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Knox College students debug their project prior to making a presentation for the computer science department at the end of spring term 2014. Photo by Peter Bailley. More about Computer Science at Knox: www.knox.edu/academics/majors-and-minors/computer-science
Case: Cooler Master HAF X
CPU: Intel Core i7 4770K Quad Core Overclocked to 4.2GHz
CPU Cooling: Corsair H100i 240mm Radiator Liquid CPU Cooler
RAM: 16GB DDR3 1866MHz Corsair Vengeance Pro
Power Supply: 1050W Corsair Pro Silver 1050HX
Optical Drive: ASUS Blu-Ray/DVD-R/CD-R
Storage 1: 256GB Solid State Drive (Samsung 840 Pro)
Storage 2: 4TB Western Digital Black
Storage 3: 2TB Western Digital Black
Graphics Card: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 780 Ti 3GB EVGA Superclocked with ACX Cooling
Sound Card: Creative Labs Recon3D Fatal1ty Champion 5.1
Internal Lighting: LED strips with remote control
Op. System: Microsoft Windows 8.1 Professional (64-Bit Edition)
December 2013
That's Elysion on the left: a Dell XPS computer with a Pentium 4 HT CPU, 3 GB RAM, some 500+ GB of hard drive space, 2 CD/DVD drives (one burner, one reader), and an OBNOXIOUS number of USB peripherals, running Windows Vista Ultimate.
On the right is the new Ryo-ohki, my Acer Aspire netbook: with it's 10.1 inch screen, puny Intel Atom CPU, 1 GB of RAM, and a 160 GB hard drive split into two partitions - one for the default Windows XP that came with the machine, and the other for Ubuntu Netbook remix (which boots now by default).
Ah, the amazing march of progress and technology!!
Timur Arshba is one of the first certified CISCO specialists in Abkhazia. He teaches computer skills in his home town, Gali, and believes that positive change always comes with education.
"There are about 100 students for now and more are coming every day,” Timur says.
Read more about UNDP's work to provide better infrastructure, medical assistance and education to people in Abkhazia
Got this never-seen-before "progress bar" looking screen today after unsuccefully waking up my computer from sleep. I had held down the power key (to shut the computer off), but when I pressed it again (to turn it on) I was presented with this strange progress bar. Funny thing is the machine never did shut off, so this basically took me to the usual screen I get when I wake it up from sleep.
Anyone know what this progress bar signifies?
This is where I got really nervous and re checked everything. I was sure I had forgotten something, but when I plugged it in and switched it on every thing worked great. Then it was just a matter of a couple hours installing windows and a few drivers and we're in business.
I could probably cram a couple more atom boards in here.
Intel Atom 1.6GHz, 2GB DDR2/800, 2x250GB Seagate 7200.8 (RAID1)
The television, and my computer setup. There are three computers here. As well as a couple of gaming posters.
Two TRS-80 Pocket Computers. I bought one with my christmas tree lot money.
I was with Tom Yoder at the time. I assume that was Christmas 1981, after
the first year I went to Alaska. The second one was Dick's.
View of cabinets showing detail of inserting a module. The DV-1 system used Motorola M680x0 processors, ran a Unix like Operating System, had hot pluggable modules and utilized an early LAN connecting to its peripherials and terminals. Such peripherials as multi-port RS-232 boxes with up to 10 ports, 9 Track Mag Tape drives, Sync. connections for IBM 3270 emulation. It also contained its own telephone switch that could handle analog telephones, loop start, ground start and E&M trunks and T-1 spans. The terminal for this system was an M4020 which had an embedded telephone set. These system were around during the late 80's. At the time the DV-1 came out they did not know how to sell it. Causing its early demise.
I've been collecting old computer equitment as a "project" for a while, but I never did anything with it. I finally to terms with the fact that I probably never would and decided I could sacrifice the space, so I threw it all out today. Some of it works, but not well.
Our Computer Vision research team at Facebook's @Scale conference presenting Similarity Search for Flickr. Details: yahooresearch.tumblr.com/post/158115871236/introducing-si...