erick99
quality posts: 21
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Erick R Williams
Only worry about the present. The past is over and the future will be the present soon enough
eco2geek
quality posts: 51
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KRiderZero wrote:It's external. It basically has the same kind of power supply a laptop has.
And it's all of 65 watts. Holy cow! Look, it's a laptop computer in a desktop case!
We have met the enemy and he is us. -- Pogo
Shinespark
quality posts: 29
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IIRC, this is a mini-ITX Pegatron board with no expansions in a mid-tower case (yeah, don't ask why).
The e-300 is pretty anemic, but the e-450 is quite fine for everyday tasks and light gaming. These chipsets are in theory really suited to HTPC stuff like the defunct Element OS, but one of the problems is that the GPU hardware acceleration that makes the APUs so good have (next to) no driver support in *nix stuff. Could make a decent fileserver though...if it had a slot for a RAID card.
edit: I clearly did not look at the images, yes it is the mobo I thought it was.
It's been 20 years, I am going to copy that floppy.
eco2geek
quality posts: 51
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ahamling27 wrote:This should be one whisper quiet computer with passive cooling.
It's got a case fan mounted in the back, so it's probably not going to be "whisper-quiet".
(Edit) Here's HP's "HP Pavilion p2-1033w Desktop PC Product Specifications" page. (They do good online documentation.)
Note that the CPU is soldered to the motherboard, so you're not going to be able to upgrade it, whether or not you install an internal power supply. Nor is there a slot for a video card, or anything else.
We have met the enemy and he is us. -- Pogo
Shinespark
quality posts: 29
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bennyfly wrote:Will this run new Diablo, collectors edition?
Ironically, it would probably run it, if at a crawl.
eco2geek wrote:And it's all of 65 watts. Holy cow! Look, it's a laptop computer in a desktop case!
Consider that the CPU is rated at 18W TDP, though.
It's been 20 years, I am going to copy that floppy.
equazcion
quality posts: 65
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A client of mine got these without checking with me for an office network. I was not amused.
This is basically a PC case with a netbook inside, and without the benefits of either one. It's not portable, it's not powerful. It has no built-in screen. It has no real PC power supply. The RAM sticks are mismatched (a 1GB and a 2GB, each different manufacturers). It's not upgradeable (no free slots for RAM or anything else). It has only one case fan and no CPU fan.
The keyboard is also very cheap (not the usual Pavilion slim design, but an old plasticy thing), though it does come with the Pavilion mouse. There's also no HDMI nor any other bells/whistles.
This has exactly two benefits over a netbook: Dual-monitor capability and DVD drive.
That's it.
The utter lack of inner hardware makes me nervous about these in the long-term. I say you're better off with a netbook. Choose wisely.
Have you been eating that sandwich again?
Shinespark
quality posts: 29
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jnottingham13 wrote:Picked up a HP refurbished desktop from woot a while back...90 days in the power supply took a crap. Thing wouldn't turn on. Had a local repair guy swap it out, he said the one that came with it was junk.
Luckily, swapping the PSU on this requires unplugging one wire from the wall and another from the box.
It's been 20 years, I am going to copy that floppy.
Shinespark
quality posts: 29
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equazcion wrote:The RAM sticks are mismatched (a 1GB and a 2GB, each different manufacturers).
Pretty sure Zacate doesn't have a dual-channel RAM controller anyway.
It's been 20 years, I am going to copy that floppy.
Shinespark
quality posts: 29
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bennyfly wrote:ARRGGGHHHH!!!! Too good to be true. Sigh. Any recommended PC's for this. Something I can possibly find here. My dell just wont cut it. My search is pretty limited to about $500, if that.
If you encounter one of the Llano (A-6/A-8) HPs here, it can Crossfire with a 6600 series Radeon, and the measly 300W PSUs in them are enough to support it (though the on-the box specs would probably recommend 400W-- realistically even under load a 6670 is rarely gonna break 120W). Not the most powerful CPUs. Only 2 levels of cache, most of them are locked though they have turbo core, but enough.
It's been 20 years, I am going to copy that floppy.
Shinespark
quality posts: 29
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grimskull89 wrote:
Probably the only good thing about this is that the hard drive has a rotational speed of 7200 RPM, which is nice because usually manufactured computers come with a slower 5400 RPM hard drive.
Not unless you're talking about laptops. And considering the parts they use the difference in performance would be slight, anyway.
It's been 20 years, I am going to copy that floppy.