It's none of your business!
23 August 2007
Writer's Corner #2
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18 August 2007
How do you say "All of the gravy, none of the grief" in Spanish?

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/17/AR2007081702175.html?nav=rss_email/components

Hey, I’m against the war, and at certain times of the month, I’m a full-fledged pacifist. But, don’t be taking our money under terms, and then suddenly welsh on those terms. This isn’t fifty dollar bill, either: “Puerto Rico received $1.88 billion in U.S. education funds this year.” If you put this money in, say, New York City’s school system, just as many latinos would benefit, if not more.

All I know is, I shirk the draft, even though it’s not currently enstated, I’m a criminal, and I never got a red cent from the federal government for my high school education. These kids score big-game USA funds, and get to thumb their noses at us, and we can’t/don’t do a thing.

Feel free to call me prejudiced or whatever, but if Guam or America Samoa or any other territory was pulling this, I’d be calling them out, too. This isn’t about me wanting to send people to their deaths in a pointless war, that they had no representation in going into (which is mentioned in the article, and its absolutely right; they shouldn’t have to fight in a conflict that they had no regards about), this is a dependent nation picking and choosing when it wants to be under our umbrella. When were handing out subsidies, oh yeah, right here! When we’re looking for enlistment, ehhh no thanks.

If you guys were against the war, why enter into a program that forces you to provide student information for selective service? Oh that’s right; it was almost TWO BILLION dollars in ONE YEAR. The bride takes the dowry, then she gets cold feet.

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17 August 2007
WHEATCUP

It’s time to go back:

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08 August 2007
Only 100 minutes, a new record.

Mounted CPU, heatsink screwed in, RAM in, board stuck in case, PSU attached, power to the board, video card inserted, connected to monitor, case wiring attached, fired it up, BIOS POST, “BOOT DISK NOT FOUND”, VICTORY IS MINE.

Now all I need is a silly name for it.

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07 August 2007
Who doesn't?

This was found by my boss, out on a I-95 rest stop.

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06 August 2007
I've got metal joints.

Here are my choices, followed by rationale. Links will come later:

CPU: Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 Kentsfield – $289

Yeah, I’m finally the man now, dog. God bless Intel-AMD competition. Switching from AMD is sort of making me feel like an awful traitor, but I don’t think reaping the rewards of capitalism makes me a baby killer. For 100$ more than the higher-end Core 2 Duos, I thought, I’ll get something that will last me long into God-knows-when. At worst I’ll need more ram (using 2 slots now, so I’ve got 2 more empty) or a better graphics card (but I’m not expecting that will be for a very long time, either).

Motherboard: GIGABYTE GA-965P-DS3 LGA 775 Intel P965 Express ATX Intel Motherboard – $120

I think this is the right board, at just the right price. Coding Horror gave great acclaims to EVGA gear, but after reading up on their stuff and people’s experiences, I didn’t feel it worth the price of admission, at least not for my needs. I mean, I was raised on having a shoestring budget for this junk, such as having to make due with 50$ MSI boards whose IDE controllers would melt due to the Worcester, MA heat, making it so there’s a good chance any time you start the computer might be your last, until you can scrape together the funds for another cheap board. Of all these upgrades, somehow paying this much for a motherboard felt the most uncomfortable. But, all solid capacitors, comes-with heatsinks on the Northbridge and Southbridge, conveniently located and labeled interfaces and jumpers, and a manual that looks like it was written by somebody fluent in English: these are vast, appreciated improvements over my standard working materials.

Heatsink: ZALMAN CNPS9500 LED 92mm 2 Ball Cooling Fan with Heatsink – $54

I’ve used ThermalTake sinks on both of my AMD Athlons, mostly cause of the “Holy Crap look at the size of that thing” factor. The fan sounded like a jet engine at maximum strength, and like a fart-can muffler on a ricer, it sounds cool at first, but after a while, you wish all the background noise would just go away. I also ‘trust’ copper over aluminum; in the past I had bad experiences with Al heatsinks. It seems like everybody and their mom has used this Zalman on their Core 2 Quads. It’s highly rated, recommended strongly for overclocking, sounds like the best of the best. And…holy crap, look at the size of that thing.

Graphics: EVGA 512-P2-N773-AR GeForce 8600GTS 512MB 128-bit GDDR3 PCI Express x16 HDCP Video Card – $215

I think my unconscious benchmark in all of this was whether or not I’d be able to run Doom 3 using maximum settings. A 512mb graphics card is essential to that undertaking, and obviously is more than sufficient for other games, as well. There was temptation to throw in just a little bit more for a 768mb, but the bang-to-buck ratio on this one couldn’t be ignored. Also, a key factor, this badboy can output video in high-def, so I can watch HDTV through here (more on that later).

RAM: mushkin 2GB (2×1GB) 240-Pin DDR2 SDRAM DDR2 800 (PC2 6400) Dual Channel Kit Desktop Memory – $96

The board is particular about CAS latency and timing on RAM, so I decided to be a good boy and follow the recommended specs to the letter, with this 5-5-5-15 quality from Mushkin. Yes, there’s plenty of room for improvement here, but I’m looking to remain on some semblance of a budget here.

HDD: Western Digital 500GB SATA – $109

Gosh, those WD Raptors sure are nice…but just a wee bit pricey. I’m willing to hold out though as my next disk, after the price drops. For now, I’m probably going to be blown well enough away enough by going from Parallel to Serial ATA.

Power Supply: COOLER MASTER RS-550-ACLY ATX12V / EPS12V 550W Power Supply – $120

Not much to say; fairly efficient, wattage power gauge, built-in fan (which sure goes a LONG way toward PSU longevity) and decently priced for highly lauded quality. Oh, and it glows blue (hahaha).

Case: Antec Performance One P180B – $85

That price is after a store rebate, by the way. I really liked the case that Coding Horror/SilentPCReview advocated, the Antec P180/P182, and it turns out the black version is much cheaper than the silver, probably due to lack of demand (yes, I guess the color is important for pimping one’s auto). I’ve gone El Cheapo on cases in the past, and paid the price; causing way too much case dust by being forced to open the panel during summer and point a external fan at the guts. Having something that could support 110mm fans instead of 80 would’ve gone a long way.

TV Tuner: ?

I’m still sort of shopping around, but eventually I want to get a set of HD rabbit ears, point it at Manhattan, and get free high-def networks and FM radio through a digital tuner. Instead of getting a better monitor AND an HDTV, I only need one. I read something about connecting a PS3 through HDMI to DVI, so that takes care of that as well.

Total Cost: $1088

I tried cutting corners at the end (and this is actually several hundred less than my initial total), but I remember that I’m looking for this puppy to last me for a very, very long time, so cheaping out on some items wouldn’t pay off, in the long run. My needs are rather modest, and I don’t see that changing really any time soon. I know that probably sounds silly, being I’ve made some less-than-modest choices, but I rather overcompensate at value now, than have to completely replace something later.

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04 August 2007
He sliced his hand open on the case, on the edges of the PCI slots. Good thing the motherboard was already red.

I’ve been inspired by recent posts at Coding Horror to throw together a do-it-yourself computar machene. I’m no stranger to the organs of a PC, thanks to Dan Polnoff, and, due to competition, and since laptops are supposedly going to replace the desktop soon, the prices are excruciatingly low. It’s like, every five years I can’t believe I paid X for something that’s now (0.0001)X. Come on, I know some of my faithful readers had a $1200 486 back in the day. Now think about those dollars after inflation, it’s like if milk was $10 a gallon 10 years ago.

I’ve got to run, tired of sitting here for the past four hours comparing and contrasting power and prices, but I do promise I’ll detail my spoils here.

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02 August 2007
Writer's Corner #1
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