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Free 486 base unit for anyone who can collect from London SE13, UK.

50 throbbing megahertz of raw computing power can be yours.

Generic 486 PC base unit, needs new 3.6v CMOS battery. Stuck a tiny 100MB hard drive in it just to prove it starts up. Has keyboard, mouse, floppy drive, Soundblaster soundcard, 3com ethernet card, CD-ROM drive (will not boot from CD ROM though).

 

Seems to work but no proper OS installed, and without that CMOS battery you'll be typing numbers into the CMOS each time to get it to see the hard drive.

Sorry, monitor not included!

Would suit mad masochist trying to get some obscure Linux distro running on the lowest spec machine in the universe.

There's all these latch things that are pretty hard to get apart. I just wedged a screwdriver in really slowly back and forth until they "popped". It sounds like you're breaking it (and maybe you are on some cards), but it wasn't broken for me.

A great bit of kit, still in daily use today (December 2011).

vihdoinkin alkaa olemaan kone sellainen kun haluan... :P

24" laajakuvanäyttö, bt näppis ja hiiri, wacom yms... vielä toinen ulkoinen kovalevy pitäis hankkia boottilevyksi.

when I tell people I work in my basement, they sometimes get a snooty look on their face. I don't tell those people what's in the other part of my basement. 5 minute drum breaks at opportune times throughout the day - I highly recommend it to anyone!

Super glue fixes everything

Creative SB0530 - Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Notebook Sound Card PCMCIA

Various hardware I had laying around.

 

View On White

youtu.be/hFCBRwhu-FU

Original song. Bedroom recording.

Fender Jazzbass,

Gibson LesPaul Studio,

Yamaha Dynamic Guitar No20,

Roland TR606,

khol(Bangladesh Drum),

LP Matador Wood Bongos,

Pearl Wood Bongo,

Old Tuning Fork Box UCHIDA DW-P,

Mackie 1402-VLZ,

Yamaha 03D Digital Mixing Console,

BOSS MG-10 Guitar Amp,

Marshall MB15 BassAmp,

Dbx 166A compressor,

Korg DL8000R Delay,

emagic AudioWerk8 PCI SoundCard,

Power Mac G4 (AGP),

CubaseVST5,

Advertisement for the Sound Galaxy Voyager and Asteroid Multimedia Upgrade Kits, PC Magazine ☯94JUN

I just pushed the plastic thing until it bent around the jacks. Felt like it was going to break something, but it didn't.

desktop is Ring of Kerry Panorama by ~meekohi

browse.deviantart.com/customization/wallpaper/multidispla...

 

Left: Dell U2311H IPS monitor

Right: HP w2007 monitor

 

Speakers: Logitech Z-2300

Headphones: Sennheiser HD-580

Soundcard: E-mu 0404usb

 

Desk: Ikea Vika

Shelf: Ikea Ekby Jarpen

Legs: Ikea Capita

This is part of an old PC Sound Card, a Creative Labs Sound Blaster PRO 2 (R). It was my first soundcard that I bought circa 1992 being my jump out from annoying "beeps" from internal pc speaker. Scale 1:1/4 approx.

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Trocito de mi vieja tarjeta de sonido Creative Labs Sound Blaster PRO(2). Fue mi primera tarjeta de sonido que compré allá por el 1992, dando un salto hacia adelante dejando atrás el "agobiante" pitido del altavoz interno del PC.

 

CPU: Overclocker Rev.1.1 Intel® Core 2 Duo(E6600) E6700 Special (Conroe) 64BIT 2×2MB Cache (2*2400MHZ +8%); RAM: 2GB (2*1024MB DualChannel) DDR2-800 Kingston; Graphiccard: GeForce 8800 GTX 768MB PCIE; HDD: 320GB 7200upm SATA-II/300 Seagate 16MB Cache; Mainboard: Asus P5W-DH-Deluxe; Soundcard: Realtek ADI 1988 (8 Channel) onBoard; Network: 1000MBit/s onBoard; DVD: Samsung Light Scribe 18x DVD/CD Burner; CPU Cooling: Freezer 7 Pro Arctic-Cooling; PSU: 650w 120mm Ultra Low Noise; Firewire; USB 2.0 6x; Casing: NZXT LeXa Midi-Tower Aluminium - black OS: Windows Vista Ultimate;

Amateratsu is the Japanese godess of the sun who holds domain over heaven.

 

Specs:

Intel Core i7 920

6GB RAM

Sapphire 5850

Creative Blaster Soundcard

2TB RAID 0 array

Alienware keyboard

Dell 23" monitor (2046 x 1152)

 

Case:

Antec 200

Custom painted. Custom cut window. Custom cut decal. Handmade LED array.

Here the CPU cooler are blowing air though the cobber heat pips that are running down along the CPU. The fan in the back and above is sucking air out of the cabinet.

 

Second stage of my PC build included installation of the following:

 

CPU: INTEL Core2Duo E6850 3000 LGA775 4MB ATX

 

Motherboard: ASUS P5K Premium/WIFI-AP Socket775 FSB1333 ATX P35 RAID PCI-Express

 

CPU cooler: ZALMAN CNPS 9700 LED

 

RAM: KINGSTON 2GB RAMKit 2x1GB DDR2 PC2-8500 1066MHz nonECC 5-5-5-15

 

Harddisk: WD Raptor 74GB HDD 10000rpm SATA serial ATA 16MB cache 3.5" internal RoHS compliant

 

Soundcard: CREATIVE Sound Blaster X-Fi Xtreme Gamer

 

All that is missing is the graphiccard.

 

BEST PRACTICES: Write down what inputs on your soundcard are what (microphone, headphones, line in, line out, etc). You can usually tell which is which when looking at a brand new card, but they are usually etched into the metal -- very low contrast. Once you get some wires blocking your view, and your computer is moved/wired in somewhere without good lighting -- A label like the ones at the bottom can save you a world of leaning, unwiring, computer moving, and lower back pain. The top label is harddrive cylinders, heads, etc. Fortunately with SATA and even EIDE, we don't have to deal with that hell anymore.

 

computer case, labels.

 

Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.

 

May 23, 2008.

  

... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com

... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com

 

Creative SB0530 - Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Notebook Sound Card PCMCIA

My dad's 1972 old vintage Amplifier with AM/FM tuner, cassette player and clock. And everything is still perfectly functional! Was working as a audio amplifier of my computer soundcard until today. Now will be stored only for decorative purpose. His brand "Suruga", is japanese, and very rare. Never found any reference to this brand on the net.

Back together again, and it works great!

a.k.a. "GUS Classic," an ISA-based PC wavetable soundcard from Advanced Gravis circa 1993

Testing the speeds using a home made shutter speed tester connected to the mic plug of the pc soundcard.

 

Here you can see how I built the shutter speed tester.

There's something about Hip-Hop which makes you want to just get involved - being a consumer isn't enough, you want to produce something - whether that's rhymes, beats, graffiti, whatever! I've been working with beats and pieces since I was 11 or so, just learning bits about making tracks - starting with a basic Yamaha keyboard, to tracker programs before PCs had soundcards, through endless loop recorders, software sequencers, synths and samplers and eventually onto gear like this - my MPC1000, which I love despite it being in need of some repair :o) After working on a PC all day, it can be a bit much to have to turn on another one to make some tunes!

I'll always be a sampling producer in the main; there's an art to taking a record (or ten) and making it do what you want it to do, changing the sound or composition to reflect your own style; especially when you take either something awful or just a tiny, forgotten couple of notes on an old song and use that as the basis for something fresh.

Hip-Hop started from taking old records and making them new - if you can't get with that, then it's just not for you!

Creative SB0530 - Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Notebook Sound Card PCMCIA

Advanced Gravis Ultrasound Max

 

Close-up of an AWE32 card I bought back when Creative Labs was still cool. I still use this card to play DOS games once in a blue moon.

This is content of my bag when I perform.

Project 366 2008 Dec 3 338/366

Asus Eee and M-Audio FastTrack Pro. Impressively, it just works - it's plug-and-play, you just need to select the correct hardware interface from within your audio software. (The Eee's internal soundcard is hw:0, and the USB interface is hw:1)

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