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- Intel i3-6100 3.7GHz (Skylake)
- 8GB Crucial DDR4 2133MHz Ram
- MSI H1101 Pro AC Socket 1151
- Adata SP550 240GB SSD
- Seagate ST500LT012 500GB HD
- Antec Mini-ITX Case ISK110-VESA
Upgrades:
- Black mesh PCI slot covers.
- NoiseBuster sound insulation mat behind the front panel.
- be quiet! SilentWings 2 front- and back fan (140mm, 1000rpm and fluid dynamic bearings).
- Seagate Desktop HDD 4TB 5900rpm mechanical drive behind the back panel.
Chassis: Fractal Design - Define S
PSU: Seasonic Platinum 520w Fanless
M/B: ASRock Z170 Extreme6+
CPU: Intel Core i7-6700K 4.2GHz quad-core with hyper-threading
Heatsink: Thermalright True Spirit 140 Power
RAM: Crucial Ballistix Sport, DDR4, 32GB, 2400MHz
SSD: Samsung SM951 (AHCI) 256GB (M.2 PCIe 3.0 x4)
OS: Microsoft Windows 10 Home x64
Neither G.Skill nor ASRock would fess up to my problems, mis-leading me to spend time & money returning my motherboard, which, if you are cynical, requires the extra precaution of proving your CPU socket pins were not bent. Because sometimes motherboard warranters refuse to repair the problem because it is user error. So I got to use my USB microscope that my sister got me from my wishlist for Christmas for an actual live-administrative purpose: Documenting that my pins were not, in fact, bent.
But it turns out the problem was the motherboard has requiresments for RAM configuration that neither G.Skill nor ASrock new. Neither manufacturer new! I'm incredibly unimpressed with both, and will go out of my way -- even paying more money -- to not buy products from ASRock or G.Skill ever again. And that's why I'm tagging the RAM even though it's not actually in the picture -- because it's part of the story here.
ASRock X99 WS motherboard, CPU LGA 2011 socket, CPU socket pins, GSkill Ripjaws 4 DDR4 RAM.
close-up.
upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
March 19, 2015.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL at wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL at wordpress.com
BACKSTORY: Building my new computer! We decided to name it Thailog. Thailog ("Goliath" spelled backwards) is the evil twin of Goliath from the cartoon Gargoyles. Carolyn's computer is named after Goliath, so it just makes sense that Clint's computer is the evil twin of Carolyn's computer. A quick summary of the computer's specs is: Intel Core i7-5820K Haswell-E 6-Core 3.3GHz with an Arctic Freezer I30 cooler on a ASRock X99 WS EATX motherboard with 24G of Crucial Ballistix Sport DDR4 2400mHz RAM, a Radeon R9 270 video card, and a Crucial M500 240GB M.2 SSD...all inside a massive NZXT Phantom 820 case. It was a $1560 build, summarized on my blog at clintjcl.wordpress.com/2015/03/06/journal-hardware-purcha...
- Intel Xeon E5-2620 v4
- SuperMicro LGA2011 SNK-P0048AP4 Heatsink Cooler
- SuperMicro X10SRM-TF-O
- Samsung M393A4K40BB1 64GB DDR4-2400 Rgistered ECC
- SanDisk z400s M.2 2280 128GB
- SanDisk z410 480GB x4
- ICY DOCK ToughArmor MB994SP-4S
- Arctic F8 80mm Fans x2
- Antec High Current Gamer Series HCG-620 620W PSU
- iStarUSA D-213-MATX 2U Rackmount Chassis
:: SPEC ::
CPU: INTEL CORE I5-9600KF
M/B: ASROCK B365M PHANTOM GAMING 4
GPU: AORUS GEFORCE GTX1080TI DDR5X 11GB
RAM: KINGSTON HYPERX PREDATOR RGB DDR4 16GB (8GBx2) 3200
SSD: DEVA'S E240E 240GB 3D NAND
HDD: SEAGATE BARRACUDA 1TB 7200RPM SATA III
COOLING: COOLER MASTER MASTER LIQUID ML240R RGB
PSU: CORSAIR RM750X
Case: TSUNAMI DMS-07
Here's my very first video tutorial on How to Play Pokemon Scarlet and Violet game on my PC! I will put the specs of my PC below for reference. I hope you like this guide and that it helps you.
Official Site approms.com/pokesvryuzu
Tested with these PC Specs:
CPU: Intel i7-8700 8th GEN Cpu
GPU: Zotac RTX 2070 Super Twinfan
RAM: 16GB DDR4 G.Skill Trident Z
SSD: 1TB Samsung 970 EVO Plus
HDD: 2x 3TB Seagate Barracuda
CPU Cooler: ID Cooling Zoomflow 240XT
PSU: Seasonic FOCUS Plus 850 Gold
Case: NZXT H500
#PokemonScarlet #PokemonViolet #Ryujinx
With my system, I had skipped a tick and tock, upgrading the last time to Intel Ivy Bridge with a Core i7-3770K, using that Gigabyte Z77-series motherboard you see above. After Haswell and Broadwell, now Intel’s Skylake architecture uses the Z170 motherboard line, and sticking with Gigabyte (who served me well, and who feature so-called “Ultra-Durable” components), I went with their GA-Z170X-GAMING7 motherboard. That “Gaming” suffix points to a theme: it’s because of gamers, who have little to do with creating cinematic arts, that technology has advanced so rapidly (sort of like lascivious content thrusting forward, ahem, home videotape technology last century). Even if you hate video games (like me), you’ll often be overlapping with that industry when you get good tech. The best example of that is “video cards,” or GPUs, that were designed mainly for 3D object rendering in virtual animations. Ironically, even though you won’t use that as a realist filmmaker, the computing power of GPUs is essential to keeping your video editing work moving along quickly. (This belongs in another article, but basically when you’re using software that leverages GPU power, like Adobe Premiere’s Mercury Playback Engine, things like color correction and even transitions get off-loaded from CPU number-crunching onto the GPU, to spread out resources and speed things up.)
Just like the battle between AMD and Intel, there are GPU wars between AMD (again) and Nvidia: simply put, the latter wins. Adobe (for example) deploys Nvidia’s CUDA acceleration to a much more impactful extent than AMD’s use of OpenGL. The current state-of-the-art by Nvidia is their GeForce 900-series, and a reasonable compromise is to buy any manufacturer’s use of their GTX 960 chipset. Available in 2GB or 4GB of VRAM, 2GB is generally enough, but if you’re pushing the limits, 4GB may be worth it. There are GTX 970s, 980s and Titans too, but those performance gains diminish rapidly the higher you go. There’s only so much of that power (designed really for gaming vectors) that you can use as a video editor.
One last core ingredient to building your system is DRAM, which is the kind of memory that disappears when you turn the computer off (compared to a storage drive). Intel Skylake now requires a new type of DRAM, rated DDR4. Inherently fast to begin with, it’s not critical to get the best DDR4 you can; and my choice shown here is somewhere in the middle but totally sufficient (i.e., it never gets saturated).
- Intel Xeon E5-2620 v4
- SuperMicro LGA2011 SNK-P0048AP4 Heatsink Cooler
- SuperMicro X10SRM-TF-O
- Samsung M393A4K40BB1 64GB DDR4-2400 Rgistered ECC
- SanDisk z400s M.2 2280 128GB
- SanDisk z410 480GB x4
- ICY DOCK ToughArmor MB994SP-4S
- Arctic F8 80mm Fans x2
- Antec High Current Gamer Series HCG-620 620W PSU
- iStarUSA D-213-MATX 2U Rackmount Chassis
My SSD on top of my cooling fan. Quite the size difference.
CPU Cooler: Arctic Freezer I30 CPU Cooler: $34.98 from SuperBiiz.com ... After having to upgrade CPU coolers TWICE IN A MONTH with my old computer Hades, due to cat hairs, I knew not to bother skimping out this time. I want straight for the more expensive, more large, $40 aftermarket cooler. Unfortunately, it was so large it blocked a RAM slot, and due to the way RAM works in this motherboard, that means not being able to use 2 RAM slots. But my motherboard has 8 RAM slots. I just wish I hadn't bought 4G SIMMS, because 6 * 4G = 24G, and being maxed out at 24G RAM kinda sucks when I regularly break 30G of actual-memory-used. If I could have used those 2 extra slots, I'd be up to 32G of RAM. If I had bought 8G SIMMS, I could have gotten 24G of RAM, and then upgraded up to 48G. But I'm stuck with 24G, and not wanting to spend $300 just to get to 32G (by virtue of having to re-buy all-8G SIMMS). ANYWAY, this cooler has other features/specs: Mfr Part Number: FREEZER I30 / 4 Mounting Directions / Application: Intel / Material: Aluminum finsx48, thickness 0.5mm / Heatpipe: Direct-Touch 8mmx4 (double-sided) / Fan Speed: ARCTIC F12 PWM; 120 mm, 400 - 1,350 RPM (PWM controlled) / Air Flow: 74 CFM / 125.7 m3/h / Bearings: Fluid Dynamic Bearing / Noise Level: 0.3 Sone (@ 1,350 RPM) / Maximum Cooling Capacity: 320 Watts / Current/Voltage: 0.22A / 3.5 - 12V / Dimensions: 139x100x161mm / Weight: 0.9kg / Compatibility List: LGA 2011: i7 Extreme=i7-3980X,i7-3960X; i7=i7-3930K,i7-3820; LGA 1155: i7=i7-2700K,i7-2600S,i7-2600K,i7-2600; i5=i5-2500T,i5-2500S,i5-2500K,i5-2500,i5-2405S,i5-2400S,i5-2400,i5-2390T,i5-2320,i5-2310,i5-2300; i3=i3-3240T,i3-3240,i3-3225,i3-3220T,i3-3220,i3-2120,i3-2105,i3-2100T,i3-2100; Pentium=G860,G850,G840; LGA 1156: i7=i7-880,i7-875K,i7-870S,i7-870,i7-860S,i7-860,i5=i5-760,i5-750S,i5-750,i5-680,i5-670,i5-661,i5-660,i5-655K,i5-650,i5-540,i5-530,i3=i3-560,i3-550,i3-540,i3-530,Pentium=G6960,G6950; LGA 1150 / 6 year warranty
My C: drive: An SSD: Crucial M500 240GB M.2: $123.99 from SuperBiiz. Look how small this harddrive is! Motherboards now have a special faster-than-SATA slot for SSD harddrives. Woo! Other stats: NAND Flash: 20nm Micron MLC / Read Rate Up to 500MB/s / Write Rate: Up to 250MB/s / Random Read (4k): Up to 72,000IOPS / Random Write (4k): Up to 60,000IOPS / MTBF: 1,200,000 hours.
building computer.
box, computer fan, harddrive SSD Crucial hardware.
Thailog.
upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
March 12, 2015.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL at wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL at wordpress.com
BACKSTORY: Building my new computer! We decided to name it Thailog. Thailog ("Goliath" spelled backwards) is the evil twin of Goliath from the cartoon Gargoyles. Carolyn's computer is named after Goliath, so it just makes sense that Clint's computer is the evil twin of Carolyn's computer. A quick summary of the computer's specs is: Intel Core i7-5820K Haswell-E 6-Core 3.3GHz with an Arctic Freezer I30 cooler on a ASRock X99 WS EATX motherboard with 24G of Crucial Ballistix Sport DDR4 2400mHz RAM, a Radeon R9 270 video card, and a Crucial M500 240GB M.2 SSD...all inside a massive NZXT Phantom 820 case. It was a $1560 build, summarized on my blog at clintjcl.wordpress.com/2015/03/06/journal-hardware-purcha...
My first modular power supply. It's very nice to not have extra cables connected unless you need them.
My modular power supply is the most badass one I've ever owned, with the highest wattage: An Enermax ERV1000EWT-G 1000W v2.3 $140.98 (after $45 rebate) from NewEgg. Other specs: Type: ATX12V v2.3 / EPS12V v2.92, v2.8 / 24Pin +12V Rails: 4 / PCI-Express Connector: 6x6+2-Pin / SATA Power Connectors: 10 / SLI Certified / Haswell Support Certified / CrossFire Ready / 87-93% efficiency @ 20-100% load / 80 PLUS GOLD Certified / Over Voltage Protection / Input Current: 11 - 5A / Output: +3.3V@24A, +5V@24A, +12V1@30A, +12V2@30A, +12V3@30A, +12V4@30A, -12V@0.5A, +5VSB@3A / MTBF: over 100,000 Hours / Dimensions: 5.91" x 3.39" x 6.89" / Weight: 6.39 lbs. / Dynamic Hybrid Transformer Topology: Technological breakthrough topology using a staged dynamic transformer array for extremely high efficiency with the most durable and stable output at any load. / C6 & Hybrid ready!: Maximum compatibility with C6 & hybrid states of current and future CPU & GPU generations by ZERO LOAD design (no minimum load). / Twister fan inside: 13.9cm Twister-bearing fan with low noise and long lifetime. / 100% Japanese electrolytic capacitors: Highest components standards for maximum durability and stability. / Future ready: 12P modular design for possibly upcoming new CPU and GPU 10P and/or 12P connectors. / DXXI ready: 100% 6+2P (8P) PCI-E connector to support new generation DXXI graphic cards. / 24/7 @ 50degrees C ready: Non-Stop industrial class performance at 50degrees C ambient. / SpeedGuard: Advanced fuzzy logic fan speed control for optimal cooling and minimum noise. / HeatGuard: Keeping PSU fan running for 30-60 seconds after shutdown to dissipate the remaining system heat and prolonging system lifetime. / CordGuard: Fixing the AC cord tightly to avoid accidental shutdowns of your PC. / Warranty period: 5 years
building computer.
Enermax Revolution87+ power supply.
Thailog.
upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
March 12, 2015.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL at wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL at wordpress.com
BACKSTORY: Building my new computer! We decided to name it Thailog. Thailog ("Goliath" spelled backwards) is the evil twin of Goliath from the cartoon Gargoyles. Carolyn's computer is named after Goliath, so it just makes sense that Clint's computer is the evil twin of Carolyn's^ computer. A quick summary of the computer's specs is: Intel Core i7-5820K Haswell-E 6-Core 3.3GHz with an Arctic Freezer I30 cooler on a ASRock X99 WS EATX motherboard with 24G of Crucial Ballistix Sport DDR4 2400mHz RAM, a Radeon R9 270 video card, and a Crucial M500 240GB M.2 SSD...all inside a massive NZXT Phantom 820 case. It was a $1560 build, summarized on my blog at clintjcl.wordpress.com/2015/03/06/journal-hardware-purcha...
I7 5820K and 16GB HyperX DDR4 Ram
Asus ROG Rampage V Extreme X99 Motherboard
Alphacool full custom watercooler with D5 Pump
Had to save the numbers. These are needed for warranty support!
My CPU is cutting edge: Intel Core i7-5820K Haswell-E 6-Core 3.3GHz LGA2011-v3 140W Desktop Processor: $381.54 from SuperBiiz.com ... Yes, 6 cores cost 50% more than 4 cores, and yes, it's totally worth it. Other features/specs include: 12-way multitask processing / Intel turbo Boost Technology 2.0 / Intel Hyper-Threading / Intel Smart Cache / support s 4-channel DDR4 memory / Core Name: Haswell E / Max Turbo Frequency: 3.6GHz / Intel Smart Cache: 15MB / Intel QPI Speed: 0GT/s / Lithography: 22nm / Max Thermal Design Power: 140W / Max Memory Bandwidth: 68GB/s / Max CPU Configuration: 1 / Advanced Technologies: Intel Turbo Boost 2.0 Technology, Intel Hyper-Threading Technology, Intel Virtualization Technology (VT-x), Intel Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O (VT-d), Intel VT-x with Extended Page Tables (EPT), Intel 64 Architecture, Idle States, Enhanced Intel SpeedStep Technology, Thermal Monitoring Technologies, Intel Identity Protection Technology, Intel Smart Re sponse Technology, AES New Instructions, Execute Disable Bit
building computer.
Intel Core i7 5820K CPU, barcodes, box.
Thailog.
upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
March 12, 2015.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL at wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL at wordpress.com
BACKSTORY: Building my new computer! We decided to name it Thailog. Thailog ("Goliath" spelled backwards) is the evil twin of Goliath from the cartoon Gargoyles. Carolyn's computer is named after Goliath, so it just makes sense that Clint's^ computer is the evil twin of ^Carolyn's^ computer. A quick summary of the computer's specs is: Intel Core i7-5820K Haswell-E 6-Core 3.3GHz with an Arctic Freezer I30 cooler on a ASRock X99 WS EATX motherboard with 24G of Crucial Ballistix Sport DDR4 2400mHz RAM, a Radeon R9 270 video card, and a Crucial M500 240GB M.2 SSD...all inside a massive NZXT Phantom 820 case. It was a $1560 build, summarized on my blog at clintjcl.wordpress.com/2015/03/06/journal-hardware-purcha...
OS: Android 7.1.2 Nougat
CPU: NXV Helix P1 (2.1Ghz Hex-Core)
GPU: Mali-G71 MP8 920Mhz
RAM: DDR4 6GB
Display: 5.6" QHD+ (3200*1800) (656ppi), Up to 600nit
Camera: Rear Leica Co-Engineered 16MP RGB / Monochrome Camera (f/1.8), Front 13MP (f/2.0)
Battery: Li-Ion 4190mAh
Storage: 64/128/256GB
etc: 3-side bezeless, USB 3.0 Type-C, IP68 water&dust resistant, back fingerprint sensor, Stereo Speaker(HTC 10 style), Dolby Atmos support
Alphabets were made by Zack: www.flickr.com/photos/61665880@N03/
CPU cooler installed on top of CPU, with thermal paste correctly applied, and fan hooked up to motherboard. Possibly the hardest amd most physically stressful step of the whole thing. There seems to be very little standardization on how you attach these things to the CPU socket, and the attachments themselves are always super-difficult to work, because they are designed to not damage the socket. Plastic screws that you can barely tell which way to turn, and only turn 90 degrees when inserted a specific way. Crap like that. And you can barely see what you are doing, due to the fan being larger than the socket it is attaching to. It's super-painful.
My CPU is cutting edge: Intel Core i7-5820K Haswell-E 6-Core 3.3GHz LGA2011-v3 140W Desktop Processor: $381.54 from SuperBiiz.com ... Yes, 6 cores cost 50% more than 4 cores, and yes, it's totally worth it. Other features/specs include: 12-way multitask processing / Intel turbo Boost Technology 2.0 / Intel Hyper-Threading / Intel Smart Cache / support s 4-channel DDR4 memory / Core Name: Haswell E / Max Turbo Frequency: 3.6GHz / Intel Smart Cache: 15MB / Intel QPI Speed: 0GT/s / Lithography: 22nm / Max Thermal Design Power: 140W / Max Memory Bandwidth: 68GB/s / Max CPU Configuration: 1 / Advanced Technologies: Intel Turbo Boost 2.0 Technology, Intel Hyper-Threading Technology, Intel Virtualization Technology (VT-x), Intel Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O (VT-d), Intel VT-x with Extended Page Tables (EPT), Intel 64 Architecture, Idle States, Enhanced Intel SpeedStep Technology, Thermal Monitoring Technologies, Intel Identity Protection Technology, Intel Smart Re sponse Technology, AES New Instructions, Execute Disable Bit
CPU Cooler: Arctic Freezer I30 CPU Cooler: $34.98 from SuperBiiz.com ... After having to upgrade CPU coolers TWICE IN A MONTH with my old computer Hades, due to cat hairs, I knew not to bother skimping out this time. I want straight for the more expensive, more large, $40 aftermarket cooler. Unfortunately, it was so large it blocked a RAM slot, and due to the way RAM works in this motherboard, that means not being able to use 2 RAM slots. But my motherboard has 8 RAM slots. I just wish I hadn't bought 4G SIMMS, because 6 * 4G = 24G, and being maxed out at 24G RAM kinda sucks when I regularly break 30G of actual-memory-used. If I could have used those 2 extra slots, I'd be up to 32G of RAM. If I had bought 8G SIMMS, I could have gotten 24G of RAM, and then upgraded up to 48G. But I'm stuck with 24G, and not wanting to spend $300 just to get to 32G (by virtue of having to re-buy all-8G SIMMS). ANYWAY, this cooler has other features/specs: Mfr Part Number: FREEZER I30 / 4 Mounting Directions / Application: Intel / Material: Aluminum finsx48, thickness 0.5mm / Heatpipe: Direct-Touch 8mmx4 (double-sided) / Fan Speed: ARCTIC F12 PWM; 120 mm, 400 - 1,350 RPM (PWM controlled) / Air Flow: 74 CFM / 125.7 m3/h / Bearings: Fluid Dynamic Bearing / Noise Level: 0.3 Sone (@ 1,350 RPM) / Maximum Cooling Capacity: 320 Watts / Current/Voltage: 0.22A / 3.5 - 12V / Dimensions: 139x100x161mm / Weight: 0.9kg / Compatibility List: LGA 2011: i7 Extreme=i7-3980X,i7-3960X; i7=i7-3930K,i7-3820; LGA 1155: i7=i7-2700K,i7-2600S,i7-2600K,i7-2600; i5=i5-2500T,i5-2500S,i5-2500K,i5-2500,i5-2405S,i5-2400S,i5-2400,i5-2390T,i5-2320,i5-2310,i5-2300; i3=i3-3240T,i3-3240,i3-3225,i3-3220T,i3-3220,i3-2120,i3-2105,i3-2100T,i3-2100; Pentium=G860,G850,G840; LGA 1156: i7=i7-880,i7-875K,i7-870S,i7-870,i7-860S,i7-860,i5=i5-760,i5-750S,i5-750,i5-680,i5-670,i5-661,i5-660,i5-655K,i5-650,i5-540,i5-530,i3=i3-560,i3-550,i3-540,i3-530,Pentium=G6960,G6950; LGA 1150 / 6 year warranty
My Motherboard is one of the VERY few motherboards on the market that has all the features I want, like on-board 7.1 sound with optical digital out: ASRock X99 Extended-lengthATX Motherboard with LGA2011-3 CPU socket: $280.48 (after $40 rebate) from NewEgg. Other misc specs: Chipset: Intel X99 / Memory: 8x288pin, DDR4 3200+(OC), MAX:128G, channel supported: Quad Channel / 5xPCI Express 3.0 x16 Slots / 1xPCI Express 2.0 x16 slot / SATA 6Gb/s: 10xSATA 6Gb/s / M.2: 1xUltra M.2 Socket / Onboard Audio: Realtek ALC1150 7.1 Channels / Onboard LAN: LAN Chipset Intel I217LM, Second LAN Chipset Intel I210AT (both 1Gbps,with teaming functionality) / Rear Panel Ports: 1xPS/2 keyboard/mouse port, 2xCOM Port Headers, 2xRJ-45 LAN Ports / USB 3.0: 4xUSB 3.0,4xUSB 2.0 / eSATA: 1 / S/PDIF Out: 1xOptical / 2xCPU Fan Connectors (1x4-pin, 1x3-pin), 3xChassis Fan Connectors (1x4-pin, 2x3-pin) (Smart Fan Speed Control), 1xPower Fan Connector (3-pin), 1xHDD Saver Connector / Dimensions: 12x10.5" / XXL Aluminum Alloy Heatsink, Premium 60A Power ±Choke±, Premium Memory Alloy ±Choke±, Ultra Dual-N MOSFET (UDM), Nichicon 12K Platinum Caps, Sapphire Black PCB / Supports Intel Core i7 and Xeon E5-1600/2600 v3 Processor Family for the LGA 2011-3 Socket, up to 18 Cores / Supports AMD 4-Way CrossFireX and NVIDIA 4-Way SLI / 10 SATA3, 1 eSATA, 1 Ultra M.2 (PCIe Gen3 x4 & SATA3) / 6 USB 3.0 (2 Front, 4 Rear) / 8 USB 2.0 (4 Front, 4 Back) / 2 COM Port Headers / 1 Thunderbolt AIC Connector / Limited Warranty period (parts/labor): 3 years / Dimensions: 332x352x87mm.
building computer, installing CPU cooler.
ASRock X99 WS motherboard, Intel Core i7 5820K CPU, fan.
Thailog.
upstairs, ±Clint± and ±Carolyn's± house, Alexandria, Virginia.
March 17, 2015.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL at wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL at wordpress.com
BACKSTORY: Building my new computer! We decided to name it Thailog. Thailog ("Goliath" spelled backwards) is the evil twin of Goliath from the cartoon Gargoyles. Carolyn's computer is named after Goliath, so it just makes sense that Clint's computer is the evil twin of Carolyn's computer. A quick summary of the computer's specs is: Intel Core i7-5820K Haswell-E 6-Core 3.3GHz with an Arctic Freezer I30 cooler on a ASRock X99 WS EATX motherboard with 24G of Crucial Ballistix Sport DDR4 2400mHz RAM, a Radeon R9 270 video card, and a Crucial M500 240GB M.2 SSD...all inside a massive NZXT Phantom 820 case. It was a $1560 build, summarized on my blog at clintjcl.wordpress.com/2015/03/06/journal-hardware-purcha...
Nuforms Design Studio
Hardware Specs
CPU: Intel 12900K
GPU: Radeon RX 6900 XT
MB: Asus ROG STRIX Z690-A GAMING WIFI D4
RAM: 32GB 3722Mhz DDR4
SSD: 1TB WD Black SN750, 2TB Samsung 980 Pro, 1TB Samsung 970 Evo Plus
Wifi/BT Card: Broadcom BRCM20702 PCIe card, BT 4.0, Wi-Fi AC (for macOS)
Audio USB Card: USB Audient ID14
Headphone Amplifier: xDuoo XD-05
Keyboard: NuPhy Air75
Mouse: Logitech G305
Speakers: Yamaha HS7
Headphones: Sony WH-1000XM3
Headphones: Audio-Technica ATH-M50X
PSU: Corsair HX1000
Case: NZXT H510i
Monitor: Dell G3223Q 4K 144Hz IPS
Yay, I've replaced four of this black dummies/placeholders by real memory modules in the PER430.
Have a great weekend!
Size comparison. This CPU cooler is huge.
CPU Cooler: Arctic Freezer I30 CPU Cooler: $34.98 from SuperBiiz.com ... After having to upgrade CPU coolers TWICE IN A MONTH with my old computer Hades, due to cat hairs, I knew not to bother skimping out this time. I want straight for the more expensive, more large, $40 aftermarket cooler. Unfortunately, it was so large it blocked a RAM slot, and due to the way RAM works in this motherboard, that means not being able to use 2 RAM slots. But my motherboard has 8 RAM slots. I just wish I hadn't bought 4G SIMMS, because 6 * 4G = 24G, and being maxed out at 24G RAM kinda sucks when I regularly break 30G of actual-memory-used. If I could have used those 2 extra slots, I'd be up to 32G of RAM. If I had bought 8G SIMMS, I could have gotten 24G of RAM, and then upgraded up to 48G. But I'm stuck with 24G, and not wanting to spend $300 just to get to 32G (by virtue of having to re-buy all-8G SIMMS). ANYWAY, this cooler has other features/specs: Mfr Part Number: FREEZER I30 / 4 Mounting Directions / Application: Intel / Material: Aluminum finsx48, thickness 0.5mm / Heatpipe: Direct-Touch 8mmx4 (double-sided) / Fan Speed: ARCTIC F12 PWM; 120 mm, 400 - 1,350 RPM (PWM controlled) / Air Flow: 74 CFM / 125.7 m3/h / Bearings: Fluid Dynamic Bearing / Noise Level: 0.3 Sone (@ 1,350 RPM) / Maximum Cooling Capacity: 320 Watts / Current/Voltage: 0.22A / 3.5 - 12V / Dimensions: 139x100x161mm / Weight: 0.9kg / Compatibility List: LGA 2011: i7 Extreme=i7-3980X,i7-3960X; i7=i7-3930K,i7-3820; LGA 1155: i7=i7-2700K,i7-2600S,i7-2600K,i7-2600; i5=i5-2500T,i5-2500S,i5-2500K,i5-2500,i5-2405S,i5-2400S,i5-2400,i5-2390T,i5-2320,i5-2310,i5-2300; i3=i3-3240T,i3-3240,i3-3225,i3-3220T,i3-3220,i3-2120,i3-2105,i3-2100T,i3-2100; Pentium=G860,G850,G840; LGA 1156: i7=i7-880,i7-875K,i7-870S,i7-870,i7-860S,i7-860,i5=i5-760,i5-750S,i5-750,i5-680,i5-670,i5-661,i5-660,i5-655K,i5-650,i5-540,i5-530,i3=i3-560,i3-550,i3-540,i3-530,Pentium=G6960,G6950; LGA 1150 / 6 year warranty
building computer.
Doublemint gum, computer fan, heat sink, lighter, nail clippers.
Thailog.
upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
March 12, 2015.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL at wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL at wordpress.com
BACKSTORY: Building my new computer! We decided to name it Thailog. Thailog ("Goliath" spelled backwards) is the evil twin of Goliath from the cartoon Gargoyles. Carolyn's computer is named after Goliath, so it just makes sense that Clint's computer is the evil twin of Carolyn's computer. A quick summary of the computer's specs is: Intel Core i7-5820K Haswell-E 6-Core 3.3GHz with an Arctic Freezer I30 cooler on a ASRock X99 WS EATX motherboard with 24G of Crucial Ballistix Sport DDR4 2400mHz RAM, a Radeon R9 270 video card, and a Crucial M500 240GB M.2 SSD...all inside a massive NZXT Phantom 820 case. It was a $1560 build, summarized on my blog at clintjcl.wordpress.com/2015/03/06/journal-hardware-purcha...
CPUs are so sensitive that they are packaged quite thoroughly compared to other computer components.
My CPU is cutting edge: Intel Core i7-5820K Haswell-E 6-Core 3.3GHz LGA2011-v3 140W Desktop Processor: $381.54 from SuperBiiz.com ... Yes, 6 cores cost 50% more than 4 cores, and yes, it's totally worth it. Other features/specs include: 12-way multitask processing / Intel turbo Boost Technology 2.0 / Intel Hyper-Threading / Intel Smart Cache / support s 4-channel DDR4 memory / Core Name: Haswell E / Max Turbo Frequency: 3.6GHz / Intel Smart Cache: 15MB / Intel QPI Speed: 0GT/s / Lithography: 22nm / Max Thermal Design Power: 140W / Max Memory Bandwidth: 68GB/s / Max CPU Configuration: 1 / Advanced Technologies: Intel Turbo Boost 2.0 Technology, Intel Hyper-Threading Technology, Intel Virtualization Technology (VT-x), Intel Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O (VT-d), Intel VT-x with Extended Page Tables (EPT), Intel 64 Architecture, Idle States, Enhanced Intel SpeedStep Technology, Thermal Monitoring Technologies, Intel Identity Protection Technology, Intel Smart Re sponse Technology, AES New Instructions, Execute Disable Bit
building computer.
Intel Core i7 5820K CPU, box, manuals.
Thailog.
upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
March 12, 2015.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL at wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL at wordpress.com
BACKSTORY: Building my new computer! We decided to name it Thailog. Thailog ("Goliath" spelled backwards) is the evil twin of Goliath from the cartoon Gargoyles. Carolyn's computer is named after Goliath, so it just makes sense that Clint's computer is the evil twin of Carolyn's computer. A quick summary of the computer's specs is: Intel Core i7-5820K Haswell-E 6-Core 3.3GHz with an Arctic Freezer I30 cooler on a ASRock X99 WS EATX motherboard with 24G of Crucial Ballistix Sport DDR4 2400mHz RAM, a Radeon R9 270 video card, and a Crucial M500 240GB M.2 SSD...all inside a massive NZXT Phantom 820 case. It was a $1560 build, summarized on my blog at clintjcl.wordpress.com/2015/03/06/journal-hardware-purcha...
Hi everyone! Just want to share my first video tutorial about on how to download and play Fire Emblem Engage on PC. Everything that you will need in start playing this game is in this video tutorial, so be sure to check it out and follow all the steps accordingly.
Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for fair use for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use.
Official Site approms.com/feengageryuzu
Tested with these PC Specs:
CPU: Intel i7-8700 8th GEN Cpu
GPU: Zotac RTX 2070 Super Twinfan
RAM: 16GB DDR4 G.Skill Trident Z
SSD: 1TB Samsung 970 EVO Plus
HDD: 2x 3TB Seagate Barracuda
CPU Cooler: ID Cooling Zoomflow 240XT
PSU: Seasonic FOCUS Plus 850 Gold
Case: NZXT H500
#FireEmblemEngage #Switch #ryujinx
CPU: INTEL Core i5-9600KF (6C/6T 3.7 -4.6GHz)
M/B: ASROCK B365M Phantom Gaming 4
GPU: Aorus GeForce GTX1080Ti DDR5X 11GB
RAM: KINGSTON Hyper-X Predator RGB DDR4 16GB (8GBx2) 3200
SSD: DEVA'S E240e 240GB 3D NAND
HDD: SEAGATE BARRACUDA 1TB 7200RPM SATA III
Cooling: COOLER MASTER MasterLiquid ML240R RGB
PSU: Corsair RM750x (750W 80+ Gold)
Case: Tsunami Hunter Eagle H8 RGB White
Monitor: AOC C27G1/67 VA Curve 144Hz
UPS: ZIRCON 1000VA 550 Watt
Gaming Gear
Mouse: Hyper-X PULSEFIRE SURGE
Keyboard: Razer Blackwidow 2019 RGB (Green switch)
Headset: Sennheiser GSP 350
Mouse mat: NUBWO STARDUST X92
Mouse Bungee: NUBWO NH48 PANDINAZ
SideStick: Logitech Extreme 3D Pro
Chair: Skorpio LUMIGO Racing Gaming Chair
Theta, a next-generation Cray/Intel system, will help bridge the gap between Mira and our ALCF-3 machine Aurora.
Theta is based on the 2nd Generation Intel® Xeon Phi™ processor (code name: Knights Landing (KNL). The system will have over 2500 nodes, each with a KNL 60-or-more-core processor having up to 16 GB of high-bandwidth in-package memory (IPM) and 192 GB of DDR4 RAM.
The aggregate peak compute speed will be over 8.5 PFLOPS. It will have an initial 10 PB Lustre parallel file system.
My workstation, SHODAN, was giving me GPU and PSU errors, so I decided to replace and upgrade the GPU and PSU. Thus, I toiled away to get it working again.
Here I am trying to remove the motherboard so I can do a complete dusting off of all components before installing the new parts.
This is the final phase or version of this current build as I also plan to finally replace processor, motherboard, and RAM, sometime this year.
This is essentially a build that I have been upgrading since 2012 and mainly comprises of:
•Intel i7 3770
•ASRock Z77 Extreme 4
•G.Skill Sniper 16GB 1600 DDR3 (4x4GB)
•Plextor M5 Pro 128Gb SSD; Samsung 850 250GB EVO SSD; Seagate Barracuda 500GB (Primarily use my 8TB Network Attached Storage for my media files)
As mentioned above, the first iteration of this build was in 2012 it has changed many times; swapping out parts, adding parts or peripherals, etc.
This time around I changed my VTX3D Radeon R9 390 to a MSI Gaming Z Geforce RTX 2060, and I replace my Corsair GS700 PSU with a Thermaltake Toughpower Grand Series RGB 650W 80 Plus Gold PSU.
Within this year, it is time for me to replace the processor with an AMD Ryzen 7, a B450 (or X470) motherboard, and still have at least 16GB of DDR4 RAM.
It is nearly time to retire my old workhorse, that granted, can still perform very well in productivity and gaming.
Shooting Information:
•Nikon D7200 with MB-D15 Battery Grip
•Sigma 17-50mm f/2.8 EX DC OS HSM
•Manual Mode
•1/15th @ 17mm zoom, f/5.6
•ISO 640
•No Flash Fired
Post Processing Information:
•Adobe Lightroom Classic CC
•Nik Software Silver Efex Pro 2
•Cropped
I accept any comment, from praises, awards, invitations, all the way to criticisms - as long as the criticism is constructive that I can learn and improve from. So, don't shy away with the comments!! =]
Also, consider following me! I will certainly follow back! You can never have too many friends!! =]
I7 5820K and 16GB HyperX DDR4 Ram
Asus ROG Rampage V Extreme X99 Motherboard
Alphacool full custom watercooler with D5 Pump
Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic XL ROG big tower
PSU: ASUS ROG Strix 1000G
MoBo: ASUS MAXIMUS XIII EXTREME
CPU: Intel® Core™ i9-11900K
Cooling: ASUS ROG Strix LC 360 RGB White Edition watercooling
RAM: G.Skill Trident Z Neo 64 GB DDR4 (3600 MHz)
OS drive: Samsung 980 PRO SSD 2 TB
DATA drive: Samsung 870 QVO SSD 8 TB
GPU: ASUS ROG Strix Gaming OC RTX 3080 Ti 12GB (GDDR6x)
Screens: ASUS ROG Strix XG49VQ 49" 32:9 + Liyama ProLite E2410HDS 24" + Samsung UE32J5200AW
Audio interfaces: PreSonus Studio 1824c, Behringer U-Phoria UMC404HD
Sound: Logitech Z906 Dolby Atmos 5.1 1000W + Dynaudio BM5 MkIII studio monitors
Headphones: Grado SR325e, AKG K171
Microphone: Shure SM7B
Peripherals: Pioneer DDJ-FLX6, Behringer Xtouch One, Nektar Panorama P6, AKAI MPK Mini MK3 white, TrackIR 5, GoPro Hero 9, Logitech C270 HD Webcam
Flightsim gear: Honeycomb Alpha, Honeycomb Bravo, Thrustmaster TPR rudder
Simracing gear: Fanatec Podium F1 wheel, Fanatec ClubSport V3 pedals
Big speakers. Silent PC. Silent Spec: + Streacom FC8 Alpha with wooden top panel finish + Gigabyte H170N-WiFi + Intel Skylake i7 3.4GHz + Corsair Vengeance LPX 16GB DDR4 2400MHz + Samsung 950 Pro PCIe 256GB SSD + 1TB Hard Disk Drive + Blu Ray Writer Slot Loading Peripherals: + LG 21:9 UltraWide 34UM95 Monitor + Logitech diNovo Edge Keyboard + Kensington SlimBlade Trackball + Beyerdynamic DT 880 Headphones #n3xuscomputing #silentpc #htpc #technology #buildapc #custompc #desktop #computer #pcmasterrace #battlestation Worthy repost? @cleansetup ;)
Motherboard: MSI B350M-PRO-VDH
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 1400 with Wraith Stealth Cooler
RAM: 8GB Ballistix Sport LT DDR4 2400
SSD: SANDISK X400 SSD M.2 2280 256GB
Grafic: Zotac GeForce GT 610 SYNERGY 2GB
Wlan: TP-Link Wlan-card TL-WN781ND
Baby got back. This is the most attractive posterior of any computer I've ever built. I'm pretty sure I gave that computer analingus that first night, but first I had to warm her up with some fingerbanging.
My case: By far the best I've ever owned, though it has a fatal flaw with harddrive noise in certain harddrive cages, and I wish the windows were bigger, and I wish the color-cycling could be automated. But still: This NZXT Phantom 820 Series case was $199.99 from NewEgg. "CA-PH820-M1 Matte Black St" / 2 yr warranty / Steel & Plastic / Power Supply Mounted: Bottom / Motherboard Compatibility: Micro ATX / ATX / Mini ITX / E-ATX / XL-ATX / Side Panel Window / Expansion: External 5.25" Drive Bays:4 / External 3.5" Drive Bays:No / Internal 3.5" Drive Bays:6 / Expansion Slots:9 / Removable Filter / Front Ports: 2xUSB3.0 + 4xUSB2.0 + Audio + SD Card Reader / Fans: 1x140mm Rear + 1x200mm Front + 1x200mm Top + 1x200mm Side Fan / Side Air duct: No / Dimensions:25.59x9.25x24.09" / Weight: 32 lbs / Integrated HUE lighting for illuminating the exterior/interior of your enclosure with option to turn on/off and allow you to customize the colors at your heart's content / integrated 4 channel digital fan controller with 15 watts per channel and LED indicators that progressively gets brighter on higher speeds / easily removable air filters located in the top+front+side+bottom to prevent dust entry / Adjustable interior pivot 120/140mm fan slot for directional airflow / Removable HDD cage and large storage capacity for 6 hard drives / Stylish acrylic window with a view to show off the interior of your rig / Unrivalled Cooling Capacity to mount up to nine fans for a maximum airflow / ±Rear I/O white light for visibility in dark environments with a toggle switch± / Extruded right side panel for an elegant look and achieves 36mm clearance for cable wire management / Equipped with a stylish pedestal that lifts your enclosure off the ground for increased airflow.
building computer, fingering holes.
NZXT Phantom 820 computer case.
Thailog. diptych.
upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
March 17, 2015.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL at wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL at wordpress.com
BACKSTORY: Building my new computer! We decided to name it Thailog. Thailog ("Goliath" spelled backwards) is the evil twin of Goliath from the cartoon Gargoyles. Carolyn's computer is named after Goliath, so it just makes sense that Clint's computer is the evil twin of Carolyn's± computer. A quick summary of the computer's specs is: Intel Core i7-5820K Haswell-E 6-Core 3.3GHz with an Arctic Freezer I30 cooler on a ASRock X99 WS EATX motherboard with 24G of Crucial Ballistix Sport DDR4 2400mHz RAM, a Radeon R9 270 video card, and a Crucial M500 240GB M.2 SSD...all inside a massive NZXT Phantom 820 case. It was a $1560 build, summarized on my blog at clintjcl.wordpress.com/2015/03/06/journal-hardware-purcha...
Date de sortie : 2022
Studio : Undead Labs
Suite de God of War (2018). Kratos et Atreus s'aventurent dans chacun des Neuf Royaumes pour trouver des réponses, tandis que les Asgardiens se préparent à la guerre. Lors de l'épopée, ils exploreront des paysages mythiques, rassembleront des alliés dans différents royaumes et affronteront de terribles ennemis, comme de monstres ou de dieux nordiques. Alors que la menace du Ragnarök se fait santir, Kratos et Atreus doivent choisir entre la sécurité de leur famille ou des royaumes...
Bande annonce : youtu.be/c8UOGU0Sdj0
____________
YouTube chaine : www.youtube.com/channel/UCVUJRWZqytwfuXsCPBEeK6Q
Facebook : www.facebook.com/tripleforcegaming/
twitter : twitter.com/TrForceGamin
discord : discord.gg/VHTdxy5r
Console:
Xbox Series S : amzn.to/3rwQgSm
Playtation 5 : amzn.to/3pwhHJpS
witch : amzn.to/3Et41VF
En exclusivité pour Setup Gamer !!! voici notre sélection :
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🎧Casque SteelSeries Arctis 3 : amzn.to/3EpTdHS
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💺Chaise Gaming : amzn.to/3Gdo62O
🔥PC GAMER Aux Alentours de 500€ ( Processeur : AMD Ryzen 3 3200G 4 Coeur 3.6Ghz, RAM 8GB DDR4, Disque Dur : 1000GB, Carte Graphique GTX 1050 Ti 4GB GDDR5, carte mère ASUS Prime A320M-K, Boitier Tour Gaming Hunter RGB) 24 mois de garantie
🔥🔥PC GAMER Aux Alentours de 700€ (Processeur : AMD Rayzen 5 2600 6 coeur 3.9 GHz (turbo) RAM : 16 GB DDR4, Disque Dur 1000GB, SSD 240GB, Carte Graphique GTX 1060 6GB GDDR5,Carte Mère MSI A320M PRO, Boitier Tour Gaming Hunter RGB) 24 mois de garantie
🔥🔥🔥PC GAMER Aux Alentours de 1000€ Megaport PC Gamer Goblin AMD Ryzen 5 3600 6X 3,60 GHz • GeForce RTX2060 6Go • 16Go DDR4 • 240 Go SSD • 1To • Windows 10 • WiFi • USB3.0 AVANTAGES : • 16 GB RAM • Très bonne carte graphique • Hybride (Disque Dur + SSD) • Élégance du Boitier • Permet de stream • Permet de faire des montages (photo/vidéo) • Performance dans les Jeux-Vidéos (FPS) Garantie 2 ans
🔥🔥🔥🔥PC GAMER Aux Alentours de 1200€ Memory PC Gamer AMD Ryzen 7 2700X 8 x 4,3 GHz, 16 Go DDR4 RAM 3000 MHz, MSI B450 StoreMI, 240 Go SSD + 2000 Go HDD, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2070 8 Go 4K AVANTAGES : • PC monté avec Windows installé • Supporte tous les jeux de 2019 en FULL • Capable de réaliser des montages (Photo & Video) • Livraison Rapide • Achat sécurisé sur Amazon +Garantie 2 ans
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥👍PC GAMER 1339€ : Intel i7-9700K 8 x 3,6 GHz, 16 Go DDR4 RAM, 480 Go SSD + 2000 Go HDD, NVIDIA RTX 2060 6GB 4K + Garantie 2 ans. ►ICI :
OS: Android 7.1 Nougat
CPU: Snapdragon 821 Pro 2.34Ghz + 2.19Ghz
GPU: Adreno 530
RAM: 6GB DDR4
Display: 5.5" QHD (535ppi) Super AMOLED, up to 850nit
Camera: Rear 16M (f/1.8), Front 16M (f/2.0)
Battery: 3840mAh
Storage: 64&128GB, SD Card up to 256GB
etc: Always on Display, Front-Facing Stereo Speaker, USB 3.0 Type-C, On-Screen Fingerprint Sensor, Resolution settings, Dolby atmos support, IP68 water&dust resistant
Couldn't use SD835 since Samsung bought all of the first made ones :(
OS: Android 7.1.2 Nougat
CPU: Snapdragon 821 2.15Ghz + 1.75Ghz
GPU: Adreno 530
RAM: DDR4 4GB
Display: 5.3" FHD (416ppi), up to 580nit, Gorilla Glass 4
Camera: Rear 13MP (f/1.8), Front 13MP (f/2.0)
Battery: Li-Ion 3000mAh
Storage: 32GB On-Board, 128GB Cloud Storage
etc: Fingerprint Sensor (Power Button), IP67 water&dust resistant, USB 3.0 Type-C, Front facing Stereo speaker
AT LLNL, THE SIERRA SUPERCOMPUTER WILL BE A 125-petaFLOPS (FLOATING POINT OPERATION PER SECOND) PEAK PERFORMANCE MACHINE, PROJECTED TO PROVIDE FOUR TO SIX SUSTAINED PERFORMANCE OF THE LAB’S CURRENT WORKHORSE SYSTEM SEQUOIA.
IT ROSE OUT OF DOE’S COLLABORATION OF OAK RIDGE, ARGONNE, AND LIVERMORE (CORAL) PARTNERSHIP, WHICH IS CULMINATING IN THE DELIVERY OF LARGE- SCALE, HIGH PERFORMANCE SUPERCOMPUTERS AT EACH OF THE THREE NATIONAL LABORATORIES. IT WILL FEATURE TWO IBM POWER 9 PROCESSORS AND 4 NVIDIA VOLTA GPUs PER NODE. POWER 9s WILL PROVIDE A LARGE AMOUNT OF MEMORY BANDWIDTH FROM THE CHIPS TO SIERRA’S DDR4 MAIN MEMORY AND THE LAB’S WORKLOAD WILL BENEFIT FROM THE USE OF SECOND-GENERATION NVLINK, FORMING A HIGH-SPEED CONNECTION BETWEEN THE CPUs AND GPUs.
For more information or additional images:
(202) 586-5251
EnergyTechnologyVisualsCollectionETVC@hq.doe.gov
www.flickr.com/photos/departmentofenergy/collections/7215...
- Intel i3-6100 3.7GHz (Skylake)
- 8GB Crucial DDR4 2133MHz Ram
- MSI H1101 Pro AC Socket 1151
- Adata SP550 240GB SSD
- Seagate ST500LT012 500GB HD
- Antec Mini-ITX Case ISK110-VESA
- Intel Xeon E5-2620 v4
- SuperMicro LGA2011 SNK-P0048AP4 Heatsink Cooler
- SuperMicro X10SRM-TF-O
- Samsung M393A4K40BB1 64GB DDR4-2400 Rgistered ECC
- SanDisk z400s M.2 2280 128GB
- SanDisk z410 480GB x4
- ICY DOCK ToughArmor MB994SP-4S
- Arctic F8 80mm Fans x2
- Antec High Current Gamer Series HCG-620 620W PSU
- iStarUSA D-213-MATX 2U Rackmount Chassis
OS: Android 7.1 Nougat
CPU: Snapdragon 835 2.45Ghz + 1.9Ghz
GPU: Adreno 540
RAM: 6GB DDR4
Display: 5.5" QHD (535ppi) Super AMOLED, up to 850nit, Gorilla Glass 5
Camera: Rear 16MP (f/1.8), Front 16MP (f/1.9)
Battery: Li-Ion 3840mAh
Storage: 64/128GB, SD Card up to 2TB
etc: Always On Display, Fingerprint Sensor(Back), Stereo Speaker, USB 3.0 Type-C, Resolution Settings, Dolby Atmos Support, IP68 water & dust resistant
OS: Android 8.0 Oreo
CPU: Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 2.8Ghz
GPU: Adreno 630
RAM: DDR4 8GB
Display: 5.8" 2560*1312 OLED, up to 900nit (~88.6% Screen to Body Ratio)
Camera (Rear): Dual 13MP, f/1.6, Phase detection & Laser autofocus, 4K@30fps, 1440p@50fps, 1080@60fps or 720p@240fps
Camera (Front): 8MP, f/1.9, 4K@30fps, 1440p@50fps, 1080@60fps or 720p@120fps
Battery: Li-Ion 3480mAh
Storage: 128GB, SD card up to 200GB
etc: USB 3.0 Type-C, Stereo speaker (HTC 10 style), IP67 Water&Dust resistant, Bluetooth 5.0, Rear fingerprint sensor
HEADPHONE JACK: F**K YES
I wrote the specification more detailed...maybe.
My workstation, SHODAN, was giving me GPU and PSU errors, so I decided to replace and upgrade the GPU and PSU. Thus, I toiled away to get it working again.
This is the final phase or version of this current build as I also plan to finally replace processor, motherboard, and RAM, sometime this year.
This is essentially a build that I have been upgrading since 2012 and mainly comprises of:
•Intel i7 3770
•ASRock Z77 Extreme 4
•G.Skill Sniper 16GB 1600 DDR3 (4x4GB)
•Plextor M5 Pro 128Gb SSD; Samsung 850 250GB EVO SSD; Seagate Barracuda 500GB (Primarily use my 8TB Network Attached Storage for my media files)
As mentioned above, the first iteration of this build was in 2012 it has changed many times; swapping out parts, adding parts or peripherals, etc.
This time around I changed my VTX3D Radeon R9 390 to a MSI Gaming Z Geforce RTX 2060, and I replace my Corsair GS700 PSU with a Thermaltake Toughpower Grand Series RGB 650W 80 Plus Gold PSU.
Within this year, it is time for me to replace the processor with an AMD Ryzen 7, a B450 (or X470) motherboard, and still have at least 16GB of DDR4 RAM.
It is nearly time to retire my old workhorse, that granted, can still perform very well in productivity and gaming.
Shooting Information:
•Nikon D7200 with MB-D15 Battery Grip
•Sigma 17-50mm f/2.8 EX DC OS HSM
•Manual Mode
•1 second @ 24mm zoom, f/5.6
•ISO 200
•No Flash Fired
Post Processing Information:
•Adobe Lightroom Classic CC
•Cropped
I accept any comment, from praises, awards, invitations, all the way to criticisms - as long as the criticism is constructive that I can learn and improve from. So, don't shy away with the comments!! =]
Also, consider following me! I will certainly follow back! You can never have too many friends!! =]
- Intel i3-6100 3.7GHz (Skylake)
- 8GB Crucial DDR4 2133MHz Ram
- MSI H1101 Pro AC Socket 1151
- Adata SP550 240GB SSD
- Seagate ST500LT012 500GB HD
- Antec Mini-ITX Case ISK110-VESA
Alpha-1 と合わせて2 or 3ノードのクラスタを構成予定
*** Alpha-2
Case: Lian-Li PC-Q07-U2 (5" Bay x1)
HDD Bay: Century CMRK-S6S6G (2.5"x6 => 5" bay)
Power: CORE-SFX300 (SFX 300W) + ATX blacket
MB: Gigabyte/Z170N-WiFi (Mini-ITX)
CPU: Intel/i5-6500T (4 core)
Fan: Cryorig/C7
Memory: Crucial/DDR4-2100 16GBx2 (CT2K16G4DFD8213)
M.2 SSD: Intel/NVMe 128GB (SSDPEKKW128G7X1)
2.5" SSD: Samsung/SATA 250GB (MZ750250BIT) x2
2.5" HDD: HGST/SATA 1TB (HTS721010A9E630) x4
*** Alpha-3
Case: ThermalTake Core V1
Power: KRPW-L5-400W/80+ (ATX 400W)
MB: Gigabyte/H170N-WiFi (Mini-ITX)
CPU&Fan: Intel/i5-6400 (4 core)
Memory: Crucial/DDR4-2100 16GBx2 (CT2K16G4DFD8213)
2.5" SSD: Apacer/SATA 250GB (AP240GAST680S-JP) x1
2.5" HDD: 500GB + 750GB (used)
:: SPEC ::
CPU: INTEL CORE I5-9600KF
M/B: ASROCK B365M PHANTOM GAMING 4
GPU: AORUS GEFORCE GTX1080TI DDR5X 11GB
RAM: KINGSTON HYPERX PREDATOR RGB DDR4 16GB (8GBx2) 3200
SSD: DEVA'S E240E 240GB 3D NAND
HDD: SEAGATE BARRACUDA 1TB 7200RPM SATA III
COOLING: COOLER MASTER MASTER LIQUID ML240R RGB
PSU: CORSAIR RM750X
Case: TSUNAMI DMS-07
MONITOR: AOC 27G2 IPS 144HZ
UPS: ZIRCON 1000VA 550 WATT
:: GAMING GEAR ::
MOUSE: HYPERX PULSEFIRE SURGE
KEYBOARD: RAZER BLACKWIDOW 2019 RGB (GREEN SWITCH)
HEATSET: SENNHEISER GSP 350
MOUSE MAT: NUBWO STARDUST X92
MOUSE BUNGEE: NUBWO NH48 PANDINAZ
SIDESTICK: LOGITECH EXTREAME 3D PRO
GAMING CHAIR: SKORPIO LUMIGO RACING