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Getbig Main Boards => Gossip & Opinions => Topic started by: Vince B on August 05, 2013, 09:52:56 PM

Title: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 05, 2013, 09:52:56 PM
I wanted to upgrade my computer but couldn't find what I was looking for. So I decided to replace my motherboard and CPU. During installation I decided to replace the lot and keep my old computer as a spare.

Computers look complicated but are really components put together so it isn't that difficult to do. I got a Cooler Master case with many blue coloured fans. What else! New 1200 watts power supply.

Asus motherboard that accepts up to 64 Gb of RAM. I have 48 Gb installed to do photo processing and panoramas. 2011 pin CPU is required. A good graphics card as well. Then I got a Solid State Drive as well.

That was a pain to install because I had to reinstall Windows 7 then call Microsoft to get my numbers approved. Lots of USB 3 ports with hubs. 7 Tb hard drives with about 30 Tb external drives. 16 external drives in total.

New high end Asus sound card for high fidelity. DVD player of course. Really simple and straightforward to assemble. I didn't need any help and did it all by myself, like I do building gym equipment.

Works well. However, lots of problems installing all the software and sorting everything out. Finally, after a couple of weeks everything seems to work fine.

It was necessary to have a connection to the internet to get help for problems. My iPad saved the day there. Cost about $4000 for everything plus the software and new external drives.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: rooseveltdunn on August 05, 2013, 09:54:19 PM
Intel or AMD?
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 05, 2013, 10:01:04 PM
For some reason Intel seems to be the superior system. Haven't really researched it completely.

I tend to select just a big higher than the sweet spot for components. Second tier graphics card and CPU. Still excellent components.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Mr Nobody on August 05, 2013, 10:02:16 PM
I wanted to upgrade my computer but couldn't find what I was looking for. So I decided to replace my motherboard and CPU. During installation I decided to replace the lot and keep my old computer as a spare.

Computers look complicated but are really components put together so it isn't that difficult to do. I got a Cooler Master case with many blue coloured fans. What else! New 1200 watts power supply.

Asus motherboard that accepts up to 64 Gb of RAM. I have 48 Gb installed to do photo processing and panoramas. 2011 pin CPU is required. A good graphics card as well. Then I got a Solid State Drive as well.

That was a pain to install because I had to reinstall Windows 7 then call Microsoft to get my numbers approved. Lots of USB 3 ports with hubs. 7 Tb hard drives with about 30 Tb external drives. 16 external drives in total.

New high end Asus sound card for high fidelity. DVD player of course. Really simple and straightforward to assemble. I didn't need any help and did it all by myself, like I do building gym equipment.

Works well. However, lots of problems installing all the software and sorting everything out. Finally, after a couple of weeks everything seems to work fine.

It was necessary to have a connection to the internet to get help for problems. My iPad saved the day there. Cost about $4000 for everything plus the software and new external drives.
That's what I do for a living. Antivirus is very important what product are you running on this computer and version? Yes software can be a bitch pending license and updates.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 05, 2013, 10:04:57 PM
I am trying out Webroot antivirus because of its high rating. Tried Avast free for over a year. Any suggestions are welcome.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Mr Nobody on August 05, 2013, 10:08:02 PM
I am trying out Webroot antivirus because of its high rating. Tried Avast free for over a year. Any suggestions are welcome.
AVG is a decent free one rated pretty high for free software.

http://free.avg.com/us-en/homepage
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: The True Adonis on August 05, 2013, 10:11:40 PM
I wanted to upgrade my computer but couldn't find what I was looking for. So I decided to replace my motherboard and CPU. During installation I decided to replace the lot and keep my old computer as a spare.

Computers look complicated but are really components put together so it isn't that difficult to do. I got a Cooler Master case with many blue coloured fans. What else! New 1200 watts power supply.

Asus motherboard that accepts up to 64 Gb of RAM. I have 48 Gb installed to do photo processing and panoramas. 2011 pin CPU is required. A good graphics card as well. Then I got a Solid State Drive as well.

That was a pain to install because I had to reinstall Windows 7 then call Microsoft to get my numbers approved. Lots of USB 3 ports with hubs. 7 Tb hard drives with about 30 Tb external drives. 16 external drives in total.

New high end Asus sound card for high fidelity. DVD player of course. Really simple and straightforward to assemble. I didn't need any help and did it all by myself, like I do building gym equipment.

Works well. However, lots of problems installing all the software and sorting everything out. Finally, after a couple of weeks everything seems to work fine.

It was necessary to have a connection to the internet to get help for problems. My iPad saved the day there. Cost about $4000 for everything plus the software and new external drives.
I just built mine with a Cooler Master Case with the blue fans!  Good Choice Vince!  You probably should learn how to use Pirate Bay though instead of wasting money on buying Windows.  ;)

What kind of Graphics Card did you get?
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: The True Adonis on August 05, 2013, 10:13:23 PM
I am trying out Webroot antivirus because of its high rating. Tried Avast free for over a year. Any suggestions are welcome.
You don`t need to run any anti-virus nonsense.  All it does is waste system resources and lag your computer or even cripple some areas.  I have never gotten a computer virus in my life and I have never used any Anti-Virus programs.  Anti-Virus programs are worthless and a complete joke. 
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 05, 2013, 10:33:09 PM
TA is capable because he has a brain. I bought a nvidea GTX 570. Goes well with the PX79Pro motherboard.

It is amazing what you can find on Youtube re free software. Lots of smart guys out there helping people.

Makes me wonder if anyone should pay for software.

I have believed that antivirus companies create viruses to sell their products.

What I do know is that computers are logical things. The problems start when companies trying to make money stuff things up. It really is endless all the shit that happens from day to day.

We shouldn't have so many problems with incompatibility and so on but we do.

Can you recommend a good, reliable and free software to download videos from Youtube and elsewhere? Real Player used to work but not any more.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 05, 2013, 10:34:30 PM
AVG is a decent free one rated pretty high for free software.

http://free.avg.com/us-en/homepage

I used AVG for many years but then found it rather invasive and hard to delete from my computer. I used Avast after that and was pleased

but they prefer that you subscribe and don't make it easy to use the free version. A pity.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: BIG ACH on August 05, 2013, 10:39:36 PM

I was using Avast....  But then there seemed to be a lot of praise in regards to Windows 8 built in protection, so I uninstalled Avast and am just going with that now.


I keep Malware Malbytes installed though and run it every few weeks/months to just to be safe!
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: cephissus on August 05, 2013, 10:49:15 PM
I wanted to upgrade my computer but couldn't find what I was looking for. So I decided to replace my motherboard and CPU. During installation I decided to replace the lot and keep my old computer as a spare.

Computers look complicated but are really components put together so it isn't that difficult to do. I got a Cooler Master case with many blue coloured fans. What else! New 1200 watts power supply.

Asus motherboard that accepts up to 64 Gb of RAM. I have 48 Gb installed to do photo processing and panoramas. 2011 pin CPU is required. A good graphics card as well. Then I got a Solid State Drive as well.

That was a pain to install because I had to reinstall Windows 7 then call Microsoft to get my numbers approved. Lots of USB 3 ports with hubs. 7 Tb hard drives with about 30 Tb external drives. 16 external drives in total.

New high end Asus sound card for high fidelity. DVD player of course. Really simple and straightforward to assemble. I didn't need any help and did it all by myself, like I do building gym equipment.

Works well. However, lots of problems installing all the software and sorting everything out. Finally, after a couple of weeks everything seems to work fine.

It was necessary to have a connection to the internet to get help for problems. My iPad saved the day there. Cost about $4000 for everything plus the software and new external drives.

LOL 4 grand!!!  With a GTX570?!?!?!?!?

You got ripped off, period.  

http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=509570

sincerely hth


I'm building one right now, got everything lined up for about 2.5k (this includes a triple 27 inch monitor setup for gaming).  i was really torn between trying to cram everything into a mini-atx case that looked cool and not having to worry about heat/complicated setup.  at this point, i think i've abandoned hope for the mini-route.

btw, coolermaster cases are fuck ugly!

im thinking about getting fractal design's define r4 in white.  fractal designs, lian li, silverstone, and thermaltake are pretty much the only companys i found that make halfway decent looking cases.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Nomad on August 05, 2013, 11:10:45 PM
LOL 4 grand!!!  With a GTX570?!?!?!?!?

You got ripped off, period.  

http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=509570

sincerely hth


I'm building one right now, got everything lined up for about 2.5k (this includes a triple 27 inch monitor setup for gaming).  i was really torn between trying to cram everything into a mini-atx case that looked cool and not having to worry about heat/complicated setup.  at this point, i think i've abandoned hope for the mini-route.

btw, coolermaster cases are fuck ugly!

im thinking about getting fractal design's define r4 in white.  fractal designs, lian li, silverstone, and thermaltake are pretty much the only companys i found that make halfway decent looking cases.

power in a mini itx for triple screen = water.  Get mid to full tower.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 05, 2013, 11:14:25 PM
Computer was just over $3000 for parts. Remember, I live in Australia and things are dearer down here. I got 3 X 4Tb external hard drives and some new software.

I already have a Dell ultrasharp 30 inch monitor. Great purchase because my photos look good on it. Coolermaster was in the showroom and only $119 which includes

some fans. Sound card is Asus Essence STX. Plus I installed an additional 2 Tb hardrive inside. Keeps the other 3 Tb drives company, plus the 256 Gb SSD. Prices for

solid state drives are coming down. Oh, yes, I have 2 X 8 plug power boards and 2 X 6 plug ones. Lots of things to hook up.

I don't play computer games so didn't need the best graphics card. 48 Gb of RAM cost about $480 here. Lots of fans humming away but they don't cost much.

Have a new gaming mouse and wireless keyboard.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Skeletor on August 05, 2013, 11:17:29 PM

Can you recommend a good, reliable and free software to download videos from Youtube and elsewhere? Real Player used to work but not any more.

If you want to save youtube videos on your computer, http://savetube.com/
is not a bad website.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: C-BuZz on August 05, 2013, 11:18:32 PM
LOL 4 grand!!!  With a GTX570?!?!?!?!?

You got ripped off, period.  

http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=509570

sincerely hth


I'm building one right now, got everything lined up for about 2.5k (this includes a triple 27 inch monitor setup for gaming).  i was really torn between trying to cram everything into a mini-atx case that looked cool and not having to worry about heat/complicated setup.  at this point, i think i've abandoned hope for the mini-route.

btw, coolermaster cases are fuck ugly!

im thinking about getting fractal design's define r4 in white.  fractal designs, lian li, silverstone, and thermaltake are pretty much the only companys i found that make halfway decent looking cases.

Agreed. You got totally ripped. The 570 is 2 gens old now.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 05, 2013, 11:46:53 PM
Aussies get ripped off in every which way. Even software costs more down here. It costs even more in New Zealand. Cars, TV, you name it, we pay more. They have a luxury tax for fancy cars!

Personal licence plates cost about $500 every year plus other rego costs. Cameras, lenses, everything costs more. Houses in Sydney are from 600 to a million or more. Expensive place to live.

No real winter down here. It is about 22 degrees outside today. That is about 70 degrees in California temp. We have a climate similar to Atlanta or Northern Florida. Great place to live.

Sydney has over 5 million people. It is like rush hour all the time now. Roads haven't kept up to the population expansion.

I was trying to keep costs down and was hoping to stay under 2 grand. Not possible when you build a high end machine. It does what I want so far so no complaints.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: The True Adonis on August 06, 2013, 12:02:10 AM
Computer was just over $3000 for parts. Remember, I live in Australia and things are dearer down here. I got 3 X 4Tb external hard drives and some new software.

I already have a Dell ultrasharp 30 inch monitor. Great purchase because my photos look good on it. Coolermaster was in the showroom and only $119 which includes

some fans. Sound card is Asus Essence STX. Plus I installed an additional 2 Tb hardrive inside. Keeps the other 3 Tb drives company, plus the 256 Gb SSD. Prices for

solid state drives are coming down. Oh, yes, I have 2 X 8 plug power boards and 2 X 6 plug ones. Lots of things to hook up.

I don't play computer games so didn't need the best graphics card. 48 Gb of RAM cost about $480 here. Lots of fans humming away but they don't cost much.

Have a new gaming mouse and wireless keyboard.
You oughta start gaming my friend.  I think you would take to it like a duck in water. 
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: The True Adonis on August 06, 2013, 12:04:19 AM
I find this to be the most useful tool when it comes to building a computer.  Its kind of fun to just make build after build to see what price you can get it for.

http://pcpartpicker.com/
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: cephissus on August 06, 2013, 12:36:23 AM
Aussies get ripped off in every which way. Even software costs more down here. It costs even more in New Zealand. Cars, TV, you name it, we pay more. They have a luxury tax for fancy cars!

Personal licence plates cost about $500 every year plus other rego costs. Cameras, lenses, everything costs more. Houses in Sydney are from 600 to a million or more. Expensive place to live.

No real winter down here. It is about 22 degrees outside today. That is about 70 degrees in California temp. We have a climate similar to Atlanta or Northern Florida. Great place to live.

Sydney has over 5 million people. It is like rush hour all the time now. Roads haven't kept up to the population expansion.

I was trying to keep costs down and was hoping to stay under 2 grand. Not possible when you build a high end machine. It does what I want so far so no complaints.

I see.  Well... that sucks :D

Anyway, I agree with adonis.  With a computer like that, no reason not to game!

power in a mini itx for triple screen = water.  Get mid to full tower.

You mean I'll need a liquid cooling system if I go mini-itx?  Anyway, thanks for the feedback.  I've 99% given up on the idea by now.  Finding a nice-looking case like the Define R4 just made the decision that much easier.  I'm planning on picking up a 4670k + GTX 770 4gb.  I do want to go too crazy... I'd rather just reign in the spending a little and upgrade more frequently.

There's one thing that still gives me pause.  While looking for the thinnest bezel monitors, I read that some zero bezel monitors were shown off at a recent trade show, and are possibly going to make it to market this year.  If I could get a real zero bezel triple screen setup within the year, that would definitely be worth waiting for.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: deceiver on August 06, 2013, 12:39:49 AM
Of course, tons when I was a kid. As I got older I got bored with that stuff and have no idea what's going on in the market anymore. When it comes to processors my common sense helps me a lot but motherboards, coolers, that stuff... I have no idea even what is the "cool" company right now.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: jwb on August 06, 2013, 12:57:54 AM
Sydney is a fucking ripoff... You realize it even more when you move overseas.

Driver's license in Hawaii is $40 for 8 years. How much is it in Australia now?
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: G_Thang on August 06, 2013, 01:01:48 AM
Aussies get ripped off in every which way. Even software costs more down here. It costs even more in New Zealand. Cars, TV, you name it, we pay more. They have a luxury tax for fancy cars!

Personal licence plates cost about $500 every year plus other rego costs. Cameras, lenses, everything costs more. Houses in Sydney are from 600 to a million or more. Expensive place to live.

No real winter down here. It is about 22 degrees outside today. That is about 70 degrees in California temp. We have a climate similar to Atlanta or Northern Florida. Great place to live.

Sydney has over 5 million people. It is like rush hour all the time now. Roads haven't kept up to the population expansion.

I was trying to keep costs down and was hoping to stay under 2 grand. Not possible when you build a high end machine. It does what I want so far so no complaints.

didn't coach and the dads say, kids are worth every penny?  i'm guessing Ferns are too.  :P

Haka!

Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: jwb on August 06, 2013, 01:04:41 AM
Sydney is a fucking ripoff... You realize it even more when you move overseas.

Driver's license in Hawaii is $40 for 8 years. How much is it in Australia now?
I looked it up.... $52 per year in sydney!
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 06, 2013, 01:14:11 AM
Hawaii is a great place to live if you can stay there permanently. They make it hard to live there even for Yanks on the  mainland. Guess they have to keep the numbers down on that island paradise.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: jwb on August 06, 2013, 01:15:31 AM
Hawaii is a great place to live if you can stay there permanently. They make it hard to live there even for Yanks on the  mainland. Guess they have to keep the numbers down on that island paradise.
What are you talking about?

If you have a green card or are a citizen you can live in whatever state you want.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 06, 2013, 01:45:48 AM
Maybe I was thinking about the University of Hawaii. Anyway, not easy to emigrate there. Do you have your Green Card?
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: jwb on August 06, 2013, 01:54:23 AM
Maybe I was thinking about the University of Hawaii. Anyway, not easy to emigrate there. Do you have your Green Card?
Yeah I married an American and had a kid. Just got my permanent green card after 2 years as conditional resident.

Not sure about UH. I know it is cheap for native Hawaiians but only about 9% ever graduate.

Honolulu has the greatest variation in wealth of any place I have ever been.

Awesome weather though it never gets cold nor very hot. 27-33 every day. Still don't know Fahrenheit!
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 06, 2013, 02:12:24 AM
Have you seen Ledward Kaapana perform? Sensational guitarist in slack key.

I'd love to return to the Islands to photograph the place. Beautiful and colourful.

Do you live in Honolulu? If so do you hang out at any of the beaches there?
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Nomad on August 06, 2013, 02:20:27 AM
I see.  Well... that sucks :D

Anyway, I agree with adonis.  With a computer like that, no reason not to game!

You mean I'll need a liquid cooling system if I go mini-itx?  Anyway, thanks for the feedback.  I've 99% given up on the idea by now.  Finding a nice-looking case like the Define R4 just made the decision that much easier.  I'm planning on picking up a 4670k + GTX 770 4gb.  I do want to go too crazy... I'd rather just reign in the spending a little and upgrade more frequently.

There's one thing that still gives me pause.  While looking for the thinnest bezel monitors, I read that some zero bezel monitors were shown off at a recent trade show, and are possibly going to make it to market this year.  If I could get a real zero bezel triple screen setup within the year, that would definitely be worth waiting for.

ooohh...if thats all then you might be able to get away with an minitx. I was thinking that you were going to go 4770k & dual 770s or a GTX 780 if you wanted to drive 5760x1080 for all games. This also depends on whether you want to overclock your cpu and or the graphics card.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: jwb on August 06, 2013, 02:33:47 AM
Have you seen Ledward Kaapana perform? Sensational guitarist in slack key.

I'd love to return to the Islands to photograph the place. Beautiful and colourful.

Do you live in Honolulu? If so do you hang out at any of the beaches there?
We take our daughter to the beach right outside the Hilton in Waikiki at sunset quite a bit.

It's a good place to live if you really like your privacy like I do. Nobody cares who you are or where you are from since they just assume you are are tourist if you are white and speak with an accent.

Racial tension can be quite high if you don't live in a good area.

Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: DroppingPlates on August 06, 2013, 02:35:02 AM
Yep, I've made 2 desktops. Why would I pay 3x more, or pay for things that I don't need like advanced graphic cards?  :)
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 06, 2013, 02:55:13 AM


It's a good place to live if you really like your privacy like I do. Nobody cares who you are or where you are from since they just assume you are are tourist if you are white and speak with an accent.

Racial tension can be quite high if you don't live in a good area.

Reverse prejudice can happen, too. Anyway, when I visited there in the late 60s I was surprised how many people of Japanese origin lived there. They kept the business scene quite formal unlike the casual scene just about everywhere else. Being in a tourist city is great for taking photos because no one seems to bother. Have you been on any of the other islands there? There is a lot of different scenery I hear.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: rocket on August 06, 2013, 04:09:39 AM
4K is quite expensive.

For that I'd be after either the 4670k or the 6 core Intel cpu around the same price.

I'd also expect something over a 570, but I'm guessing you're not exactly gaming (and GPU has very little to do with photoshop work).

Massive overkill on the power supply. I have a gtx680 and I'm running nothing like 1200 watts.

"High fidelity" sound card needs "high fidelity" speakers and if I had 4k to burn on a box, I'd be looking at maybe half that going on speakers.  When I did, I did exactly that and boy am I not sorry about that.

7 external drives is terrible, you should have got a QNAP (or alternative).

Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 06, 2013, 04:19:01 AM
We all accumlate devices over the years and that is true of external hard drives. I have 16 of the critters so when I hook them all up I want to make sure I have enough power, etc. Besides I wanted the new connectors on the Cooler Master Silent Pro 1200. Makes working inside the computer much easier.

I have a good speaker system but wanted the Hi Fi card for head phones. When making the decisions I had to juggle price, availability and quality. Of course, I prefer the state of the art but such components cost double or more. The motherboard I wanted was too popular so unavailable for immediate pickup. Sydney is quite good for parts but few keep a lot of stock. All the best places were run by Asian looking people. I had to get a network adapter card because my computer said I needed one. Easy enough to add a wireless USB device and go. I learned a lot about computers doing this and no longer am awed by them. Well, putting them together isn't rocket science. They are still marvels of technology.  
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: rocket on August 06, 2013, 04:28:53 AM
For one thing, a hd uses approximately 12W (max) per device.

For another, most of those external drives are likely powered by external power adapters.

And if they aren't they are subject to the very low USB bus power requirements that exist (from memory up to 5V 1A - ie 5W).


Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Army of One on August 06, 2013, 04:41:23 AM
I wanted to upgrade my computer but couldn't find what I was looking for. So I decided to replace my motherboard and CPU. During installation I decided to replace the lot and keep my old computer as a spare.

Computers look complicated but are really components put together so it isn't that difficult to do. I got a Cooler Master case with many blue coloured fans. What else! New 1200 watts power supply.

Asus motherboard that accepts up to 64 Gb of RAM. I have 48 Gb installed to do photo processing and panoramas. 2011 pin CPU is required. A good graphics card as well. Then I got a Solid State Drive as well.

That was a pain to install because I had to reinstall Windows 7 then call Microsoft to get my numbers approved. Lots of USB 3 ports with hubs. 7 Tb hard drives with about 30 Tb external drives. 16 external drives in total.

New high end Asus sound card for high fidelity. DVD player of course. Really simple and straightforward to assemble. I didn't need any help and did it all by myself, like I do building gym equipment.

Works well. However, lots of problems installing all the software and sorting everything out. Finally, after a couple of weeks everything seems to work fine.

It was necessary to have a connection to the internet to get help for problems. My iPad saved the day there. Cost about $4000 for everything plus the software and new external drives.

On what planet do you need 48gb for photo processing? ( been building pcs for 20 years)
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: _aj_ on August 06, 2013, 04:46:26 AM
Two words: cable management.

The last one that I built for my son looks like a spider web in there. God help me if I need to swap out components. It's decent, an i5 with 16gb of RAM and an decent ASUS accelerated video card for about $750.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 06, 2013, 05:29:50 AM
On what planet do you need 48gb for photo processing? ( been building pcs for 20 years)

I am a bodybuilder so tend to overdo things. Not protein or supplements. I sometimes do huge panoramas and if they have over 100 raw photos the files can be huge. Over 5 Gb. If there are 10 rows of 12 photos that challenges most processors. So, yes, overkill but I now can't blame my RAM. 16 would have been sufficient and 32 more than enough.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: DroppingPlates on August 06, 2013, 05:58:05 AM
Why is it that esp old men like to hold long conversations about computers?
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: dostu on August 06, 2013, 06:00:33 AM
I am a bodybuilder so tend to overdo things. Not protein or supplements. I sometimes do huge panoramas and if they have over 100 raw photos the files can be huge. Over 5 Gb. If there are 10 rows of 12 photos that challenges most processors. So, yes, overkill but I now can't blame my RAM. 16 would have been sufficient and 32 more than enough.

What software do you use for your panoramas?
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 06, 2013, 07:14:43 AM
The best I have used, having tried them all, is Autopano Giga. This software allows all manner of editing and re-editing. Tutorials available as well. It handles the largest panoramas.

Sometimes I will use the one in Photoshop.  
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: dostu on August 06, 2013, 08:22:02 AM
The best I have used, having tried them all, is Autopano Giga. This software allows all manner of editing and re-editing. Tutorials available as well. It handles the largest panoramas.

Sometimes I will use the one in Photoshop.  
Thanx.
Also I've noticed you have a Canon 5D MK II. Do you have an EF 17-40 F/4L and if so what do you think of it.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: _bruce_ on August 06, 2013, 08:31:37 AM
IPC wise Intel has the edge, they have the best engineers and production facilities. Their Intel C/C++/Fortran compilers are the icing on the cake -> Vince, should you ever develop your own path finding algorithm for white vans evading the police... use these tools... it's C on steroids.

AMD was cool when they had the A64 as their flagship product. They've officially entered neckbeard territory where it's cool to root for the "underdog" - that funnily doesn't exist anymore.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: The True Adonis on August 06, 2013, 08:57:41 AM
We all accumlate devices over the years and that is true of external hard drives. I have 16 of the critters so when I hook them all up I want to make sure I have enough power, etc. Besides I wanted the new connectors on the Cooler Master Silent Pro 1200. Makes working inside the computer much easier.

I have a good speaker system but wanted the Hi Fi card for head phones. When making the decisions I had to juggle price, availability and quality. Of course, I prefer the state of the art but such components cost double or more. The motherboard I wanted was too popular so unavailable for immediate pickup. Sydney is quite good for parts but few keep a lot of stock. All the best places were run by Asian looking people. I had to get a network adapter card because my computer said I needed one. Easy enough to add a wireless USB device and go. I learned a lot about computers doing this and no longer am awed by them. Well, putting them together isn't rocket science. They are still marvels of technology.  
Most motherboards already have very high quality onboard audio (8 channel) to where you would not need a Sound Card at all.  I didn`t realize people still bought soundcards really anymore.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince B on August 06, 2013, 09:48:15 AM
Thanx.
Also I've noticed you have a Canon 5D MK II. Do you have an EF 17-40 F/4L and if so what do you think of it.

I have a 17-40 that I used twice. I have the 16-35, 8-15, 24-105, 70-200 F/4is, 70-300Lis, 50 macro, 100 macro, 200 F2.8, 400 F5.6, 500 F4, two extenders.
Two 5 D II, 60D, NEX7, OMD-EM5, adapters and special additional lenses. An expensive hobby for sure. I use the NEX7 a lot. Sharp sensor and great for closeups.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: manuelsonn on August 06, 2013, 10:20:34 AM
I have a 17-40 that I used twice. I have the 16-35, 8-15, 24-105, 70-200 F/4is, 70-300Lis, 50 macro, 100 macro, 200 F2.8, 400 F5.6, 500 F4, two extenders.
Two 5 D II, 60D, NEX7, OMD-EM5, adapters and special additional lenses. An expensive hobby for sure. I use the NEX7 a lot. Sharp sensor and great for closeups.
shouldnt u be in a home?
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: jwb on August 06, 2013, 10:28:42 AM
Reverse prejudice can happen, too. Anyway, when I visited there in the late 60s I was surprised how many people of Japanese origin lived there. They kept the business scene quite formal unlike the casual scene just about everywhere else. Being in a tourist city is great for taking photos because no one seems to bother. Have you been on any of the other islands there? There is a lot of different scenery I hear.
Only ever been to Maui, lived there for 2 years until six months ago. A lot more rural. Has a cool volcano you can drive up. Gets pretty cold at 10,000 feet above sea level even in Hawaii. Lived at 3000 ft up for a year was lovely and mild all the time.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: dostu on August 06, 2013, 10:41:31 AM
I have a 17-40 that I used twice. I have the 16-35, 8-15, 24-105, 70-200 F/4is, 70-300Lis, 50 macro, 100 macro, 200 F2.8, 400 F5.6, 500 F4, two extenders.
Two 5 D II, 60D, NEX7, OMD-EM5, adapters and special additional lenses. An expensive hobby for sure. I use the NEX7 a lot. Sharp sensor and great for closeups.

My collection includes a 5D III, 7D, 24-105L, 100 macro, twin macro flash, 70-300EF, Sigma 150-500, 2 older "C" bodies, a few lenses to go with them and other odds and ends. Plus 2 older telescopes with T mounts - Celestron C8 (2000mm f10) and a Criterion 4000 (1200mm f12). The Criterion is used occasionally, the Celestron because of size, never.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: James28 on August 06, 2013, 10:48:29 AM
That's what I do for a living. Antivirus is very important what product are you running on this computer and version? Yes software can be a bitch pending license and updates.

Antivirus is NOT important unless you're old or a moron. Not run an antivirus full time since the 90's and never found a virus on the occasion I did install it and checked. Don't run dodgy executables, don't open any email attachments that came from an unknown sender, ignore popups on websites, don't install any programs unless it was developed by a reputable company. Follow those rules and use a bit of intelligence, and you'll never have any issues. However, your average person is a fucking moron therefore the proliferation of antivirus software.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Ropo on August 06, 2013, 12:09:05 PM
I am trying out Webroot antivirus because of its high rating. Tried Avast free for over a year. Any suggestions are welcome.

buy license for F-secure.
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Vince G, CSN MFT on August 13, 2013, 05:21:48 AM
I wanted to upgrade my computer but couldn't find what I was looking for. So I decided to replace my motherboard and CPU. During installation I decided to replace the lot and keep my old computer as a spare.

Computers look complicated but are really components put together so it isn't that difficult to do. I got a Cooler Master case with many blue coloured fans. What else! New 1200 watts power supply.

Asus motherboard that accepts up to 64 Gb of RAM. I have 48 Gb installed to do photo processing and panoramas. 2011 pin CPU is required. A good graphics card as well. Then I got a Solid State Drive as well.

That was a pain to install because I had to reinstall Windows 7 then call Microsoft to get my numbers approved. Lots of USB 3 ports with hubs. 7 Tb hard drives with about 30 Tb external drives. 16 external drives in total.

New high end Asus sound card for high fidelity. DVD player of course. Really simple and straightforward to assemble. I didn't need any help and did it all by myself, like I do building gym equipment.

Works well. However, lots of problems installing all the software and sorting everything out. Finally, after a couple of weeks everything seems to work fine.

It was necessary to have a connection to the internet to get help for problems. My iPad saved the day there. Cost about $4000 for everything plus the software and new external drives.


Lot of money to spend on storing all of your kiddie porn....
Title: Re: Anyone else here built their own computer?
Post by: Army of One on August 13, 2013, 05:24:19 AM
Antivirus is NOT important unless you're old or a moron. Not run an antivirus full time since the 90's and never found a virus on the occasion I did install it and checked. Don't run dodgy executables, don't open any email attachments that came from an unknown sender, ignore popups on websites, don't install any programs unless it was developed by a reputable company. Follow those rules and use a bit of intelligence, and you'll never have any issues. However, your average person is a fucking moron therefore the proliferation of antivirus software.

Not true, only way you'd be safe is to disable scripts/flash/java or even the most cautious would still get virus/malware, 10 years ago your school of thought worked, now not so much