The AI-generated cat pictures thread
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,076
Total Cats: 6,628
Hmm. Haven't heard a spec on curb weight yet.
(Am I the only one who isn't really impressed with the whole Kodo design language?)
Got a new PC at work, finally. We recently decommissioned one of our realtime 3D previsualization suites, so I stole one of the workstations out of it for myself. Six core i7-3960X overclocked to 4.1 Ghz (it came this way, I'll probably turn it down to stock), 16GB, Nvidia Quadro 4000 video card, a bunch of storage, blah blah blah. It's kind of fast-ish.
(Six PCI-E x16 slots is probably enough.)
Much better for running AutoCAD 2014 inside a virtual Win7-64 machine while also running WireCAD, 30 Chrome tabs and MAP Designer in the main OS. The machine ain't even breathing heavy, whereas my old laptop would be absolutely dying under this load.
It's honestly kind of hilarious how quickly this thing boots up. I'm happy.
(Am I the only one who isn't really impressed with the whole Kodo design language?)
Got a new PC at work, finally. We recently decommissioned one of our realtime 3D previsualization suites, so I stole one of the workstations out of it for myself. Six core i7-3960X overclocked to 4.1 Ghz (it came this way, I'll probably turn it down to stock), 16GB, Nvidia Quadro 4000 video card, a bunch of storage, blah blah blah. It's kind of fast-ish.
(Six PCI-E x16 slots is probably enough.)
Much better for running AutoCAD 2014 inside a virtual Win7-64 machine while also running WireCAD, 30 Chrome tabs and MAP Designer in the main OS. The machine ain't even breathing heavy, whereas my old laptop would be absolutely dying under this load.
It's honestly kind of hilarious how quickly this thing boots up. I'm happy.
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,076
Total Cats: 6,628
I just realized that I have an $800 video card.
I really don't need it in this machine. Any idea whether this card would be significantly better at Portal and TF2 than my Radeon 7770 GHZ edition, which cost $150? I may swap them.
Oh, and the rotating base I ordered for the LED TV arrived. The specification is full of originality and of many methods:
(Seriously, I have to assume that they used Google Translate to generate this text from the original Chinese. No human could be this bad at grammar- not even Leafy.)
I really don't need it in this machine. Any idea whether this card would be significantly better at Portal and TF2 than my Radeon 7770 GHZ edition, which cost $150? I may swap them.
Oh, and the rotating base I ordered for the LED TV arrived. The specification is full of originality and of many methods:
(Seriously, I have to assume that they used Google Translate to generate this text from the original Chinese. No human could be this bad at grammar- not even Leafy.)
Elite Member
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Join Date: May 2009
Location: Jacksonville, FL
Posts: 5,155
Total Cats: 406
Thats a pretty slick case (Functionally. Looks are 'meh'.)
I bet those fans on the back are noisy though. Look like 80 or 92mm.
As for the liquid cooler goes, IIRC Joe previously equated them to the cyborg from West World in that they are over engineered.
At the point it is the best way to do a serious overclock without having a heatsink that fills the entire volume of your case. But w/o OC I bet even that CPU would be fine with a modestly large heatsink, like the Noctua. It would probably be quieter too.
I bet those fans on the back are noisy though. Look like 80 or 92mm.
As for the liquid cooler goes, IIRC Joe previously equated them to the cyborg from West World in that they are over engineered.
At the point it is the best way to do a serious overclock without having a heatsink that fills the entire volume of your case. But w/o OC I bet even that CPU would be fine with a modestly large heatsink, like the Noctua. It would probably be quieter too.
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,076
Total Cats: 6,628
I was worried about the noise, but honestly I can't even hear it over the ambient noise of the office. All of the fans are speed-controlled by the motherboard, and they're just ticking over at a few hundred RPM right now. I'm not pushing the machine very hard at all.
As for the liquid cooler goes, IIRC Joe previously equated them to the cyborg from West World in that they are over engineered.
But w/o OC I bet even that CPU would be fine with a modestly large heatsink, like the Noctua. It would probably be quieter too.
Did it ever both anybody that the robots in Westworld were mostly filled with passives and discrete semiconductors, with nary a VLSI chip in sight?
2 Props,3 Dildos,& 1 Cat
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Fake Virginia
Posts: 19,338
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gaming cards are for gaming
quadro cards for for cad/rendering/whatnot
they don't typically compare well to each other in the wrong environment.
that said, I've got a K4000 in my work machine. sadly I am stuck with an older xeon so your i7 blows me out of the water by about 2.5x
quadro cards for for cad/rendering/whatnot
they don't typically compare well to each other in the wrong environment.
that said, I've got a K4000 in my work machine. sadly I am stuck with an older xeon so your i7 blows me out of the water by about 2.5x
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,076
Total Cats: 6,628
This motherboard supports SSD-based caching. It dynamically pages data into the 60G SSD from the primary drive (500 GB at upper-right) which is what hosts both the OS and the applications.