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From: Mike Raiford
Subject: I'm positively buzzing with excitement! (Images attached)
Date: 6 Jul 2009 07:03:01
Message: <4a51d9e5@news.povray.org>
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It's the E0 stepping, too!
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Attachments:
Download 'img_9332.jpg' (134 KB)
Download 'img_9333.jpg' (146 KB)
Preview of image 'img_9332.jpg'
Preview of image 'img_9333.jpg'
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From: Invisible
Subject: Re: I'm positively buzzing with excitement! (Images attached)
Date: 6 Jul 2009 07:41:04
Message: <4a51e2d0$1@news.povray.org>
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...I hate you. :-P
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From: Mike Raiford
Subject: Re: I'm positively buzzing with excitement! (Images attached)
Date: 6 Jul 2009 08:56:56
Message: <4a51f498$1@news.povray.org>
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Invisible wrote:
> ...I hate you. :-P
hee hee... Now, now...
I'll have to play with the latest beta of 3.7 ... ;)
I get the memory, case and video card next week.
BTW, the Intel reference cooler design has gotten really really wild.
Looks like a good chunk of copper is used right on the processor's heat
spreader.
LGA is a weird thing, too. The chip has no pins... The board has the pins.
--
~Mike
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From: Invisible
Subject: Re: I'm positively buzzing with excitement! (Images attached)
Date: 6 Jul 2009 09:09:02
Message: <4a51f76e@news.povray.org>
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Mike Raiford wrote:
> I'll have to play with the latest beta of 3.7 ... ;)
>
> I get the memory, case and video card next week.
Ah, the waiting game, eh?
What case did you go for? It's surprisingly hard to find a decent one.
(And nearly impossible to tell from a website which cases are the good
ones...)
> BTW, the Intel reference cooler design has gotten really really wild.
> Looks like a good chunk of copper is used right on the processor's heat
> spreader.
The six Dell Precision 7300 systems we just bought are a piece of work.
After you spend 20 minutes uncabling all the SATA cables and God know's
what else so you can remove the plastic air ducting, you find out why
the hell the system is so heavy: The heat sink appears to be a giant
lump of solid pig iron. Seems really overkill... (But hey, it's Dell!)
> LGA is a weird thing, too. The chip has no pins... The board has the pins.
I'm familiar. A few months ago I put together our *cough* dual quad-Xeon
2.8 GHz HP rack-mount server. >:-)
But hey, that's what "LGA" (and PGA) means.
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From: Mike Raiford
Subject: Re: I'm positively buzzing with excitement! (Images attached)
Date: 6 Jul 2009 09:34:48
Message: <4a51fd78$1@news.povray.org>
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Invisible wrote:
> Mike Raiford wrote:
>
>> I'll have to play with the latest beta of 3.7 ... ;)
>>
>> I get the memory, case and video card next week.
>
> Ah, the waiting game, eh?
Yep, yep... I get to stare at some nice kit for days and days before I
can assemble it.
> What case did you go for? It's surprisingly hard to find a decent one.
> (And nearly impossible to tell from a website which cases are the good
> ones...)
This one:
http://www.overclockercafe.com/Reviews/cases/CoolerMaster_Centurion-590/index.html
This was a difficult search.... I had some, probably unrealistic
requirements. Lots of cases with the USB, Audio, Firewire (and some
SATA!) ports on the top of the case. That won't work for me, as the
computer sits under the desk. So, a top-mounted IO panel was a
dealbreaker. Of those, many had the front-mounted IO panel near the
bottom of the case. I've had the unfortunate experience if stepping on a
USB plug accidentally, shorting out the port, and destroying it. So, I
wanted one that was front-mounted at the top of the case.
I was leery of the bottom-mounted PSU, which seems to be fairly common,
mainly for airflow reasons, since it's supposed to act like an exhaust
it wouldn't do much good on the ground. This one allows the PSU to cool
itself by pulling air through a vent in the case. I wanted lots of room
to expand, and lots of ventilation. This case has ventilation in spades,
and is very expandable. The mesh front allows lots of air to flow in
from the front.(very important, under the desk is confined, I don't want
it recirculating hot air that had just been blown out of the case.) The
filters are a nice touch. Spots for 6 fans. (It can support up to 8, but
my configuration will allow 7) and a vent behind the processor to give
the back of the board some air.
There are some drawbacks for the case
1. I'm hoping my power supply has long enough power cables for the
board, due to the bottom mounted PSU
2. No reset button, and as far as I can tell, no internal speaker, which
means diagnostic sounds will not be heard, unless the mainboard routes
these sounds through the mixer. These are minor concerns. I can't
remember the last time I punched the reset button, except accidentally,
which generally results in lost data and a string of swear words.
3. The motherboard tray isn't removable. It looks like there's lots of
room to work, though, so this may not be as bad as it seems, save for
the fact that I could not find a case that actually had a removable tray.
4. All of the reviews complain about the tool-free mounts. The drive
mounts don't hold, and with a large and heavy video card the back panel
mounts are inadequate, but there are screws supplied, so this isn't much
of a concern.
I'm going to be a bit silly, though. I plan to buy fans with green LED's
to mount in the front, instead of the standard blue. I like the idea of
green with this case for some reason.
I plan on adding another cage/fan combo block to get a second front fan,
and probably mount a fan in the top for exhaust, and the fan over the
chip as an exhaust.
> The six Dell Precision 7300 systems we just bought are a piece of work.
> After you spend 20 minutes uncabling all the SATA cables and God know's
> what else so you can remove the plastic air ducting, you find out why
> the hell the system is so heavy: The heat sink appears to be a giant
> lump of solid pig iron. Seems really overkill... (But hey, it's Dell!)
From what I've seen Dell does a good job cooling their systems. The
case on my work PC is tiny and cramped, and still keeps the processor
under 45.
>> LGA is a weird thing, too. The chip has no pins... The board has the
>> pins.
>
> I'm familiar. A few months ago I put together our *cough* dual quad-Xeon
> 2.8 GHz HP rack-mount server. >:-)
Ooooh... nice ;) Did you try POV 3.7 on it? XD
> But hey, that's what "LGA" (and PGA) means.
Yeah, but it doesn't sound weird until you actually look at it ;)
--
~Mike
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Hehe, I share your excitement - just got me a brand new Core i7-920, running at
2.793 GHz (officially 2.666, but CPU and mainboard seem to agree that cooling
is far sufficient to run at 21x clock speed, even when POV-Ray is blasting away
on 8 virtual CPUs simultaneously - 4 cores * hyperthreading - at a room ambient
temperature of cozy 32 deg. celsius.)
Needed to reinstall though: I had my local PC dealer install Windows 7 RC on it,
but never having gone through the Vista experience before I found it to be a
total PITA - drivers & software installation trouble on end joining forces with
a totally unaccustomed user interface and localization scheme to drive me nuts;
so I'm trying with Windows XP Professional x64 Edition now. So far it's playing
quite fair - despite seemingly using a similar localization scheme as Vista, but
at least it's not teaming up with other nasties as far as I can see.
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From: Mike Raiford
Subject: Re: I'm positively buzzing with excitement! (Images attached)
Date: 8 Jul 2009 14:21:23
Message: <4a54e3a3@news.povray.org>
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clipka wrote:
> Hehe, I share your excitement - just got me a brand new Core i7-920, running at
> 2.793 GHz (officially 2.666, but CPU and mainboard seem to agree that cooling
> is far sufficient to run at 21x clock speed, even when POV-Ray is blasting away
> on 8 virtual CPUs simultaneously - 4 cores * hyperthreading - at a room ambient
> temperature of cozy 32 deg. celsius.)
Ooh, the i7.... nice ;) I wonder if Hyperthreading gives much gain on a
multi-core system. The gains were negligible on the P4.
> Needed to reinstall though: I had my local PC dealer install Windows 7 RC on it,
> but never having gone through the Vista experience before I found it to be a
> total PITA - drivers & software installation trouble on end joining forces with
> a totally unaccustomed user interface and localization scheme to drive me nuts;
> so I'm trying with Windows XP Professional x64 Edition now. So far it's playing
> quite fair - despite seemingly using a similar localization scheme as Vista, but
> at least it's not teaming up with other nasties as far as I can see.
>
I'm wondering if it's worth it to change the install to Vista64 (it
seems if you have the retail box, you have 32 bit or 64 bit.)
I'm still a bit leery of going 64bit because of driver/etc... I have
lots of hardware that has been around for a while, most seems to work
with 32 bit vista, and I didn't need to shoehorn any WinXP drivers onto
it, so maybe I'll make the 64bit leap. I'll have to reinstall anyway,
because of the new MB.
Curious by what you mean by localization scheme?
--
~Mike
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From: Chambers
Subject: Re: I'm positively buzzing with excitement! (Images attached)
Date: 8 Jul 2009 23:03:03
Message: <4a555de7@news.povray.org>
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clipka wrote:
> Needed to reinstall though: I had my local PC dealer install Windows 7 RC on it,
> but never having gone through the Vista experience before I found it to be a
> total PITA
That's funny, because it's much more usable than Vista.
It's ironic that the greatest challenge to Windows Vista (and Windows 7)
comes in the form of XP.
--
Chambers
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From: Chambers
Subject: Re: I'm positively buzzing with excitement! (Images attached)
Date: 8 Jul 2009 23:05:45
Message: <4a555e89$1@news.povray.org>
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Mike Raiford wrote:
> I'm still a bit leery of going 64bit because of driver/etc... I have
> lots of hardware that has been around for a while, most seems to work
> with 32 bit vista,
I've been running 64bit Windows for a while now without any problems.
Have you checked http://www.microsoft.com/windows/compatibility/ for
your hardware?
--
Chambers
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On 9-7-2009 5:05, Chambers wrote:
> Mike Raiford wrote:
>> I'm still a bit leery of going 64bit because of driver/etc... I have
>> lots of hardware that has been around for a while, most seems to work
>> with 32 bit vista,
>
> I've been running 64bit Windows for a while now without any problems.
I have an existing keyboard with additional knobs that does not fully
function, my old palm cradle does not work and I have a removable usb
harddisk that almost does not function. I find the palm problem really
annoying. One of the reasons I will switch to Ubuntu soon.
> Have you checked http://www.microsoft.com/windows/compatibility/ for
> your hardware?
No because I already had them.
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