Latest News and Information

Western Digital launches new Velociraptor

April 6th, 2010

Today (yes, this IS fresh news, even I can’t believe it!) Western Digital announced the shipping of the new Velociraptor drives with the slogan “The world’s fastest SATA hard drive now has twice the capacity”.

Velociraptor 2.5"
Velociraptor 2.5″

The new Velociraptors actually come in two flavors – 450GB and 600GB. MSRP for ‘em are $299 and $329 respectively. Features are: SATA3, 10000 rpm, 2.5″ size (3.5″ available too), 32MB cache.

Velociraptor 3.5"
Velociraptor 3.5″

You can view the original press release here.

Written By: presola

AMD rolls out OpenGL 4.0 compliant graphics driver

March 31st, 2010

Shortly after the Khronos Group announced OpenGL 4.0, the newest version of the multi-platform graphics API, AMD (or ATi, whichever you like) whipped out a Preview driver that supposedly supports it.

As usual, the driver is intended for the ATI Radeon, FireGL, FirePro, and Mobility Radeon graphics accelerators, and it’s available for Windows XP, Vista, 7 and Linux.

With it’s latest revision, OpenGL 4.0 is comparable to DirectX11 and has one major advantage – it runs on Windows XP!

You can download the driver here.

Written By: presola

Dead Drive? – You’re not alone!

February 28th, 2010

As I sit here getting ready to RMA my 3rd hard drive this year!!! – I began to wonder if I’m just snake bit, or if there isn’t something else going on. We purchased an HP ex485 Media Smart Server a little over a year ago. It came with a Seagate 750GB 7200rpm drive. That drive just gave up and died without warning at about 3 months old. Fortunately we also had a second drive in the Server and had folder replication turned on, which saved a copy of our data. Still, the operating system had to be reinstalled after the drive was replaced.

Knowing I needed to reinstall Windows Home Server OS, I purchased a new WD Caviar Black WD2001FASS 2TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA drive. Dual processors, 64Mb cache, 7200rpm, and a $300 price tag! We just replaced that last week. Once we got the new WD drive, we decided to use it as the primary drive in a new WHS custom build. It would run alongside two Seagate drives, both 1.5TB, one 7200rpm, the other a 5900rpm LP drive. It took a lot of configuration testing to get the WD drive to run at the proper speed. The drive has the ability to use the Clock Spectrum feature on the motherboard and until we enabled it in the BIOS, the drive ran at about 10% of its rated speed.

Ok – we get the primary drive up and running, transfer files from the 7200rpm Seagate Drive, roll it into the storage pool for WHS, and now it’s time to copy the files from the 5900rpm Seagate to the WHS file shares and we’ll be up and running as we should be. Click,…Click,…Click, hmmm, Houston, we have a problem. Yes indeed, drive number 3 is about to go belly up! Fortunately, we get all the files copied. Now it’s time to test with diagnostics, attempt repartition and reformat, and inevitably, just RMA the thing in hopes of getting a replacement that will last more than a year.

If you think our experience is unique, just go to Newegg and pull up the reviews on hard drives 1TB and larger and read the reviews. Users are reporting between 10% to almost 40% failure rates depending on the model. The 5900rpm Seagate LP drive shows a 37% DOA or quick failure in the reviews.

The only manufacturer I see getting consistently good reviews is Samsung. Their Spinpoint drives have been getting good reviews for years. I’ll be trying one of their 2TB Drives next. Buyer beware, quality control just isn’t what it used to be.

Written By: Gary

nVidia’s GeForce PC Kit

February 25th, 2010

Instead of a fully working Fermi prototype, nVidia’s announced yesterday a new Do-It-Yourself kit simply named ‘GeForce PC Kit’.

It’s main purpose (aside nVidia getting some fresh cashflow) is supposed to be teaching more people how to assemble their own machine.

Don’t expect any fancy parts, though. Here’s what you get in the box:

CPU: Intel Pentium Dual Core E5300 @ 2.6GHz
Cooler: GlacialTech Igloo 5058
Motherboard: MSI G31TM-P21
Memory: 2GB DDR2-667 Corsair Value Select
Graphics Card: XFX 9800GT 512MB (most likely using DDR3)
Hard Drive: 3.5″ Seagate Barracuda 250GB SATA2
Optical Drive: LG DVD-RW burner
Power Supply: Ultra LifeTime 500W
Keyboard and Mouse: Microsoft keyboard and mouse
Chassis: CoolerMaster Elite 334 NVIDIA Edition

Included are the standard cables and adapters one can expect to find in such a kit, and some glossy color manuals, making life easier for ordinary users.

As a bonus for giving 500 dollars to nVidia, you also get a limited edition nVidia screwdriver. Oh, the irony… ;)

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Written By: presola

AMD’s new 12-core Magny-Cours Opterons available for sale

February 17th, 2010

Missouri-based custom server and workstation maker Oakville Mehlville Computers started selling four 12-core Opteron 6174 processors on eBay today. The starting bid for the four-pack is set to 7,000$.

Magny Cours

The interesting thing here is that these processors are not announced by AMD yet. Still, judging from their markings, they don’t seem to be engineering samples. Each one of them features twelve cores running at a clock speed of 2.20GHz, has 12MB of unified L3 cache and 6MB L2 cache (512KB of cache per core). The central processing units code-named Magny-Cours have quad-channel PC3-10600 (DDR3 1333MHz) memory controllers and are designed for the socket G34 platform.

Magny Cours

The processors are tray-packaged, so the lucky bidder must think of a way to cool them. More over, at the time of writing this, there are no announced socket G34 motherboards available for sale… ;)

Written By: presola

The Best All in One Printer Solution: Brother MFC-9840CDW

February 16th, 2010

Released almost a year ago, the Brother MFC-9840CDW is still by far one of the best solutions for printing, scanning, an sending/receiving faxes. Targeted towards small business, the Brother printer integrates seamlessly into a existing network, having both ethernet and wireless capabilities. It is also equipped with two Automatic Document Feeder paper trays, USB port connectivity for automatically printing pictures off a camera, and a standard 128MB of RAM easily upgradable to 640MB. The stock printing toner gets about 3000 pages before replacement, and handles Duplex printing and high resolution printing and scanning with ease.Varying in price from 550-600 USD, the options outweight the price, and the printer will pay for itself in the long term. It is also fully certified with Windows 7, and has an easy to use interface that makes printing even easier.

Written By: Chris

What’s Next?

February 16th, 2010

Looking back on 27 years of experience at the keyboard, I thought it might be time to reflect a bit on where we’ve been, where we are, and where we might be going.

Back in the day – circa 1983 the personal computer was little more than a replacement for the typewriter, calculator, and the file cabinet. You were a power user if you had 640k of ram and 2 320k floppy drives. Word processing and spreadsheets were the hot applications, and if you were a real geek, you knew what to do with a database. The focus was always on what you were able to
accomplish with an individual PC. The only way to make any money with a PC was to write or customize specific applications targeted at individual tasks. If you could automate a repetitive task that took place in a business environment, you could make a few bucks which of course always just went to buying new hardware or software. As things moved along, the focus was always on more speed from the hardware and what was the next killer app. The more things change the more they stay the same. We all got our 300 baud modems so that we could connect to local bulletin boards and download/upload files for sharing with other users. Then came Compuserve and the WWW which changed everything. 

So even now, most users that I help with their computing problems, bring me their boxes to clean up and fix the broken software or clean out the spyware. Most users are still focused on the single box that everyone in the home uses. That will change dramatically in the next few years. Everyone will be asking their geek/guru friends to help them with their home networks. It’s starting now, but it will explode over the next few years as everyone starts to realize the potential of the home network as the way to unify all communication and entertainment.

Most power users have demystified the complexities of Win XP, Vista, and Win 7. Most of us have no qualms about tearing open any box and upgrading or adding new hardware. The next hurdle for the power user is the network and the Server. I’ve spent the last year playing with Windows Home Server and MS Server 2008 R2. It’s a reasonably steep learning curve for the most users, but not insumountable. The reality to note however is that this isn’t for the average consumer that has spyware loaded on their home PC. Anyone who has proficiency with network setup/admin, and server setup will be ahead of the curve.

What’s going to bring it all into focus and create demand? Entertainment. Large flat screens are now common in the family room. Once people begin to realize that it’s possible to use a home network to record and pipe everything to any screen in the home, demand will follow.

I am currently setting up our home network to record/rip all media to the Home Server so that it’s available everywhere. I am also waiting for the new Ceton card which will let you setup an HTPC to record or view up to 4 channels from your cable connection. Once the content is saved it will be available on any PC connected to your network. Way cool. Once we get that setup, the next hurdle will be to access and stream the stored content over the net when your away from home. I’m hoping that with a 35/35Mbs Fios connection that I can actually get it to work quite well.

In my next post I’ll review my experience with Windows Home Server and outline some of the pitfalls we encountered.

Written By: Gary

WD1002FAEX – Western Digital’s first 1TB SATA3 hard drive

February 16th, 2010

Although SATA3 (a.k.a. SATA 6.0Gbps) is still a relatively new standard and only a handful of high-end motherboards support it, California-based manufacturer Western Digital released it’s first hard disk drive utilizing it last week in some Japan stores.

WD1002FAEX

It’s a 1TB Caviar Black, featuring a regular 3.5″ form factor. The exact model  is WD1002FAEX and it has 64MB of cache. It’s based on two 500GB platters which rotate at a standard 7200rpm.

WD1002FAEX

The retail price of the new drive in Japan is around 118$, which is somewhat higher than the previous 1TB Caviar Blacks.

Written By: presola


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