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What kind of computer(s) do you use to visit LMF?

#1

JDgreen

JDgreen

As for me:

Blackberry 8330 Curve smartphone

Toshiba L-355 17 inch laptop

Dell 530 desktop, Pentium E-2180, 4 gb ram, 320 gb hard drive, 320 gb external Western digital hard drive, Asus 1 GB video card, Corsair 450 watt power supply, 23 inch Asus LCD monitor, Canon MP 210 MFP, Canon IP2600 photo printer, Microsoft 5000 wireless KB and mouse, Vista 64 bit

Attachment shows my home office with desktop pc. I love computer hardware !!! :thumbsup:

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#2

jmurray01

jmurray01

I either browse it with the 4 year old Windows 2000 desktop main computer that I built (hasn't got a big HDD, not a lot of memory, not a lot of anything, but it works good for emails and forums), my 8 year old Viglen Genie Windows XP Professional desktop in my office, or my 3 year old eMachines E520 Windows Vista Home Basic laptop.

I've also got two other desktops, but they don't run just now as they need a bit of work.

Great office set up by the way!

I'll see if I can get a picture of mine some time.


#3

Parkmower

Parkmower

iPod touch. Currently no computers hooked up in the house.


#4

jmurray01

jmurray01

Here we go, went up and got a picture 10 minutes ago.

DSCI0012.jpg



#5

JDgreen

JDgreen

I have NEVER seen a fish tank set up on a computer desk before...what if Buttons (not the picture) decides to have fish for lunch and splashes water all over the place? :laughing:


#6

M

Muhammad

At work I have a Dell XPS 8100 (i7) with a 30" dell monitor :)biggrin:).

At home I use a Dell Studio 15 laptop (core 2 duo).

And everywhere else, I have an LG G2X with the LMF Android App. :thumbsup:


#7

jmurray01

jmurray01

I have NEVER seen a fish tank set up on a computer desk before...what if Buttons (not the picture) decides to have fish for lunch and splashes water all over the place? :laughing:
I like the fish tank on my desk, it is very nice to look at while on the computer.

As for Buttons, she just looks at them, and even if she wanted to get to them, the lid is fitted tightly.

I do keep an eye out though :laughing:

In case you hadn't noticed, I love old fasioned technology (CRT monitor, CRT TV etc...)


#8

Briana

Briana

I added a poll to this thread. Technically I could have selected all four options because my work computer is a Dell PC/Desktop, but my home computer is a Mac/Laptop. :smile:

Personally, I'm being won over by PC. It's much more efficient in many ways... :ashamed: My devout Mac friends would be in shock.


#9

jmurray01

jmurray01

I added a poll to this thread. Technically I could have selected all four options because my work computer is a Dell PC/Desktop, but my home computer is a Mac/Laptop. :smile:

Personally, I'm being won over by PC. It's much more efficient in many ways... :ashamed: My devout Mac friends would be in shock.
Windows is the only O/S for me! :thumbsup:


#10

JDgreen

JDgreen

iPod touch. Currently no computers hooked up in the house.

Seems to me that a smartphone option should be added to the poll, in addition to the four choices already given.


#11

jmurray01

jmurray01

Seems to me that a smartphone option should be added to the poll, in addition to the four choices already given.
Seconded! :thumbsup:


#12

M

Mini Motors

I just built a new PC desktop machine. In the past, I've put parts from broken machines to make a working one, but this time, I had some insurance money from a car accident I was in, so I went all new. Well, mostly new. I had a case and a DVD RW drive w/ Lightscribe. The machine sits next to the HDTV, so I got a motherboard that has HDMI output. I used a Core 3 dual core processor, 3 ghz, w/ hyperthreading, so it acts like it has a quad core. 4 gb of ram, 500 gb hard disk, and a Blu-ray/DVD RW drive w/ Lightscribe. Running Windows 7 Enterprise. LOVE IT!!!


#13

Two-Stroke

Two-Stroke

I mostly use a desktop PC that I built -- it's a few years old and runs XP pro but I keep it tuned up. I also have a netbook but I usually just use that for email when I'm away from home.

Important elements of a good desktop PC:
  • HD monitor -- worth spending big $$ -- not the place to be a miser
  • Fast graphics card -- you can get a good one if you shop but pre-built machines rarely measure up
  • Lots of HD space -- it's cheap so buy it -- and get an external drive as well for backup
  • Memory - it's also cheap so why not lots of it?
  • Wireless keyboard and mouse


#14

JDgreen

JDgreen

I mostly use a desktop PC that I built -- it's a few years old and runs XP pro but I keep it tuned up. I also have a netbook but I usually just use that for email when I'm away from home.

Important elements of a good desktop PC:
  • HD monitor -- worth spending big $$ -- not the place to be a miser
  • Fast graphics card -- you can get a good one if you shop but pre-built machines rarely measure up
  • Lots of HD space -- it's cheap so buy it -- and get an external drive as well for backup
  • Memory - it's also cheap so why not lots of it?
  • Wireless keyboard and mouse

Everything you listed is in my desktop, the monitor has a HDMI input, as my graphics card has an HDMI output. I added my 1 GB card after buying the basic Dell 530, you can add a graphics card from the factory but they are way, way overpriced. Vista 64 bit will recognize no more than 4 GB of ram, or I would have more. Paid $635 with tax for the basic Dell with the printer and a 19 inch LCD, after adding more memory, the external drive, the video card, backup power supply, 23 inch monitor, the larger PSU, photo printer, etc. and after selling the 19 inch LCD for $100, I have about $1100 into my rig. Only way I can increase performance now is to add a better chip and that will result in such a small WinPerIndex I cannot justify the expense.


#15

C

cubby

I got a Dell laptop for Christmas 2 years ago and I'm just getting the hang of it, soon I'll actually
learn how to post a picture.:smile:


#16

M

Mini Motors

You'd be surprised what Windows 7 would do for you, JD.


#17

S

Slater

Vista 64 bit will recognize no more than 4 GB of ram, or I would have more. Only way I can increase performance now is to add a better chip and that will result in such a small WinPerIndex I cannot justify the expense.

Incorrect. Vista 32bit will not recognize more than 4GB, 64bit WILL recognize more than that unless it is a motherboard or chipset limitation. I am assuming though that it is DDR2 Ram which is last generation and now really expensive to get, so I would agree that Windows 7 would be your best way to upgrade your performance as of now.

@Mini Motors... I think you forgot an i for your processor. Should be a Core i3 :biggrin:

My Setup:
Monitors: 2x 27" along with a 50" Plasma next to my setup for all of my BluRays
CPU: Intel i5 2600K Quad Core - 3.3gHz running cooling at 4.4gHz with a watercooler hooked up
Motherboard: Asus P67 Sabertooth
RAM: 16GB G-Skill RipJaw Series DDR3 1600
GPU: 2x EVGA GTX 460 running in SLI
PSU: Modular 700W OCZ ModXstream
HDD: 2x 1TB in RAID...1x 1TB...1x 750GB Green Storage
OS: Windows 7 64 bit installed on Raid setup, OSX Lion installed on other TB drive
Keyboard: Logitech K750 Wireless Slim solar-powered Keyboard
Mouse: Logitech MX518
Case: Modded Antec 300
OD: Sony DVD Burner

Work
Dell Optiplex 720

Other:
HP Touchpad 16GB
Droid X
Lenovo X120e

Edit: On the RAM issue it looks like it is dependent on the motherboard you have.
http://en.community.dell.com/dell-groups/gaming/f/3344/t/19302941.aspx
Read post from jsktx half way down the page. So again, Vista 64bit isn't the issue, it would be your chipset. If you have 4 slots, I think you just need to have your bios updated and you can have up to 8GB, but DDR2 is still too expensive IMO.


#18

Sammy the Red

Sammy the Red

Vaio desktop, running Win'98 2nd. ed.


#19

M

Mtn.Mike

I lurk using a MacBook Pro 13" but we also have an IMAC, Macbook, Acer netbook and a Toshiba. When I want to get frustrated I use my Acer Netbook or my Toshiba running Windows.
Why anyone who used a Mac would go back to Windows is a mystery to me.

Just my 2 cents worth

Mike :confused2:


#20

reynoldston

reynoldston

Two Dell Inspiron's laptops and two Lazy-Boy recliners, one for me and one for my wife. I have a dell Desk-top but haven't turned it on since I got the lap-tops. It's getting rare that the TV gets turned on anymore. Only way to go.


#21

motorrefurb

motorrefurb

I did have a mid-2008 MacBook but it decided to stop working and had a $2000 file recovery going its way if I wanted to fix and keep everything, but I am going to get a new one and I am using in the meantime a Dell XPS 400 with a 1TB Western Digital External Hard-drive, a 23" LG Monitor. I also use a Belkin OmniView 4 port ps/2 switcher to switch monitor views so I can simultaneously use my daily use computer and my server (Dell Dimension 2350) and when I get a chance I'm also going to hook up my Dell Dimension 4300 :biggrin:


#22

M

Marcusk

iPad 2 wifi only 32 go...

Great toy I have the manuals for my toys on here as PDF,s when you ate working on mowers and such it's gret to be able to look at a utube vid showing you how when you can be next to your mower ..


#23

Dangeroustoys56

Dangeroustoys56

PC's here - actually have 2 of them ( use one at a time mostly) ones my 'frankenstien' a friend built for me many years ago to play 'Unreal Tournament ' online and my other PC games , the other is my folks older 'noisy' compac - unfortunately both are 'graphically challenged' for newer games..... still debating on wether to update the compac or frankenstien - or just get another 'gamer' puter eventually.

I already have flat screen monitors, ditched the antique ones. Bot them because they were super cheep at the time.


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