Genghiz Cohen wrote: » Stretch for an IPS, it's totally worth it.
Gumbi wrote: » Hey guys, any suggestions for a friend for a 150 euro monitor or less. I'm thinking a nice 22-24inch 1080p one, but I forget what we recommend as standard here! Thanks.
Baked.noodle wrote: » I wasn't powering the speakers through my keyboard, just out of a USB port on the back of my motherboard. I have a few USB hard drives, USB head phones, wireless keyboard receiver, an XBOX controller and a wireless USB NIC plugged in so almost every USB port used. Probably overloaded (PC can fail to boot if two hard drives are plugged in with everything else) and perhaps that could have caused the unclean power you speak of. I didn't test it extensively as I had a USB wall plug handy and that did the trick.
Baked.noodle wrote: » I wonder if you did a Windows system restore to yesterday. It's a long shot but who knows. Just thinking about what you were saying about crackling audio, and the only time I experienced this was with speakers that were powered over USB. The speakers were pluged into the green output port on the motherboard and If I plugged the USB power cord into my PC I got crackling audio, but If I used a USB wall plug I didn't get any interference. It's probably not relevant to your issue, but perhaps the crackling audio was power related and then it just failed as a result of it.
Gumbi wrote: » Did the onboard sound fail work for some time and then fail at some point? I've had this board for a year now and it has served me well until now.
nesf wrote: » I had issues with this machine with the Realtek on-board sound. I ended up needing to disable it and use a PCI sound card instead. Annoying but it just wasn't playing nice with the other components and updating drivers made things worse not better. I had no luck with this board though, one pair of SATA ports failed also. The card I use is this one: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Express-Normalizer-Virtual-Speaker-Shifter/dp/B007RMMYFI/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1403563505&sr=8-1&keywords=xonar It's not too expensive at £25 and sounds just fine to be honest and does all the things I need it to do. The extra features are all pretty much ignorable, most people will never use them or tinker with the card once it's installed.
Baked.noodle wrote: » Try uninstalling the Realtek drivers altogether and let Windows use the generic drivers. I haven't used them in years. At least if this doesn't work it should rule out a software problem. Another less than perfect solution is using the Graphics card audio on your HDMI port as a substitute. Just plug the speakers into the output on your monitor.
Baked.noodle wrote: » I wonder if it has anything to do with the NSA. Hardware encryption back doors etc. Edit: http://www.prisonplanet.com/intel-ceo-refuses-to-answer-questions-on-whether-nsa-can-access-processors.html
Baked.noodle wrote: » Russia wants to replace US computer chips with local processors
Russia’s Industry and Trade Ministry plans to replace US microchips Intel and AMD, used in government’s computers, with domestically-produced micro processor Baikal in a project worth dozens of millions of dollars, business daily Kommersant reported Thursday. The Baikal micro processor will be designed by a unit of T-Platforms, a producer of supercomputers, next year, with support from state defense conglomerate Rostec and co-financing by state-run technological giant Rosnano. The first products will be Baikal M and M/S chips, designed on the basis of 64-bit nucleus Cortex A-57 made by UK company ARM, with frequency of 2 gigahertz for personal computers and micro servers. The Baikal chips will be installed on computers of government bodies and in state-run firms, which purchase some 700,000 personal computers annually worth $500 million and 300,000 servers worth $800 million. The total volume of the market amounts to about 5 million devices worth $3.5 billion.
yawhat! wrote: » Its more or less the same as a 780. Much much stronger than a GTX 770