World: r3wp
[Hardware] Computer Hardware Issues
older newer | first last |
james_nak 22-Jun-2007 [238] | Well, I don't have much experience with Linux so I wouldn't be able to judge but it works so that is a start. I don't think that it is optimized to take advantage of the graphics HW but I could be wrong. We have 1080p projector so seeing a 12 foot wide browser is pretty cool. I've pretty much decided that it will be my next "Amiga" as a couple of guys at work now have PS3's. I just bought some parts for a new PC Build but the next comp will be a PS3. Apparently they are coming out with a better Cell chip. |
Geomol 27-Jul-2007 [239] | Just got a Playstation 3. The experience so far reminds me much of when I bought my first Amiga, an A500 back in 1987. Let's see, if I'm as hooked in the next days and weeks as I was back then. |
Henrik 27-Jul-2007 [240] | Geomol, will you be able to play Mass Effect and Halo 3 on it? :-) |
Geomol 27-Jul-2007 [241] | Probably not. :-) |
Gregg 1-Aug-2007 [242x3] | Favorite setup configs; hardware recommendations; what hasn't worked for you. |
My current machine is 3.5 years old, and is starting to breathe heavily at times, and take little naps when it chooses. It's time to think about the future. | |
This setup will be for software development and remote administration. It can be a big box, but I'm not opposed to docking a small machine, as long as I can use a good monitor and my ergo-keyboard. What are your favorite setup configs? Have multiple monitors helped you? Lots of disk space? An in-house NAS? etc. On the software side, what general infrastructure bits do you use? I like Reichart's drive model, and have used it very well with Ghost and Partition Magic, but haven't gone to PGP or TrueCrypt (yet). Hardware wise, after setting up a machine with a fast SAS drive, man, that's appealing, but expensive. What kind of KVM do you like, or do you avoid them (my epxerience is mixed)? Do you like separate machines or VMWare? Do you like a Mac base, and emulation, or a real Windows machine? Any converts from Win to *nix? Build your own, or who do you like these days? Plain Jane, or something special like they build for traders? Silent PC? Mini? What have you tried that didn't work out? Space is not an issue. I have a huge old surplus desk that will hold anything. | |
Geomol 1-Aug-2007 [245] | My Mac iBook is the best machine, I've bought in more than a decade. I've used it daily for more than 2 years without any problems at all. I plan to get a Mac Mini and a flat HD monitor in the near future. I hope to have better Mac support for REBOL with R3. I find, that I get more work done with a Mac, because it just works. When I have to use Windows, I use Remote Desktop Connection from my Mac to a Win machine at work. |
Pekr 1-Aug-2007 [246x4] | I still use 1.8GHZ Athlon machine, I have ability to use 2 notebooks, or other hw. The main trouble for me is noise. When I come home, in the evening, I would prefer silent pc. So, even my current set-up has some Arctic Cooling Silent Pro CPU cooler and my gfx card is fan free. I also bought power supply with big 12cm fan, as fanless (passive is quite expensive). If you want to silent your pc, go and read some sites, as: - www.silentpcreview.com - www.mini-itx.com - www.epiacenter.de IMO nowadays you need all those fancy DualCore CPUs only if you do some CPU crunching intensive work, e.g. video, sound editing, etc. Other than that, I can bet your PC is pretty much overspecced. I remember doing fine with Duron750, with enough of memory and windowsXP. If your PC starts lagging, then just reinstall XP from scratch ... I will live with my current set-up for another one - two years, and then I plan on completly silent PC, maybe even without HD, with gigabit local network plus wi-fi around the house. I will combine it with some new hi-fi set-up, as my Technics set-up starts to be a bit aged (12 years) ... |
as for two monitors set-up - go for that, absolutly. I worked with that for more than year. If someone tells you, that the experience is the same as having wide 21" display, than don't believe him, unless such person tried both set-ups - I did ..... | |
There seems to be new trend though - buying really big LCDs - 24" or so ... Dunno how I would like to work on such big display :-) | |
in my above post, it is www.epiacenter.com | |
Geomol 1-Aug-2007 [250x2] | I've heard many good things about the Apple Cinema Displays: http://www.apple.com/displays/ The 23-inch model is 1920x1200 pixels, which is enough for HD, 1920x1080. But there is something about a standard (HDCP), and that's not supported on the Apple displays, afaik, so it might not be the perfect monitor. Apple hasn't updated their displays in a long time, so maybe there's something new just around the corner, who knows. |
I think, it's ok with a big monitor, if it has high resolution. Then it feels ok to sit so close to the image. And you start using your OS desktop in a new way, having e.g. the browser window at one side, other windows on the other side, etc. instead of always on top of each other. | |
Gregg 1-Aug-2007 [252] | I'm at 1600x1200 now, and would like more space, particularly for remote monitoring bits, though I could also do it virtually. If going multi-monitor I'd like to do it from the start, rather than try to add later. |
Geomol 1-Aug-2007 [253x2] | About noise, as Pekr wrote about. Even if my iBook has a fan, it very rarely starts, so my computer is totally noise free, which I really enjoy. The new MacBooks are the same, and battery lasts for 6 hours. I'm not sure, if the MacMini is the same!? |
(I sounds like an Apple salesman, yuk!) ;-) | |
Gregg 1-Aug-2007 [255] | :-) I went to a Ruby meeting, to talk about REBOL and scout for local developers, and two of the five people had MacBooks. Of course, that's not great for demoing REBOL, but it did impress enough to download and try it. |
Henrik 1-Aug-2007 [256x2] | I've owned a PC with a rather cheap motherboard for a few years and suffer under bad RAM performance. It was bought so I could use my then current PC133 RAM, but did not expect it to perform about half as fast as other motherboards with the same CPU. |
My Mac Mini however is pretty fast for a G4 (runs circles around the 2.6 Ghz PC) and amazingly stable. | |
Gregg 1-Aug-2007 [258] | New Minis are Intel-based though, correct? |
Henrik 1-Aug-2007 [259x3] | yes, there are no PPC machines left. |
for the quality of the hardware, it's rather cheap. sure you can get the 300$ PC, but you get what you pay for under those circumstances. | |
Geomol, when my mac mini fan is running at max speed, it's about half as loud as my PC. During normal operation it's about as loud as a brick. :-) | |
Geomol 1-Aug-2007 [262] | Nice! I like silence, when I'm typing along on my keyboard. |
Henrik 1-Aug-2007 [263x2] | geomol, speaking of which, did you see the new apple keyboard? |
it has the same keys as the macbook | |
Geomol 1-Aug-2007 [265] | no |
[unknown: 5] 1-Aug-2007 [266x2] | henrick - http://www.trettech.com/product_info.php?products_id=18762 |
Just a shameless plug from my site. | |
Ashley 1-Aug-2007 [268] | 2 Mac mini (PPC) with 23" Cinema displays plus an iBook with Parallels running WinXP. The whole lot is networked via AIrport Express to an ADSL modem and a Brother MFC-8840D. I've had no problems and zero downtime for over two years. I switched from Windows/Linux about two years ago and haven't looked back. Some of the business advantages include: - Almost silent operation - Low power consumption - Small footprint - Zero admin - The WOW! factor when clients see your setup - Cheap - Out-of-the-box solution (no extra s/w required) In fact, the only software I have purchased is iWorks and .Mac membership. The one issue I have is with Spreadsheets on the Mac minis. I don't want to use/pay for MS*Office and iWorks does not have a spreadsheet, so I'm using NeoOffice (aka OpenOffice) which is SLOWWWWW on PPC hardware. Works well on the (Intel) iBook though. I'll upgrade the Mac minis to Intel when Apple refreshes the line (probably when they release Leopard later this year). Parallels is a must if, like me, you have to run or support legacy software running on Windows. Coherence mode puts the Windows task bar directly on the Mac OSX desktop and enables you to run Windows programs directly from it. It's hardware virtualization so it's fast, and removes the need for multiple machines. The ability to cut&paste directly from a Mac app to a Windows one is also pretty handy. Bottom line is, if you like to play and endlessly tinker with stuff then WIndows/Linux is the way to go; if you want a tool that just works then get a Mac. |
Gregg 1-Aug-2007 [269] | Thanks Ashley! That's valuable info. I do *not* like tinkering with hardware. I want a set-and-forget setup. The main issue is getting over the FUD of changing platforms in a big way. |
btiffin 1-Aug-2007 [270] | Yep...I'm with Ashley. If you want a computer to use, get a Mac. If you want to stick it to the man, use GNU/Linux, but do so knowing that whizbang feature X will be lacking or require gnome level tinkering. If you want to be a lemming, go Windows, sorry I mean, if you like mainstream, go Windows. |
Gregg 1-Aug-2007 [271] | Ashley, can you explain in a little more detail how your setup works for you? i.e. why two minis, is the iBook just for traveling, etc. |
Gabriele 2-Aug-2007 [272x2] | as many monitors as big as you can afford :) possibly all on dvi digital |
linux + wine works better than i had expected. but, of course, linux has its pains too, so only go for it if you know what to expect. | |
btiffin 2-Aug-2007 [274] | Gabriele; Really? Is it just my small brain...but I can't focus on more than a webpage, an editor or altme and gizmo and that all fits fine on on a 15" lcd. When I work on the 21" that the graphic designer uses, I just get distracted. I sit beside the 21, a 19 but prefer to work on the 15. |
Gabriele 2-Aug-2007 [275x2] | well, right now i have three altme windows open. i can tell you, that two big monitors really help with that :) |
also while working on qtask i used to have the debug console on one monitor and the editor / browser on the other. how much faster it was than when i was using one monitor only! | |
btiffin 2-Aug-2007 [277] | Ahh, you have one of those multi-tasking brains huh? Juggle when you read :) |
Gabriele 2-Aug-2007 [278x3] | it's not that you multitask much. it's that you have a bird-eye view of things. |
altme does not have any way to notify you of new messages if the window is covered (let's not talk about the sound option ;) | |
this way, i notice new messages and can respond quicker (especially new messages from Carl ;) | |
btiffin 2-Aug-2007 [281] | Yeah, I find that too distracting. At corporate they had walls of monitors. I watched the staff ignore a big red dot for many minutes before I mentioned it. They get swamped in data...but yeah I see your point. |
Gabriele 2-Aug-2007 [282] | another thing that has been *really* great is using vim vertical split after stretching it to cover both monitors :-) eg. vimdiff. it does not even compare to using it on a single monitor where you see only half of the line. |
btiffin 2-Aug-2007 [283x4] | That I can see being useful... I do stuggle with side by side compares... |
Well, struggle's not the right word...but I can see it being better with diff -y | |
Without tabbed Konsole I might freak out a ltitle, but with...tabs 15 inch is nice for focus | |
Enjoy the big screens. :) | |
Ashley 2-Aug-2007 [287] | Ashley, can you explain in a little more detail how your setup works for you? Sure. I run a home office with two studies. Each has a Mac mini (plus Cinema display) for day-to-day work. My study also has a TabletPC connected to a 1280x1024 VGA LCD display. I use this for REBOL development and demos away from home. The iBook is located in the other study and is used by my better half when running Windows software related to our finance company (CRM/Sales software distributed via the professional body we belong to, no Mac or Linux option available). We also use the iBook when showing non-IT people stuff (e.g. a spreadsheet showing how much their portfolio could be worth if they geared it) and when attending training sessions. The ADSL modem has an ethernet connection to Airport express, which in turn has the MFC plugged into its USB slot. The Mac's pick up the printer automatically, the TabletPC runs Bonjour and does the same. Everything, including the TabletPC, detected the Network without issue. It really has been as simple as, 1) Unpack, 2) Plug-in, 3) Use. I've also noticed that WinXP running on the iBook is a lot faster/smoother than on the TabletPC as it installs 'clean' (i.e. piggy-backs off the Mac's Network and Hardware support). Large screens are a must if you write and or read a lot of documents. A 1920x1200 screen lets you do a slideshow on a PDF document and read the pages side-by-side. On wide screens I always have the task-bar/dock on the right to maximize the vertical display area. |
older newer | first last |