This particular Gigabyte has 8 sata ports with two FRAIDs. I figure once the horsepower of the machine is not enough, it will be at the very least a good server. I lost count of the USB portsl but I believe it has 12. Also two 1394B (yes, the 800mbps) firewire. Also two lans. Dual bios, so you can save the old one before you upgrade. This is an amazing amount of hardware for something shy of $150.
With the Silent PC case, a heat piped graphics card, an on-demand fan in the PS, the PC is less annoying than many notebook computers in terms of noise. I'm using Asus DVD roms, and am only somewhat happy with them. The drawers are kind of flimsy. The drives are fast, but not as quite as my Sony DVD burner. I guess I want a Mac (no fan) with PC performance. James L. Sims wrote: > My previous machine had a Gigabyte MB and I really liked it. So far, > I'm not impressed. It's also my first experience with Nvidia chipset > drivers - I was ready for anything else, given my experience with VIA. > I may go back to Gigabyte, sooner than later. > > Jim > > gary wrote: > > >>I guess I should say Asus mobos anymore. It used to be my mobo of choice. >> >>http://www.iometer.org/ >>To some degree you can measure disk i/o with the program, though it >>really flogs your whole system. >> >> >>gary wrote: >> >> >> >>>FWIW, I don't build PCs using Asus mobos. I find I get a better bang for >>>you buck with Gigabyte. I've built two systems using the GA-k8n Ultra-9 >>>(x64 and Suse 10.0) >>> >>> >> >> >> >> >> > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe by mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], with 'unsubscribe filmscanners' or 'unsubscribe filmscanners_digest' (as appropriate) in the message title or body
