diztrukted said:wondering....what monitors are everyone using....not really concerned about size more like brand/models
diztrukted said:wondering....what monitors are everyone using....not really concerned about size more like brand/models
Anton668 said:I just got a 23" LG LCD. Its my first non-CRT and... works for me
vocab said:What kind of card you going for? That looks like an extremely tight fit for a build.
TouchMyBox said:W2353V?
Roto13 said:How is Toshiba as a brand of laptop in regards to reliability? Not for gaming, but I figured I'd ask here anyway.I just want to finally own a laptop that doesn't fall apart after a year.
diztrukted said:wondering....what monitors are everyone using....not really concerned about size more like brand/models
Violater said:5770 with a V8 cooler
The reviews say it should fit
Shambles said:I have a satellite a100-va9 that is 3 years old and has survived a drop out of my side-loadping backpack onto a hard floor. It only left a dent and lost the serial printer port. It feels like cheap plastic and the paint started to wear out from my palms/fingers after only 6 months but it's still running strong. It has a 7600 Go in it but they gave it a gibbled (Canadian) version of the chip with only 128mb of memory. Not sure if that was more of a Future Crap/Canada than a Toshiba thing.
If I had to get another notebook today it would be difficult for me to decide to stick with or ditch Toshiba.
vocab said:Asus VW246H. I like it, but I got used to it pretty fast, so the wow factor isn't there anymore.No ghosting, and almost non existent input lag. I bought it because of those two factors, and I have two friends who own the monitor who said it's worth it. I'm happy with it.
I hate most LCD's simply because they can't hold the image on the screen properly, so I feel like I got my money's worth with this monitor.
Ya, that will fit.
Decided to up my budget a little to try and put together something really solid to replace my old Dimension. So, what does everyone think of this:
£1,065.55 total.
- i7 860 (£235.00)
- GA-P55M (£85.99)
- ATI 5850 (£223.24)
- G.Skill Ripjaw DDR3 4GB (£92.99)
- Samsung F3 1TB HDD (£61.99)
- Samsung S223L DVD+/-RW (£20.36)
- Windows 7 Pro 64-bit (£112.00)
- Antec P183 case (£113.99)
- Samsung SM-2243SN (£119.99)
I'm going to re-use my old Logitech keyboard and mouse, throw in my old DVD and CD-RW drives and my 500GB WD Caviar HDD but I'm wondering about replacing both my sound card and wireless card, so can anyone recommend a cheap-ish couple of cards that would fit with the above? Also, I'm still looking for a solid PSU to power this little lot so any recommendations there would be great.
Cheers!
Do you mean the SK9? That's what I have. 2006 model... Got it in January 2007. Last floor model left in BC and still works now although the battery life is shit and paint is wearing off and looking nasty on mine too =PShambles said:I have a satellite a100-va9 that is 3 years old and has survived a drop out of my side-loadping backpack onto a hard floor. It only left a dent and lost the serial printer port. It feels like cheap plastic and the paint started to wear out from my palms/fingers after only 6 months but it's still running strong. It has a 7600 Go in it but they gave it a gibbled (Canadian) version of the chip with only 128mb of memory. Not sure if that was more of a Future Crap/Canada than a Toshiba thing.
If I had to get another notebook today it would be difficult for me to decide to stick with or ditch Toshiba.
Firestorm said:Do you mean the SK9? That's what I have. 2006 model... Got it in January 2007. Last floor model left in BC and still works now although the battery life is shit and paint is wearing off and looking nasty on mine too =P
My floor model was $797 + tax = $900 flat from Staples =p Pretty much the reason I jumped on the floor model for a laptop. Kinda risky. Didn't even buy the extended warranty. I really do think my next laptop will be a 13" Asus Thin and Light with the switchable video card. I'm just super-impressed by the battery life.TheExodu5 said:Got mine in August 2006 from Ottawa U. Was $1800 + $150 for a 3 year warranty at the time. Originally bought it at FS for $2100 + $400 or so for the warranty which I immediately returned upon finding the Ottawa U deal.
Firestorm said:You could look at a full ATX motherboard for upgrading purposes later. You don't need a sound card as the onboard sound is more than enough for most users. As for PSU, Antec makes the CP-850 specifically for the P183 but it could be overkill unless they have a bundle.
toasty_T said:Guys, I think there is something wrong with my Q6600. It idles at in the high 60s where before it would be in the low 30s and maybe hit the high 60s during a high load. Could I fix this by reapplying some thermal paste? It's still on stock clocks so this makes very little sense.
I bought a Xigmatek S1283 heat sink but I need to find somewhere that sells the bracket since I broke the one it came with. I tried to take out my mobo but I couldn't get the 6-pin connector out of my gpu. Is there a particular way to do it or am I being thick?
Your link just takes me to the main page, not the notebook.favouriteflavour said:I just picked up this notebook, should I be covered for most games? Most recent game I am looking at playing are Arkham Asylum and Mass Effect 2. I'm not expecting Crysis to run well or anything but it would e a pleasant surprise!
Cosmonaut X said:Just reposting from the last page to see if anyone can offer input and advice on this possible build:
Anton668 said:W2361V
brain_stew said:Looking good, if you're a student or someone in your family is then W7 profesional can be had for less than £40 delivered here, assuming you have an old copy of Windows somewhere (any) to upgrade from:
http://www.software4students.co.uk/...fessional_64_bit_Upgrade_Edition-details.aspx
chedabob said:If your university offers MSDNAA you can also pick up the full version of Professional for free.
brain_stew said:Looking good, if you're a student or someone in your family is then W7 profesional can be had for less than £40 delivered here, assuming you have an old copy of Windows somewhere (any) to upgrade from:
http://www.software4students.co.uk/...fessional_64_bit_Upgrade_Edition-details.aspx
If not Home Premium is usually more than enough for most, you're not missing much outside of XP mode, only pay the extra if you need any of the specific features.
I'd only recommend a sound card if you've some serious audiograde hardware and/or require a specific feature offered only by discrete audio hardware (like 3D headphone support or something). On board sound has come a long way and hardware accelerated audio went the way of the dodo with Vista's launch.
I'd also echo the recommendation of a full ATX motherboard.
Any decent 500w PSU will power that rig just fine, you can spend more, but no need for 850w+ units and the like.
diztrukted said:wondering....what monitors are everyone using....not really concerned about size more like brand/models
dell s2409wdiztrukted said:wondering....what monitors are everyone using....not really concerned about size more like brand/models
Roto13 said:How is Toshiba as a brand of laptop in regards to reliability? Not for gaming, but I figured I'd ask here anyway.I just want to finally own a laptop that doesn't fall apart after a year.
TheExodu5 said:Samsung SyncMaster 2232GW.
It's not that good. It's fast, colors and contrast are not very good, backlight bleed is awful.
Adequate monitor for gaming, but I don't think I'll be touching Samsung again.
My next monitor is going to need a 75Hz mode. A friend of mine hooked up a CRT to his PC last LAN because he couldn't bring his big TV. 75Hz is so god damn sexy...forgot how incredibly smooth it was. I'm hoping an LCD monitor can produce the awesomely smooth result that the CRT could.
Firestorm said:Do you mean the SK9? That's what I have. 2006 model... Got it in January 2007. Last floor model left in BC and still works now although the battery life is shit and paint is wearing off and looking nasty on mine too =P
deim0s said:Should I go with the i7-860 or i5-750? (Same mobo platform, yeah?)
No overclocking, two to 3 years normal gaming usage.
diztrukted said:wondering....what monitors are everyone using....not really concerned about size more like brand/models
Your hunch is right. My friends reeled when I popped onto Vent with the ZM-1. It picks up my mouse clicking, without any +20db. And it makes me sound like shit. Not to mention if I have the window open they can hear the fountain outside of my complex, and I can't even be bothered to have music or TV on, or the game at an audible level so that I can hear it.TheExodu5 said:My problem with that one is that it seems like it's going to pick up a lot of background noise. Is there anything on a boomstick?
Salaadin said:Are these Kingston SSDNow VSeries Desktop Upgrade Kits any good? I just saw them mentioned in a tomshardware article on SSDs and the prices arent too bad.
pahamrick said:So, question for PC Gaf.
I'm finally going to be building a new computer within the next couple of months. Figured it was time to get back into PC Gaming. I'm currently running a P4 3ghz with a Radeon 9800 pro. Been awhile for me, heh.
I've pretty much got my parts picked out for the build, but I was wondering if I should bother getting a soundcard or is onboard sound good enough these days? I could also stick in my old PCI Sound Blaster Audigy if need be. I mostly game with headphones, so I'm not too concerned about super hi-fidelity.
The motherboard I'm looking at getting comes with the Realtek 889 Sound Chip.
Thanks!![]()
evil solrac v3.0 said:I need recommendations on speakers. I want a 5.1 sound system, but i have a "soft" budget.(meaning not too expensive but for the right set-up i'm willing to go over budget)
SuperEnemyCrab said:They are not the preferred SSD. Toms hardware is riding their jock pretty hard so I have to assume there is some sort of advertising deal there. They fail to mention the Kingston drives use the Jmicron controller. Better version than the one that caused the stuttering, but it's still an inferior controller compared to Intel and the indilinx drives. And they do not support the TRIM command in win7. As I have said many times regarding SSD's you want intel, or OCZ vertex or agility series, or at least an indilinx controller drive.
brain_stew said:Its all down to individual demans on framerate, resolution and image quality really. There;s no reason to not get a quad core these days with prices starting from a $100, and a decent quad should see you fine with any single GPU rig.
Why are you looking at 4770s? They're EOL, get a 5770 or 5750 instead.
If gaming is your primary concern its almost always better to spend more on the GPU than the CPU, it'll net you the biggest boost in frames.
I mean look at this:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...704&cm_re=athlon_x4_ii-_-19-103-704-_-Product
That's a 2.8ghz quad core CPU for $101 delivered!! That's going to be more than a match for any game, so on a budget there's really no need to spend anything more than that, it'll see you more than fine, its a heck of deal. Its a great OCer to boot.