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New toy
Antec Fusion Remote (Silver)
Gigabyte MA785GMT-UD2H AM3 Mobo
AMD Phenom II X4 B50 Black Edition (3.4GHz Unlocked 550)
Arctic Power 500w PSU
4GB Crucial Ballistix 1333MHz DDR3 RAM
ATI Radeon HD5770 1GB Graphics Card
500GB Seagate SATAII HDD
networked to the 6TB Storage server I built last month :0)
A week ago my powerful XPS computer had a serious breakdown.
Now we'll see what the support for the XPS is good for.... Last time I had to talk to someone in India :-o
Notice the vertical lines.. My guess is that it's the graphics card that's toast.
In the end, the graphics card and the CPU heatsink / fan had to be changed... but now it's alive... ALIVE! Had to wait a week for the parts that was needed, but other than that, the Dell support was fast and impressive.
I'm that guy to whom everyone gives their old computers and related parts. So I have a rather large collection of useless items including this very old graphics card. I got bored one day and with the aid of a plastic $1.99 magnifying glass took these photos.
Whee!
Dreamer's space is in a corner of the exercise (and hiking gear storage) room. Eventually I plan to set it up as a headless system that I'll access via XServer to set up and run batch deep dream jobs.
Some of my Deep Dream wallpaper [Flickr]
The beast got some new guts:
An ASUS Xonar Essence STX Hi-Fi Sound Card (ahhhh the sound of silence - no more motherboard noise)
A Gigabyte nVidia GTX460 1G OC Video card (so I can run CUDA video apps)
An Antec 750W power supply to run it all.
And, after a couple of false starts, it works!
Selfie of "Dreamer" with her new GPU.
Some of my Deep Dream wallpaper [Flickr]
The YCD MuVi Wall incorporates three M9140 graphics cards to drive 12 monitors—in any size, of any matrix, and at any angle—from a single workstation.
Matrox M9140 low-profile PCI Express x16 graphics card supports up to four monitors at resolutions up to 1920x1200 per output.
This old Inspiron 580s was part of my home theater system (boxee alpha then XBMC then SteamOS). It came with a oem Geforce 310. The box now runs Google Deep Dream processing on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS. The new card will give the box CUDA processing capabilities (i.e., better performance for caffe/deep dream processing). [Original Specs]
Some of my Deep Dream wallpaper [Flickr]
I removed the old video card and a couple other components. To ensure I don't overtax the system with the new GT 730, I stripped out the old surround sound audio card and 2TB media drive I no longer need.
Some of my Deep Dream wallpaper [Flickr]
Obligatory "got my new GPU!" selfie
Some of my Deep Dream wallpaper [Flickr]
Taken for group "Macro Monday" theme "Inside Electronics"
This was taken with a 50mm lens and extension tube.
Matrox M9140 low-profile PCI Express x16 graphics card supports up to four monitors at resolutions up to 1920x1200 per output.
The high impact YCD MuVi Wall can use multiple Matrox M9140 graphics cards to drive up to nine screens of digital messaging content.
Next-generation CPU
This system running a 3GHz Phenom quad-core microprocessor and three ATI HD 2900 XT graphics cards was shown during AMD's Technology Analyst Day presentation. (Photo: The Inquirer)
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 295
GPU Engine Specs
Processor Cores: 480 ( 240 per GPU )
Graphics Clock: 576 MHz
Processor Clock: 1242 MHz
Texture Fill Rate: (billion/sec) 92.2
Memory Specs
Memory Clock: 999 MHz
Standard Memory Config: 1792 MB GDDR3 ( 896MB per GPU )
Memory Interface Width: 896-bit ( 448-bit per GPU )
Memory Bandwidth: (GB/sec) 223.8
Feature Support
NVIDIA SLI®-ready* Quad
GeForce 3D Vision Ready
NVIDIA PureVideo® Technology* HD
NVIDIA PhysX™-ready
NVIDIA CUDA™ Technology
Microsoft DirectX 10
OpenGL 2.1
Bus Support PCI-E 2.0 x16
Certified for Windows Vista
Display Support
Maximum Digital Resolution: 2560x1600
Maximum VGA Resolution: 2048x1536
Standard Display Connectors: Two Dual Link DVI
HDMI
Multi Monitor
HDCP*
HDMI*
Audio Input for HDMI SPDIF
Standard Graphics Card Dimensions
Height: 4.376 inches (111 mm)
Length: 10.5 inches (267 mm)
Width: Dual-slot
Thermal and Power Specs
Maximum GPU Temperature: 105 C
Maximum Graphics Card Power: 289 W
Minimum System Power Requirement: 680 W
Supplementary Power Connectors: 6-pin & 8-pin
The Matrox Graphics booth at ISE 2012 featuring the Matrox Avio KVM extender and Matrox Mura video wall controller board demo stations.
XFX HD 4890 1GB eVGA GTX 260 Core 216 55nm Superclocked installed.
Next on the list: Bolt-thru kit for the Ninja 2 (motherboard warp :( ), Q9550
ATI Radeon HD3870 X2
AMD's R680 (2 x RV670 GPUs) 55nm PCI-Express 2.0 x16 graphics card.
Key features: GPU 825MHz, Memory 900MHz (1800MHz effective), Over 1 TeraFLOPS GPU compute power, 640 (320 x 2) stream processing units, superscalar unified shader architecture, 2 x 256-bit memory interfaces, DirectX 10.1/Shader Model 4.1 support, dynamic geometry acceleration, game physics processing capability, ATI CrossFireX multi-GPU support (4 GPUs with FX790), high-speed 128-bit HDR rendering, Up to 24x custom filter anti-aliasing etc...
Almost a waste to put this INSIDE a computer. Nice looking GPU from MSi and Nvidia, that is now powering my hackintosh. It's nice to see great performance in the liquify filter… (-:
Card is not too noisy (fortunately) and has DVI, VGA and HDMI out.
nvda_drv=1, GraphicsEnabler=yes, web drivers 346.02.02f03