I'm building today and I want to know where's a good place to build. My house is covered in carpet and I'm not building in my kitchen, I have a spacious plastic table I can use, will that work?
You can even use disassembled cardboard boxes as a surface to build on. People do build on carpets, while wearing sweaters, and such. I prefer to not temp fate. Take your time, remain calm, ground yourself with the case/PSU, and go step by step.
Random question -
I have a 1GB Samsung Spinpoint which I think might be dying on me, as it took 5 installs of Windows before I could finally boot in, so I'm wanting to get an SSD. The Crucial m4 seems to be the one to go with, but what I'm wondering is - is it a good idea to clone the HDD to the SSD, or should I really just be starting fresh with a new install?
I've only personally cloned HDD to HDD, but HDD to SSD is supposed to be fine. Between Windows, and certain clone software, any possible alignment issues should be taken care of.
So, I unplugged everything and I am using the POST beeps to try to figure out the problem. I got one long and two short beeps, which the manual states is a memory issue. So I try different figurations with the memory and now I am getting no beeps at all. Any ideas of what is going on I'm really at a loss here.
You've tried each stick of RAM, one at a time, in the primary slot? Have any spare modules around to try with? Friend/family near-by to borrow one compatible stick from? To be further certain, you could use a different display, and/or try the motherboard's video out, if your board has that option.
1) No warranty
2) I'm a computer engineering mayor, I have worked with electrical components and circuit boards, I've never quite soldered anything, but I am willing to learn or try just for this. Any tips?
Also any tips on where to get the caps or a good cheap solder?
Also a friend mentioned it might be the back light not the capacitors. How would I got about knowing the difference or changing the back light?
PS: Am I really going to have to pay money so that I can get a service manual/schematics to fix my own monitor,really? What gives? Are there no decent places to get a repair guide or guide to know how to open the unit? This is really frustrating.
Search online for links and videos relating to your specific display. Unless it's very obscure, you should find enough relevant material to help you out. If you have cap problems, it's easy to spot.
Looking to buy a new PC for mostly WoW, Star Wars: The Old Republic, and various indie/Source games. I am not planning on running anything that pushes the envelope (BF3, Crysis, Witcher), but I would like to play stuff like WoW and SWTOR on high settings with good framerates.
Budget is $500-600. Any decent suggestions? I was looking into a laptop, but it seems like there's nothing to great at that price range.
I'm in the USA, and you may exclude Windows 7 from the budget.
I do not want to build my own system. I wouldn't mind buying something cheap and expandable, then dropping in my own videocard or something.
Isn't there a website though that will let you pick your components and then they assemble everything for you for an extra fee?
Have you read the OP?
There are builds you can use as a guideline (tweak where needed), along with links to sites that will construct it for you.