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Hardware

Ask Slashdot: What Hardware Is In Your Primary Computer? 558

An anonymous reader writes: Here's something we haven't done in a while: list the specs of your main system (best one) so we can see what kinds of computers Slashdot geeks use. Context would be interesting, too — if you're up for it, explain how and why you set it up as you did, as well as the computer's primary purpose(s). Things you can list include (but are not limited to): CPU, motherboard, video card, memory, storage (SSD/HDD), exotic Controllers (RAID or caching), optical drives, displays, peripherals, etc. We can compare and contrast, see what specs are suitable for what purposes, and perhaps learn a trick or two.
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Ask Slashdot: What Hardware Is In Your Primary Computer?

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  • by Art Popp ( 29075 ) * on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:02PM (#49883531)

    AMD 8350 (best value per crunch at CPUbenchmark.net)
    32G ECC RAM (because single bit errors suck, and lots of VMs are nice)
    Nvidia Geforce 210 (fanless, because video card fans are the cheapest most common failure points)
                      (and because 2D XFCE doesn't need a Titan-X to be wicked fast)
    Patriot 240G SSD (for small data sets and zippy desktop responsiveness)
    Asus M5A99X EVO R2.0 (runs well out of the box with Centos/RH 6.6 and Fedora 21)
    2 x 23" 1080p IPS monitors (best value in screen real estate)

    Everything on this system runs in RAM after the first read. I took the 4 magnetic drives out for the sake of quiet. Since there are cores to spare and 4.0 Ghz clock I have 3 desktops open with a dozen Firefox/Chrome windows each (with many tabs in each) and lots of PDFs and there is still RAM to spare. In my youth I put more money into "the fastest processor" and "the best possible video card" only to find most of my annoyances were from storage latencies and noise.

  • Blue smoke (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:06PM (#49883561)

    At a fundamental level, everything in my computer seems to be filled with this magic blue smoke.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:08PM (#49883571)

    Mac Pro
    2.7GHz 12 Core CPU
    1TB Storage
    64GB Ram
    Dual AMD FirePro D700 GPUs with 6GB of GDDR5 VRAM each

    • by schlachter ( 862210 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:38PM (#49883901)

      And the 2013 Mac Pro is the same as the 2015 Mac Pro. You're still current!

  • CPU -- AMD FX8320E Eight core
    Motherboard -- ASUS M5A99X EVO R 2.0
    Video -- some cheap Gigbyte card
    RAM -- 16GB
    HDs -- 2x 1TB (C and D), 2x 2TB for my stuff (second 2TB is mostly for backups)
    2x1080p monitors (23" and 22")
    Windows 8.1 made to look like a "Classic" Windows desktop with Classic Shell

    Don't need super performing video, run lots of stuff in VMs just to play with it. (currently running Ubuntu and two different versions of FreeBSD in VirtualBox)

    Memory should be bloat proof for the next bunch of years,

  • I have a Clevo P650SE laptop (rebranded as the Eurocom M5 Pro, also available as the Sager NP8651 though the Sager variant has no TPM). 15.6" 1920x1080 IPS panel (opted for standard HD instead of 3k/4k due to problems with mixing high/low DPI displays, and I plug in an external 1920x1200 display sometimes), 2.6GHz quad-core i7, nVidia GTX 970M, 512GB SSD for OS/applications, 500GB spinning disk for media (though I'd like to unify those into a single large SSD in the future, moving parts are no fun) and I'v

  • I rebuilt my PC about 1.5 years ago when I was working on my Master's and taking a digital forensics class where EnCase brought my old PC to its knees. I reused the case which is a grey Antec, also reused the blu-ray drive/dvd burner, I also kept the 2TB SSHD which is my application/data drive. Everything else was replaced and here is what I have right now. Intel i7-4770 Noctua NH-U14S HSF ASRock Z87 Extreme3 motherboard G.SKILL Ripjaws X Series 32GB kit (4x8) Seasonic SS-660XP2 PS XFX Double D R9 2GB gpu
  • Macbook Pro (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ugen ( 93902 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:14PM (#49883631)

    Macbook Pro, 15", Mid 2012 (I buy them refurbished from Apple for best price/specs). Whatever they come with (except for the Samsung 1Tb SSD, 840 EVO with all the recent fun that it implies).

    In fact, this is not only my primary, but the only computer. I find that software is more important, and having just one computer makes it easier to keep track of things, back up etc. I do have several VMWare virtual machines with several version Windows, Linux and FreeBSD, all within this one, used for their respective development purposes. I'd hate to deal with that many physical boxes, though.

  • by TechyImmigrant ( 175943 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:14PM (#49883637) Homepage Journal

    A big box. The sort that holds the MB horizontally with the drives underneath.
    A sabertooth motherboard. The sort with the plastic housing the direct the air around the chips and muffle the noise. Why doesn't everyone do that?
    A 4 core top end Ivy Bridge i7, 64GB dram.
    Dual 500Gig SSD mirrored. In hotplug housing.
    Dual 1TB rotating mirrored, for local backup. In hotplug housing.
    Some expensive Nvidia card.

    Why?
    #1 The CPU is the first model with my logic in it. So it's personal. Also employee discount.
    #2 I wanted to play 3D games after a hiatus of a few years.
    #3 Hotplug housing is awesome. You can pull em out and put em back in again.
     

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:14PM (#49883639)

    Things you can list include (but are not limited to):

    CPU: YES
    motherboard: YES
    video card: YES
    memory: YES
    storage: YES
    controllers: YES
    optical drives: YES
    displays: YES
    peripherals: YES

  • 2.6 GHz Intel Core i7
    16 GB 1600 MHz DDR3
    NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M 1024 MB
    LED Cinema 27" (connected 92.3% of the time)
    Yosemite / VMware Fusion

    Linux Sysadmin/Network management, Ruby/C++ development

  • Less is more (Score:3, Informative)

    by jmd ( 14060 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:19PM (#49883665)

    Shuttle XS35 GT. 2GB ram and 500G hard drive. Ubuntu 14.04LTS

    About $400 in this 4-5 years ago. The less I spend on computers the more money I have to enjoy the finer things in life. Like Thai food. In Thailand.

  • I remember not to long ago to play the latest PC games you needed to upgrade your CPU which meant upgrading your motherboard and memory about every 18 months. I think I have been rocking the same Core i5-2500K cpu for almost four years now, and it still sits at the top tier of the Tom's Hardware gaming CPU chart.

    I realize this has occurred because games have become much more GPU dependant, but it is still a big money saver for me.

    • AMD Phenom II X4 945, 8G RAM, Radeon HD 5450, with HP branding. It's a Pavilion Elite HPE 210F if I recall correctly. It's about 6 years old now. Only thing I have replaced is the hard drive, twice. Original drive was a WD Caviar Green, and it failed in just 9 months. Next hard drive was a WD Caviar Black, and it failed in 4 years. I've had enough of WD, and the current drive is a Toshiba. There's some funny BIOS problem connected with the hard drives. Occasionally, the computer fails to detect any

  • Has anyone built a near-silent desktop computer with off-the-shelf components? I'm interested in getting the details. And to answer the original question, I assembled my desktop in 2010 using parts from Newegg (this is boring): Athlon II X4 640, ASUS M4A88TD-V EVO/USB3, ZALMAN CNPS20LQ liquid CPU cooler, 8 GB Kingston ECC memory, Antec EarthWatts EA-500D, Antec Three Hundred Illusion Black Steel ATX mid tower case, with various hard drives (Seagate rotating, OCZ SSD). Runs Debian Wheezy. It's not quiet
    • I've always felt that it's important for a computer to make noise - it means things are working and staying at a reasonable temperature. There are two real options - get something that is low power usage that it can be passively cooled (like a raspberry pi or netbook) or put the computer just in a different place. and run cables to/from your desk. Or you could just get a mechanical keyboard and then you want hear it at all!

    • I know you're asking about user-built quiet systems, but I recently got a Dell 7910 and just love how quiet it is.
    • My i5 NUC is near-slient, w/ 100GB SSD and 8GB RAM for less than $500 total.

      Connected to the family room TV, runs Hulu, Neftlix and Kodi (XBMC) quite nicely, also will run VLC and pull camera feeds from around the house - makes a "virtual window with night vision" in the living room wall.

    • by tomhath ( 637240 )
      Laptop with an SSD instead of a hard disk is basically silent. The fan is almost always on low speed and can't be heard at working distance; the video is fine for development and browsing, a gamer might not find it fast enough though.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:20PM (#49883679)

    Pentium Overdrive 83mhz, 64mb edo simm, rage video card, sound blaster 16, 20gb hdd through pci card IDE controller. Plays MP3's as long as I don't move the mouse.

    • by JazzLad ( 935151 )
      I'm impressed, 64MB RAM is pretty good for an early Pentium. You should be able to use the mouse and play MP3s, but make sure the screensaver is disabled (I remember when I finally retired my 486 DX 100 (99mhz), was because it took a Pentium to play MP3s). Good times.
  • Mac Pro (Late 2013) w/ 3.5GHz 6-core Xeon E5, 64GB RAM, 1 TB of Flash disk space.

    Bought the extra RAM configuration so I could crunch OpenStreetMap data quickly. Turns out more RAM is better than more CPU horsepower, though the 3.5GHz E5 isn't really that shabby.

    • I'm using a similar MBP, but with only 16GB of RAM, which I thought was extravagant but useful for building large C++ codebases. Dual-booted with Kubuntu-14.10 but I haven't booted to OSX for about a year.

  • Yes, my aging P4 3.8 GHz with 800MHz DDR2 memory is "slow", but when I think back on "the old days" when we only did builds over the weekends in the age of 1MHz processors, it's pretty darned snappy.

    Plus when I tune code, I get to see an improvement. :D

  • AMD FX-6300
    Gigabyte GA-990xa-ud3
    16GB Crucial Ballistic Sport RAM
    NVidia GTX 560 Ti
    128GB Samsung SSD
    320GB WD Blue HDD
    2 x 500GB WD external HDDs
    1 x 24" IPS monitor

  • Just today I received my mini-ITX system with an AMD A8-7600. It is an upgrade for a 7 year old AMD Athlon 64.
    I wanted something with relative low power, small form factor and silent. I don't want a noisy midi-tower in my livingroom anymore.
    I use it for development work, but also for watching HD Video and browsing in my own time.
    Ofcourse there is just a new generation of AMD apu's announced, where the rumors first claimed it would only be a 100Mhz increase, but the marketing speak claims many more improveme

  • Old, slow, crappy, but reliable. I have two other workstations, one is a Zotac Zbox or something like that, an Atom-based "net-top" with a hard-drive, but flash-based backup, and the other workstation is a Raspberry Pi.

  • I use a 6-year-old Mac Mini.

    It's slow.

  • I built my current rig in 2009, investing heavily in forward-compatibility for upgrades. The investment payed out more than I could ever have imagined.

    In 2009, the PC was:

    Intel Core i7-920 (2.97GHz)
    6GB RAM (six DIMM slots, three used)
    32GB SSD (for the OS)
    512GB HD (files and stuff)
    Current-gen video card @ ~$250 price point

    Now, in 2015, all I've done is:

    1. Add two larger SSDs
    2. Upgrade the video card - currently a GTX770
    3. Double the RAM (hell yeah six DIMMs)

    The rig is perfectly capable of editing 4k video,

  • by Thud457 ( 234763 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:27PM (#49883753) Homepage Journal
    Earth Mark II
    I bet you didn't even notice the failover, did you?
  • My setup is a few years old, but still does everything from gaming to coding to a couple VMs CPU: AMD Phenom II (the hex one) RAM: 16GB GPU(s): 2 Radeon 6950s in crossfire HDD/SSD: 128GB SSD for OS and core applications, 2TB for software/VMs, 4TB for General File Storage Oh and I I'm watercooling the GPUs and CPU. I don't OC as much as I used to - but it was a fun project to play around with. And I've had a great life around it. I think I built this around 2010/2011 and I've yet to have any issues with it
    • AMD Phenom X4 840 3.2GHz (added two years ago, replacing a X2 processor)
    • Gigabyte AMD 690-chipset mATX motherboard
    • G.Skill 4GB DDR2 800MHz RAM (two sticks)
    • Seagate 1TB hard drive
    • Nvidia Geforce 720 1GB video card (added last month, a temporary replacement for a dead ATI 7960 video card)
    • Diablo Tek 600W PSU (added last year, replacing a failing 7-year-old PSU)

    The last major hardware upgrade (CPU/memory/motherboard) took place in 2007 to switch over from Windows XP to Windows Vista. Since then I've ran Windows 7

  • by Kiaser Zohsay ( 20134 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:28PM (#49883765)

    It's been a while since we've done that, too.

  • i7 4770K, 16 gb ram, gtx 670, 3x ssd, 3x spinning rust platters, DVD-RW drive, 24" dell screen (very old model but excellent).
    It's for games and programming.
    2 of the ssds are for windows only games and the last is for arch linux where i spend most of the time.
    The rust platters are hardly in use anymore as most of my stuff is on a synology box.

  • Motherboard: ASUS F2A85-V PRO
    Processor: AMD A10-5800K Trinity 3.8GHz FM2 Quad
    Memory (part number): G.SKILL Ripjaws Z Series 4 x 8GB DDR3 1866
    Display Chip: AMD A85X (Hudson D4) [Integrated graphics, not a gamer)
    Display LCD: Monoprice 30" IPS CCFL Backlit LCD Panel
    Hard Drive (System): SAMSUNG 840 Pro Series MZ-7PD256BW 2.5" 256GB SATA
    Hard Drive (Storage): Hitachi HDS724040ALE640 (0S03355) 4TB
    CPU Cooler: COOLER MASTER Hyper 212 CPU Fan
    Case: Antec-300 PC Case
    Power Supply: Rosewill FORTRESS-450w 80 Plus Platinum

  • Inspiron 7746
    Core i7-5500U
    16 GB DDR3 1600MHz RAM
    1TB Seagate 5400RPM hybrid HDD
    DVD-RW (replaced it with a BD-RW drive)
    17.3" 1920x1080 touchscreen
    nVidia GeForce GT 845M graphics with 2 GB video RAM

    Wiped the drive on arrival and reinstalled Windows 8.1, Office 365, etc.
    The only part of it I don't like is the illuminated keyboard: lit or not, it's almost impossible to see the markings on the keys.
  • by Thud457 ( 234763 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:33PM (#49883823) Homepage Journal
    Banana Junior 6000 [computerhistory.org]
  • Intel 4970s
    Gigabyte motherboard w/ thunderbolt
    32GB RAM
    2 GTX970s
    2 ~1TB SSDs
    4TB HD
    2560x1440 monitor

    Used for gaming and music production. I thought 32GB was a lot of RAM when I first put the system together, but it runs out quick when loading up a bunch of sample libraries in the Cubase (the music program.) Definitely would have gone to 64GB if I was doing it again.

    The SLI video card setup is cool when it works, but a few games don't use both cards, or there are glitches.

    Thunderbolt doesn't work
  • I have a 2010 Macbook Pro 15" w/ 8GB RAM & Dual drives (256GB SSD + 500GB HDD).

    BUT IT RARELY GETS USED....due to my newer (Mac) work machines, my iPad, iPhone, AppleTV, FireTV, Xbox360, Nintendo Wii U, and Synology NAS.

    Anyone else find they use their primary machine less than a couple of hours a week?

  • by wbr1 ( 2538558 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:36PM (#49883863)
    Work:
    quad-core AMD FX-4170
    Asrock 990FX mobo
    32 GB RAM
    128 GB Ocz (crap but was on shelf) SSD - Primary
    1TB RAID 5 - Storage and weekly system images.
    AMD R7 260 GPU
    1x 23" display, 2x 22" displays
    Old Cooler Master Cosmos case

    Home:
    AMD FX-6300 Vishera 6-Core 3.5GHz
    Asrock 990FX
    16 GB RAM
    256 GB Samsun 850 Evo - Primary
    1TB and 750GB - Storage drives and media server. (backups on separate NAS)
    AMD R9 270X GPU
    1x 24" and 1x 20" displays
    Cheapo gaming case

    Tertiary rig - old poweredge 2950.
    32 GB Ram 2x dual-core xeons
    6TB storage.
    Boatloads of VMS for testing

  • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

    MSI G45 MB
    Core i7-4770 CPU, non-overclocked
    16GB RAM
    ATI R9 270 video card
    512GB Crucial SSD
    750GB WD Black drive
    1TB WD Black drive
    LG Blu-Ray Burner
    Generic mid-size Antec case
    Cheapo Asus 27" LED monitor
    APC UPS
    Microsoft Sidewinder mouse
    i-Rocks buckling-spring keyboard

    Works well for games and a few virtualized development environments. Need to replace the (2) WD spinning disk drives with a single 4TB or similar. They were both the primary system drives from previous machines. Now the 1TB is for VMs and the 750GB

  • CPU 2.5 GHz quad-core Krait 400
    3 GB RAM
    32 GB SD

    I have gentoo prefix installed, which lets me install gentoo software under the stock Android distribution. I also haave XServer XSDL, an Android app that is an X Server, but I haven't used this very much so far.

    I use it for web browsing, watching videos and development of Android [homeip.net] and Free Pascal software. I have a Bluetooth keyboard to help with that.

    I also have a MiniMac connected to the big screen TV at home that is my web server [homeip.net] and hosts MythTV. It's a

  • Intel Xeon E3 1225 v2 (3.2GHz) on MSI Z77A-G41 (Because it was cheaper than the same i7 and better value than the latest gen at the time)
    20 GB RAM
    Radeon R7 270 ?
    Samsung 256 GB SSD
    2 & 4 TB hard disks.

  • Desktop
    CPU: AMD Phenom II X6
    GPU: AMD Radeon 6970
    SSD: Crucial 256 GB M4
    HDD: 2 TB Seagate
    RAM: 16 GB Mushkin
    Optical: BD-ROM / HD-DVD Combo and BD-RW
    Display: 2x 1920x1200 28" LCD's

    Works well for gaming and OpenGL development.

    I also have an Alienware M17 laptop; works well for same reasons but not great at multitasking
    CPU Intel Extreme 2 core
    RAM: 16GB
    SSD: 256 GB SSD
    HDD: 1 TB

    As well as a HTPC
    CPU: AMD 1090T
    GPU: AMD Radeon 5450
    RAM: 8GB
    HDD: 120GB

    And a File Server
    CPU: AMD Phenom X4
    GPU: don't
  • Why would I need anything more?

    You connect to a bunch of remote systems, you browse, you read e-mail....

  • listing these specs makes me realize it is time to upgrade.

    phenom ii 965
    990fx motherboard
    8GB ddr3
    7870
    128GB 840 pro OS
    256GB 850 evo games
    500GB HDD data

  • 1964 Model MDT (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @12:47PM (#49883991) Journal

    Proteins, water, DNA, RNA, synapse interconnects ...

    All the other computers I use are controlled by this one.

  • HP Pavillion DV6700

    Core2 Duo T5850 @ 2.16GHz
    GeForce 8400 GS 256MB
    4GB RAM
    512GB SSD - Samsung Evo
    Dell UltraSharp U2412M 24"W Monitor
    Ergotron monitor arm
    StandDesk adjustable desk
    Microsoft Natural Wireless 7000 Keyboard & Mouse

    Fast enough not to upgrade. Used it on the road doing software consulting but for most of the last 7 years it has functioned as my desktop. I keep thinking of upgrading, but haven't found a compelling reason to yet.

  • I use a cutom box from Red Barn Computers in Binghamton, NY. It has dual Xeon E5-2690 @ 2.9 GHz (32 threads), 51 TB configured raid 6 data disk using 16 WD 4001 4 TB RE SAS hot-swap 6Bg/s disks, 256 GB DDR3 ECC ram, two 600 GB WD6000 OS disks in a raid 0 config, one 256 GB SSD as swap space, hot-swap dual power, 10 Gb/s networking, and runs CentOS 6. Current uptime is 901 days (since Hurricane Sandy). I use it as my "desktop" over vnc from work or home. It is a mostly lightly-used node in an SGE cluster of
  • AMD FX(tm)-4100 Quad-Core Processor 3.6GHz
    16 gigs ram
    ATI Radeon 3000 Graphics on mobo
    1TB HD internal
    1TB USB3.0 external
    1.5TB USB3.0 external
    120GB Sandisk SSD
    28in 1920x1200 monitor

  • When I was 25: I knew every spec, every component, research and purchased them individually, hand-assembled the hardware, and optimized for performance so I could play Half Life.

    When I was 35: I had xoticpc build me a spec'd PC in the high end so I could play Skyrim.

    Now: I bought a macbook off the shelf. I honestly don't even know how much RAM I have.

  • Still runs fine (although recent OSX releases have been shite).
    Why upgrade?
    My next computer will probably be a Chromebook but I'm in no hurry... target date of 2020.

  • I prefer laptops (of the 17in "desktop replacement" monstrosity type) because I enjoy the portability and flexibility, and am happy to pay more for that convenience, both in cost and in upgradeability. However, because of that, I tend not to upgrade very often - generally not until my primary laptop has completely bitten the dust in a way where replacing it is more financially smart than trying to repair it. My primary personal computer wasn't quite top of the line 4 1/2 years ago, but wasn't too shabby, ei

  • Quad core i7 MacBook Pro 17" and Thunderbolt display with 16 GB of RAM, a 1TB HD and a 480 GB SSD running Mac OS 10.6.8

    Why? I like the 17 inch screen and 1920 x 1200 resolution on the 17" screen and I HATE the UI of all the Mac OSes after 10.6.8.

    Quad core i5 iMac 27" with 16 GB of RAM, internal 1TB HD and 16 TB external storage on Firewire 800

    Why? I like the 27 inch screen and 2560 x 1440 resolution on the 27" screen and I HATE the UI of all the Mac OSes after 10.6.8.

    I develop iOS applications professiona

  • I spend the most time on my Thinkpad X60.

    CPU: Core Duo T2400 1.83 GHz
    RAM: 2 GB (recently upgraded after scrounging dead stuff)
    Hard Disk: 160 GB

    I bought it for about $200 several years back, and it still does everything I need. I had to switch from kmail/KDE to Thunderbird/LXDE after the latest Debian release (stupid akonadi), but after that switch I have no speed complaints.

    My desktop has a Core 2 Duo E5200 (or so), but I don't use it that much these days.

  • I just deployed an Intel NUC5i5RYK with 16 GB of Corsair Vengeance DDR3L @ 1600MHz memory and a 500 GB Samsung SSD 850 EVO M.2 running CentOS 7 as my new living room PC. The on-board Intel HD Graphics 6000 adapter is supported by Xorg's latest driver and the on-board WiFi chip is recognized. I initially tried installed FreeBSD 11.0-CURRENT, but the WiFi chip wasn't supported.

    Normal usage consists of web browsing with Chrome. Spotify and Netflix's web players both work 100%. I use VLC for watching save

  • I've upgraded it with scavenged parts to 6 GB RAM (could use more but DDR2 is expensive), a 1 GB Radeon 6450, Crucial 128 GB SSD boot disk and a WD 1 TB data drive. It works great and is surprisingly peppy (I don't game on it, obviously). Originally it only supported 4 GB of RAM, but Dell put out a BIOS update a few years ago that bumped it to 8 GB. And there is a hacked BIOS out there that re-enables the AHCI that Dell removed so the SSD pretty much maxes out the 3 Gbps SATA port. Very impressed after a

  • I built mine about 3 or 4 years back, but it is still hangs pretty good with modern hardware. i7 3770k 8 GB RAM (considered 16 GB, but it never goes above 6 GB usage, so all that memory would be sitting there burning electricity). 128 GB SSD (considering upgrading to 1 TB because space is becoming an issue even though I only put the OS and Flight Simulator files on it.) 3 TB HD ( only 400 GB used). Radeon 6990 Video Driver. 30" HP IPS LCD Asus Maximus IV Extreme Motherboard
  • Intel i5 @ 2.6 GHz with 8GB RAM

    Replaced the HDD with a 120GB SSD and the DVD with a 240GB SSD - both drives are encrypted

    Two external monitors (don't use the built-in display except when traveling)

    I don't need any more power than that because all the heavy lifting is done on database servers over a VPN. And (thankfully) not doing any more Java development so no heavyweight IDE :^)

  • i7-930
    20 gigs ram
    770 gtx (upgraded recently from a 4850)
    1tb 850 pro
    12tb raid 0
    2 6tb drives, 1 2tb drive
    2 27" ips monitors
    2 24" ips monitors

  • HP Z800, 2xXeon X5650 (6-core with HT, 2.6Ghz), 48GB RAM, 2x2TB HDD (one with Win7, one with UbuntuStudio)
  • Dell Latitude E7440
    Intel Core i7-4600U
    16GB RAM
    Microsoft Windows 7 Pro x64 SP1
    Docking Station
    Dual 24" Dell Ultrasharp Monitors
    LiteOn 256GB SSD
    Hauppage WinTV HVR-950

    Great for IT work and running VM Workstation.

    I'll post my home rig later.

  • Hand-assembled desktop:
    Case: Corsair Obsidian 650D
    PSU: Corsair Professional Series Gold 1200W
    Mobo: ASUS P8Z77-V
    CPU: Core i7 3770K
    RAM: 32 GiB DDR3-1600 (Komputerbay)
    Storage: 3 x 4 TiB HGST 7200rpm 3.5" + 1 x Seagate Barracuda 4 TiB 7200rpm consumer HDDs (in hardware RAID10)
    RAID controller: Adaptec 6405E
    GPU1: Sapphire Radeon HD7970 (reference design with impeller)
    GPU2 (in CrossFireX): XFX Radeon R9 280X (with three large 'standard' fans and clocked at GHz Edition speeds)
    Soundcard: Creative SoundBlaster Z

    Acces

  • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @01:06PM (#49884179) Homepage Journal

    I have older systems, but this is my best one... it just keeps doing everything I need it to.

    Gigabyte GA-MA700-UD3P v1.0
    Phenom II X6 1045T
    Cooler Master Hyper TX2 cooler
    Cooler Master 460W PS
    Zotac GF750Ti
    4xG.Skill 2GB (2x f3Â-10666-cl8dÂ-4gbhk)
    ThermalTake Shark case
    Samsung 850 Evo 500GB (heh heh) and Intel VO0160EC HPL (160GB HP-branded, eBay-sourced Intel SSD)
    Viewsonic VP2655wb 25.5" IPS, Gateway FPD2275W 20" LCD, Dell E228WFPc 20" LCD
    HL-DT-ST GH22NS50 DVD-blah blah blah
    Kenwood KA-305 with Yamaha Monitors and Sennheiser HD420s
    Microtek MRS-2400A48U scanner
    Dell media keyboard with 2-port USB1.1 hub
    Logitech Trackman Wheel USB T-BB18

    The total cost of this system was below $1000, including displays, because I sourced so many parts used, including two out of three of the displays. Maybe I'm in $1100 including my HPLJ2300DN.

    This system started out with a hand-me-down 160GB HDD, a Sony/Optiarc DVD which has since died as they all do, a flea market X-Blade case and a Phenom II X3 720, as well as only half the memory, and a Gigabyte 240GT, later an Asus 450 GTS OC.It seems likely I will upgrade again, but the next upgrade is MB+CPU+RAM and I haven't felt the need to go that road. Skyrim is the most demanding game I play, and it runs OK with almost everything turned on at 1920x1200. I have replaced microswitches in the trackball twice. The pot on my Kenwood amplifier could use a cleaning or replacement. The Sennheisers were $5 at a yard sale and I had to refoam 'em, that was around $20 and some scissor work. I have a fancier (active, high-wattage, high-efficiency) PSU to install, but it has no SATA power so I need to solder some in so I don't have a bunch of stupid Y cables.

    My very first PC was an IBM PC-1 and my first Linux box was a 386DX25 with 8MB of DIP-socketed DRAM. I'm constantly amazed at what you can dig out of the trash: I've got a C2D with 2GB at my left that I did precisely that with. There's genuinely nothing wrong with it, and it even had an HDD in it.

  • 2012 MacBook Pro with an i7 and 8gb ram. Only computer I have. I simply have no interest in babysitting a bunch of garbage.

  • My main PC is as follows:

    Phenom II 6 core (2.4 GHz)
    16GB RAM (DDR3, 1333MHz if I remember correctly)
    2x 128 SSD disks (Raid 1)
    1x 2TB disk for TV Recording
    1x 16x Blu-Ray drive
    1x 48x DVD drive
    1 Radeon 74xx video card (2 GB DDR5 ram, 720 threads)
    2x 24in 16:9 monitors
    IBM Model M keyboard
    Microsoft version 1.0 laser mouse (from 2000)
    Windows 7 Ultimate

    I have a low powered (6 watt CPU) linux box running on the network as my file storage through Samba, mail server, web server. This is more than enough power for me an

  • My current computer was built in Dec 2012, with some updates since (i.e. video card). I'm usually on a 3 year refresh rate. I'm thinking that I'll be building my next one when Skylake comes out.

    I use mine for photo editing, video editing, gaming, GNS3 (Network simulation), etc. It was built primarily for gaming with the thought that anything else thrown at it would work just fine. The weak point in my system are the displays, its past time for new monitors. For gaming I use my 52" Samsung Plasma but I

  • Intel Haswell 3.3ghz i5 quad
    24GB DDR3
    Samsung 850 EVO 500GB x2
    AMD6950
    Intel i210-T1 NIC - because I refuse to use the intergrated RealTek
  • Lenovo D20 ThinkStation with a intel Xeon X650 @ 2.67ghz ( x 2) with 48gb RAM and an extremely noisy 2TB HDD running... wait for it... Windows 7 x64. Dual Samsung 24" LED Montitors.

    Is there such thing as "too much" power? Somehow with 48gb of RAM and a server processor this thing still crawls like it's Windows 2000.
  • by rl117 ( 110595 ) <rleigh @ c odelibre.net> on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @01:16PM (#49884323) Homepage

    I upgrade my system piecemeal over time as bits get too slow and/or fail. It's currently:

    Case: Corsair Obsidian 550D
    Mainboard: ASUS Sabertooth R2.0
    CPU: AMD FX 8350
    Memory: Crucial 16GiB ECC
    GPU: AMD Radeon 6850 w/ 1GiB VRAM
    Disks: 256GB Crucial M550 SSD (Windows 8.1), 120 GB Intel SSD (FreeBSD 10.1), 256GiB Seagate HDD (data)
    (Important data is on a FreeBSD NAS w/ ZFS RAID)
    Monitor: HP LP2475w
    Keyboard: Kinesis Freestyle2

    Primary use is software development and secondary is gaming. People criticise the AMD 8350, but with 8 cores it's a beast for parallel building; shared FPU isn't a big deal at all.

    Planned upgrades:
    New monitor; I'd like a 16:10 (or greater aspect ratio) at least 4K resolution with at least 10 bit depth (I do scientific imaging work). Might have to settle for the 5K Dell or similar if the ghastly 16:9 is all that's available.
    New GPU: I'm waiting on the forthcoming AMD releases, probably wait until the new year for a reasonable deal; might have to wait on the monitor as well if I need a new one to drive a much bigger display.

  • by schlachter ( 862210 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @02:06PM (#49884851)

    Notice the interesting trend of people on Slashdot being generally happy/content with machines that are up to 5-6 yrs old?

    That's intriguing from a group of technology happy people who mostly earn good money.

    I suspect it's the combination of family obligations (time and money), good work machines, and portable devices...that have reduced our desire and allocation of money for frequently updating our machines. And of course the fact that CPU performance has largely been flat lined over the past several years while SSD upgrades have dramatically improved the performance of our older machines.

    • Well, that and the fact that many of us build ludicrously over-specced machines whenever we actually upgrade. "Well, I'll be watching a lot of Youtube videos, so 32GB of RAM, 16 cores, 16TB of spinning storage, and 2TB of SSD should just about cover it. Oh, and toss in a couple of GPUs because I've deluded myself into thinking I'll write a protein folding simulator some weekend."

      Sometimes it takes a while for your technology to become obsolete when you've installed ASCI Red in your garage.

    • by dave562 ( 969951 )

      Exactly.

      I am running a

      i7-960 on an Asus board
      12GB RAM
      SSD primary (Evo840)
      RAID1 7200 SATA secondaries (WD w 64MB cache)
      GFX660s in SLI

      It handled games just fine until Witcher 3. In that game the CPU lag is noticeable to the point where it impacts game play.

      I doubt that I will upgrade it any time soon with a baby and new house on the way.

      If I need real computing power, I am working on something that I am getting paid for and they are providing the hardware. I am too lame to be doing anything cool in my spare

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