Re: My slave drive.....
Posted: Tue Feb 09, 2010 2:12 am
You may want to look online at places like MWave (www.mwave.com) and get the pieces separate. You can have your computer shop put it all together if you're not comfortable doing it yourself, but it's really not that hard to do.Debaser wrote:I’m not finding much in the 3 GHz or better area.
2.66 appears to be the easiest to find.
I like Antec cases. I like Asus motherboards. AMD processors are A-OK (there used to be compatibility problems, but not any more), but get Intel if you're more comfortable with it. NVidia video. Kingston RAM. Gigabit NIC(s). LiteOn DVD burner or BluRay if you can afford it.
I use HD Tune (see earlier message) - has all that in it plus benchmark and error/surface scan.emuler wrote:Maybe Phuzzy will recommend a SMART disk utility that will let you gauge the condition of your hard drives. If your drives really are on the verge, SMART should tell you something.
DB, you might consider using "portable" software to ease your installation pain. Truly portable software doesn't leave any tracks on the PC at all, but "semi-portable" software doesn't have to be reinstalled - it will operate from anywhere, even if it writes stuff to the registry. That means you can leave it on your non-OS partition, and if you have to redo the OS, all you need is to recreate the shortcuts, not reinstall the program again. Google pen drive or portable apps and that should give you some ideas about what's available - you might be surprised. Apps like VLC and KMPlayer, eMule, Open Office, etc. are all portable. I've got nearly all my diagnostic tools on a flash drive - you'd know I'm a techno-geek right away because I carry 4 or 5 flash drives around all the time.