On Monday 04 July 2011 09:30:27 Grant wrote:
I'm reading that ASUS and Gigabyte are the way to go for reliability.
Don't forget Tyan. The workstation board I have here has been rock-solid even
in really bad atmospheric conditions (large temperature and humidity
differences) and a dodgy power
On 07/20/2011 11:49 AM, Joost Roeleveld wrote:
On Monday 04 July 2011 09:30:27 Grant wrote:
I'm reading that ASUS and Gigabyte are the way to go for reliability.
Don't forget Tyan. The workstation board I have here has been rock-solid even
in really bad atmospheric conditions (large
I've put together the new system and everything works really well.
Here's the Gigabyte motherboard:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128490
- Grant
Nice mobo. I always want a lot of slots but rarely use them. I'm stuck in
the old days where the mobo was basically
On Sunday 10 July 2011 22:15:31 Grant wrote:
Speaking of videos, I sincerely apologize for this but it's Sunday and I
can not help myself:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7cqOEr_yfak
I don't know what that's about - I couldn't watch more than 10s of it.
--
Rgds
Peter
Yes, since a htpc doesn't need a powerful cpu (or a powerful gpu)
My learned-this-the-hard-way advice: while this is generally true, if
you ever come across a 720 or 1080p video that doesn't use a
hardware-accelerated codec, you would rather the HTPC not sound like
it's about to launch
Grant wrote:
Yes, since a htpc doesn't need a powerful cpu (or a powerful gpu)
My learned-this-the-hard-way advice: while this is generally true, if
you ever come across a 720 or 1080p video that doesn't use a
hardware-accelerated codec, you would rather the HTPC not sound like
it's
On 6 July 2011, at 19:54, Grant wrote:
...
I wonder if I'll be able to decode 1080p in software on a single core
now without losing A/V sync. I kinda doubt it. I've been on an
Athlon X2 3.1Ghz.
Note that some 1080p videos are harder to decode than others. The birds scene
from the BBC's
Yes, since a htpc doesn't need a powerful cpu (or a powerful gpu)
My learned-this-the-hard-way advice: while this is generally true, if
you ever come across a 720 or 1080p video that doesn't use a
hardware-accelerated codec, you would rather the HTPC not sound like
it's about to launch
On Wednesday 06 July 2011 11:54:29 Grant wrote:
Yes, since a htpc doesn't need a powerful cpu (or a powerful gpu)
My learned-this-the-hard-way advice: while this is generally true, if you
ever come across a 720 or 1080p video that doesn't use a hardware-accelerated
codec, you would rather
Yes, since a htpc doesn't need a powerful cpu (or a powerful gpu)
My learned-this-the-hard-way advice: while this is generally true, if you
ever come across a 720 or 1080p video that doesn't use a hardware-accelerated
codec, you would rather the HTPC not sound like it's about to launch
On Monday 04 July 2011 17:30:27 Grant wrote:
I'm reading that ASUS and Gigabyte are the way to go for reliability.
I'm suspicious of my Asus P7P55D motherboard. It seems just fine with Gentoo,
and it has lots of tuning methods built in (over-clocking etc.). I've never
used those facilities
On 07/05/2011 12:39 AM, pk wrote:
Yes, since a htpc doesn't need a powerful cpu (or a powerful gpu)
My learned-this-the-hard-way advice: while this is generally true, if
you ever come across a 720 or 1080p video that doesn't use a
hardware-accelerated codec, you would rather the HTPC not sound
On 07/04/2011 09:39 PM, pk wrote:
On 2011-07-04 22:32, Grant wrote:
That's the FM1 socket, right? I only see two FM1 CPUs on newegg.com
Yep.
right now. They're quad-core and 100W. I guess the advantage there
is they have graphics on the CPU. A 65W CPU would be better but when
it
My motherboard is getting flaky and it's time for a new one. I have
an AMD 6000+ CPU, 4GB DDR2/800 RAM, 2TB SATA2 HD, Blu-Ray burner, PCI
wireless card, 400W power supply, and ATX case. I could replace any
of these components if it's worthwhile for some new feature, but I may
as well keep
Grant wrote:
I'm reading that ASUS and Gigabyte are the way to go for reliability.
- Grant
I can brag about my Gigabyte. When I was doing research on my newest
rig, Gigabyte seemed to be the highest rated. As we know, that
changes. When I built a rig several years ago, it was Abit.
-original message-
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] {OT} Time for hardware upgrade(s)
From: Grant emailgr...@gmail.com
Date: 2011-07-04 23:30
How do you know it's the motherboard and not the PSU for instance?
You're right, but I want HDMI and USB 3.0 so I figure I may as well
switch the motherboard
On 2011-07-04 18:30, Grant wrote:
I'm reading that ASUS and Gigabyte are the way to go for reliability.
For consumer oriented motherboards, I feel the same.
Yeah I'm a little worried about that with the motherboard. If
necessary I can keep limping along with my current motherboard while I
I'm reading that ASUS and Gigabyte are the way to go for reliability.
For consumer oriented motherboards, I feel the same.
Yeah I'm a little worried about that with the motherboard. If
necessary I can keep limping along with my current motherboard while I
wait for drivers for the new one.
On 2011-07-04 22:32, Grant wrote:
That's the FM1 socket, right? I only see two FM1 CPUs on newegg.com
Yep.
right now. They're quad-core and 100W. I guess the advantage there
is they have graphics on the CPU. A 65W CPU would be better but when
it comes out I suppose.
Yes, since a htpc
On 2011-07-02 17:41, Grant wrote:
My motherboard is getting flaky and it's time for a new one. I have
an AMD 6000+ CPU, 4GB DDR2/800 RAM, 2TB SATA2 HD, Blu-Ray burner, PCI
wireless card, 400W power supply, and ATX case. I could replace any
of these components if it's worthwhile for some new
20 matches
Mail list logo