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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
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And a clean desk there are so many sloppy desks around me that sometimes i let mine go but not anymore my new computer makes me want to keep it super clean lol !!!!
"Literacy Windows" digital collage computer file in Photoshop. This closeup is of the third of the four books with the "K is for Key," and "F is for flight," design. The key and feather were directly scanned as they lay on the scanner bed, not photographed. Then Manchester Craftsman's Guild student and now contemporary artist, Emily Noelle Lambert created this design.
Our first HMB Mobile computer lab at WIC (Women, Infant and Children's Clinic) was very popular. We eventually had all computers filled with a few computers holding more that 3 patrons.
STDL patrons may choose from a wide variety of computer classes, or surf the net on one of the 100 public use computers.
A picture of my computer that I made by taking 6 pictures then stitching them together. The stitch wasn't perfect (there was a lot of parallax), but it still looks cool. Yes, that is an older computer in the desk. Eventually this one will replace that one. The filesize of the stitched together version is 6.52MB!
ABC Open's Summer School series can help you find your centre - and work out how to do stuff on your computer that you're sick of asking your family to help out with.
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
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Title: Computer Science
Date: undated
Description: Computer Science Lab
Image ID: 13-07-F_ComputerScience_1056-06-01
Copyright 2016, Iowa State University Library, University Archives
For Reproductions: www.add.lib.iastate.edu/spcl/services/photfees.html
My first computer (1986), an IBM-clone.
Never gave any problem, but became outdated after some years.
Bondwell was a US manufacturer of personal computers during the 1980s.
In the early 1980s, Bondwell sold a line of Z80, CP/M-80 based Osborne-like luggables such as the models Bondwell-12, Bondwell-14 (1984) and Bondwell-16 (1985). An exceptional feature in these was an inbuilt speech synthesizer. Their prices were exceptionally affordable for the time, although significant trade-offs were made in regard durability, for instance the chassis was rather flimsy plastic, falling far short of the ruggedness usually expected of luggables. The fanless power supply unit, located under the motherboard, often caused trouble. The choice of peripheral I/O devices made the use of interrupts virtually impossible.
The Bondwell-12 was a "luggable" portable computer with a built-in 9 inch (23 cm) monochrome CRT display, equipped with 64 kiB of internal memory, CP/M 2.2 and two single-sided, double density, 5.25 inch floppy disk drives (180 kiB). The Bondwell-14 had 128 kiB of memory, CP/M 3.0 and two double-sided drives (360 kiB). The Bondwell-16 had CP/M 3.0, one double-sided drive and a hard disk drive with a capacity of a bit less than 10 MiB.
The Bondwell-2 (1985) was a laptop computer with 64 kiB of memory, CP/M 2.2 and one single-sided, double density 3.5 inch floppy disk (360 kiB). 256 and 512 kiB memory extensions were available. It was one of the earliest laptops, as well as one of the few battery-powered CP/M computers.
The more advanced Bondwell-18 model featured MS-DOS and the x86 architecture. (Wikipedia)