Saturday, January 26, 2013
Another DELL terrific PC
As the trend is for computers to get smaller, DELL have designed this really compact unit which contains everything that most customers will require. It comes standard with Intel's latest third generation Core i3 or i5 CPUs, USB 3 sockets, HDMI connector for HTPC use, an integrated media card reader, WiFi card included, etc. At the moment you can get it with Windows 7 Professional but I doubt that this will last too much longer before we are forced into the Windows 8 disaster. Also, because of the small form factor upgrade-ability is somewhat limited and the 220W power supply won't support any 3D gaming graphics cards.
Well done to DELL in designing and manufacturing this little beauty. I'm sure I will be recommending and selling many of these perfect PCs in the near future.
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Starting the New Year
It is an impressive timepiece with a big, modern look. I prefer the stainless steel watch band as I always have trouble replacing the leather ones. The strap needed a slight adjustment which was a bit tricky and fiddly. A small hammer helped.
I probably won't use the stopwatch too often, but it is good to have and gives the chronograph a professional look. For a watch that has a recommended retail price between £200 to £250 (depending on where you look) it is a great purchase and a stylish start to the New Year.
Monday, December 24, 2012
Hits and misses of 2012
In technology, the rise of the tablet to the detriment of desktops, laptops and the complete decimation of netbooks is a major change in the way people want to access the Internet and their data. Tablets are for the future and Apple and Android-based devices reflect a new effective IT force. The experience I've had with my own Google Nexus 7 tablet has shown me the way and I've been so impressed with it especially at just a relatively low cost. You can even play some great, addictive games on it!
The recent improvement in my broadband speed by Virgin Media must also go as plus for 2012. Playing multiplayer games benefit hugely from this as well as the increasingly frequent large downloads.
One of those large downloads was the software disaster of Windows 8, which I'm now being forced to sell from DELL in collaboration with Microsoft. It will surely be viewed as the turning point in Windows operating systems. I do have a system running Windows 8 for testing and support purposes but I'm still not happy with it and neither are my customers.
My own computers have not been upgraded at all this year, not even my gaming system. I suppose the economic downturn has contributed to this as well as the level of existing performance is sufficient for my purposes. My reaction times are also getting slower!
Thank you Virgin Media
Sunday, October 7, 2012
Being responsive
As it was a branded system, overclocking the CPU was not an option, so I tried replacing the memory with 4Gb faster memory. No difference was perceived or benchmarked. Adding a relatively new graphics card also had similar non-results. Then I saw an offer last weekend for a relatively cheap but slow SanDisk 128Gb SSD for just £50. Not an Extreme or Ultra just a basic SSD.
A quick clone of the hard disk to the SSD and the system rebooted a lot quicker. Now this is to be expected and is often used as an example of why you should buy an SSD. For me it is not so important as I typically only start a PC once a day and a few seconds here or there doesn't seem that important. What is important is when you click on an icon, I expect to see the system respond with a new window filled with information, an application splash screen, a positive message, etc. Click on another icon and the same should happen immediately. Put the cursor somewhere and type and I expect to see the letters appear as I type not a few seconds later. That is being responsive.
Needless to say, that is what this humble little system did. Yes, I benchmarked the file data bandwidth to be over four times faster, and the overall PCmark shows more that a 50% increase, but the responsiveness improvement was fantastic. And the system was an awful lot quieter too! Also, if you turned off automatic defragmentation the little disk light doesn't keep flashing.
I've decided to keep this little system and upgrade it to Windows 8 when it's released later this month to see if it finally is any good at all on the desktop.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Windows 8 Second Edition
Zebedee Dipstick the new Microsoft CEO and former janitor at the Redmond campus said 'with the new features such as Start button, Control panel and Aero user interface we expect Windows 8 Second Edition to become the world's premier desktop and laptop operating system again.' The present Windows 8 will be renamed Windows 8 PhoTab for touch sensitive phone and tablet devices. Following abysmal sales, the Microsoft Slate devices will be immediately discontinued.
Since Microsoft introduced their Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) policy and the remaining workforce brought Apple iOS and Android-based mobile phones and tablets the writing has been on the wall for any Windows-based personal devices. This follows the market's rejection of Windows 8 on desktop PCs and laptops. Following some initial favourable press and reviews of the year old operating system. Indeed Microsoft is announcing a free upgrade to Second Edition for those devices in a bid to stimulate a return to Microsoft Windows software architecture. Microsoft Office 2013 Second Edition will also see a makeover shortly to be consistent with the operating platform.
Zebedee Dipstick also said that Microsoft is concentrating its development efforts on convergence with Apple and Google's software architecture in the future and considers innovation completely finished for them.
There were no further comments as the Microsoft marketing and press departments no longer exist.
Friday, August 31, 2012
What an upgrade!
However, as I was in the process of dismantling a system with an Intel Core Quad Q6600 CPU using the same Socket 775 I wondered about upgrading the DELL with it.
Even though DELL claimed that this processor was not supported in the E520 others had tried successfully. So, I upgraded to the latest 2.4 version BIOS and dropped it into the E520 and it booted.To make the most of this better CPU, I was able to load Windows Vista Home on to the system. However this required upgrading the memory to 2Gb. I only had a couple of PC6400 DIMMs which again DELL said it didn't support. However, in they went and worked at the faster speed. Swapping the 80Gb drive for a 200Gb was the next step, followed by adding an old Radeon HD4550 graphics card.
Now the performance test using PCmark05. The original system struggled to 2,217 yet the same test gave 7,667 on the upgraded system. Quite a difference and well worth the double asking price. A really successful mid-life upgrade to a quality system.