet port for my comp as well as a wireless signal. Not sure if that could happen. But they do make wall units with multiple ethernet ports, so I could hook the PC and PS3 up off one unit, but then I'd be out of my wireless for my bitchin' mini-book. |
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Originally Posted by viperormiata
(Post 978413)
What is CAT5?
So this: https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1360772727 Going from the back of this: https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/i...1moHbKrQD8wwRk To the port labeled "Ethernet" on the back of this: http://www.acrcomputers.co.uk/img/plugs/pcback.jpg Now, I'd like a new wall bridge with an ethernet port for my comp as well as a wireless signal. Not sure if that could happen. But they do make wall units with multiple ethernet ports, so I could hook the PC and PS3 up off one unit, but then I'd be out of my wireless for my bitchin' mini-book. Buy a wifi router. Seriously. Pick up any ole Netgear / D-Link / Whatever Wifi router, like the one in the middle picture above. Run a cable from your bridge to the port on the back of the router labeled "WAN" or "Internet" or similar. Now, you can plug your PC and PS3 into the other ethernet ports on the router, and also have WiFi for your bitchin' mini book. |
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rofl.
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Netgear sucks. Wouldn't connect to the Kindle Fire, so a firmware upgrade was recommended. Which killed the router. Netgear would offer no support for the "fix" that killed it. Buy Belkin.
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I like my Buffalo router. It came with DD-WRT so I didn't have to do any work hacking it up.
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Joe, you think that will work?
Router->wall bridge->wall bridge->router->porn machine
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 978479)
Well, if you're dead-set on using the ethernet-over-power doohickey
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Originally Posted by rleete
(Post 978532)
Netgear sucks. Wouldn't connect to the Kindle Fire
Substitute any common brand name for X, and any device using a non-standard implementation of an open-source OS for Y.
Originally Posted by viperormiata
(Post 978747)
Joe, you think that will work?
Router->wall bridge->wall bridge->router->porn machine What other options would I have? |
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Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 978774)
If there's another router on the other end of the bridge (rather than a direct connection to a cable modem), plug the bridge into one of the LAN ports on the new router rather than the WAN port, and disable the new router's DHCP server. Thus, DHCP requests from the machines connected to it will simply flow through it, across the bridge, and be serviced by the router on the other end. That way everyone is on the same subnet and on the same side of a common firewall.
I think I may have a router or two around here in my junk bin. I'll give it a shot. Now, I need a set of deez
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 978774)
Drill holes through walls / floors as needed. (I use a 3/8" drill bit that's about a foot long.) Pull cable through holes. Terminate cable with RJ-45 connectors.
However, I am not above running a line outside......and this is cheap |
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