Thursday, September 11, 2014

New value graphics card champion

For the last couple of years or so, I've been installing AMD Radeon HD5450 graphics cards in family desktops so that basic games such as World of Warcraft, The Sims or Flight Simulator can be played. These cards also improve video playback, have a low power rating without additional connections, are silent (without noisy, little fans), can be adjusted to low profile cases and are fairly cheap to purchase, though the average price is increasing from £20 to £30 in that time.

I've occasionally purchased and tested similar cards such as Radeon HD6450 with DDR3 and DDR5, nVidia GT610, etc. The performance increase was generally not worth the extra cost. This week I saw an nVidia GT730 with 1GB DDR3 going for just £34 so I decided to try that. It is a short, PCIe 8-lanes card with a basic dual slot width heat-sink. Testing it shows that it doubles the PCmark7 score and trebles the 3Dmark06 figure. Yes, I know these benchmarks are old but it saves me re-benchmarking old cards and systems. And the games are old too. An impressive result and I'm sure that I will be purchasing more of these little video wonders.

Also, for a bit more money at about £60 I can get an nVidia GT640 with DDR5 and 128-bit memory bandwidth, so I will probably get one of these to see if the performance improvement is worth the extra cost. It should be.

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Outlook 2010 the best

After many years of using Office 2003, I had an opportunity to upgrade the Outlook component to the 2010 version. This is on my main PC, a DELL Vostro 430 with Intel i5 750 Quad core, 4Gb RAM and a 320GB hard drive. Generally I don't change the software or hardware on this system much and it is well protected and regularly backed up. It has all my emails, bookeeping, documents and photos on it.

I must admit that I'm impressed with this Outlook 2010 version. It upgraded easily from the older version and I'm now used to the 'new' ribbon interface and been able to customise it and added my useful buttons to it. I also like the small conversation view at the bottom of the window. I've installed the latest Outlook 2013 version many times now on customer's systems and it seems to be not as good as its predecessor.

It has taken me a while to upgrade but I'm glad that I did so.

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Fantastic value DELL Inspiron 15 laptop

Having written about a really cheap desktop from Acer recently, this time it is a laptop. DELL are offering an Inspiron 15 for just £179 including VAT, shipping, and a years warranty. With a discount code this can be further reduced to £166.
It is a fairly bare configuration of course:
- Intel Celeron Dual Core N2830 CPU 2.17GHz (turbo up to 2.4GHz)
- 4GB Single Channel DDR3 1600MHz (4GBx1)
- 500GB 5,400rpm SATA Hard Drive
- 4-in-1 Media Card (SD/SDHC/MS/MS Pro)
- Intel HD Graphics
- 15.6 inch LED Backlit Display (1366 x 768)
- Microsoft Windows 8.1 with Bing

So, no CD or DVD optical drive, Bluetooth or Ethernet. Still great for the price.

I ordered one yesterday and it was delivered this morning. The laptop seems well built, after setting it up and removing a lot of software c**p, is fine and reasonably responsive. As I repair PCs for a living, I see a LOT of slow laptops and this doesn't seem to be one of them. It processes most web surfing, emails, photo editing (with free Paint.net), word processing, etc. applications just fine. I ran a couple of Internet games on it as well (such as Forge of Empires) and these worked well too.

For £166, I'm really impressed. Fine for home use, students, old folks, etc. I'll probably keep it myself as a spare. Might fit a small 128Gb SSD to make it even better.

Monday, June 30, 2014

Chieftec Purple Dragon died

After many years of faithful service my huge, heavy, mega-tower Chieftec Purple Dragon case has gone. It blew up in spectacular fashion when the old PSU expired with a loud bang. As I sit quite near it, I had massive fright. Luckily, further examination and testing revealed that the MSi motherboard, overclocked AMD Phenom II X3 720, memory and hard drives had survived.

As I thought that it would be difficult to replace the PSU with the extra long leads to reach to the bottom of the case and I could hardly lift it any more, it was better being rehoused and scrap the power-hungry nVidia 9600GSO graphics, the IDE RAID hard disk drive array and multiple optical drives. So the remains were re-housed in a modern, light case with a fast, SATA hard drive and a new nVidia GT610 graphics card. Amazingly Windows Vista re-activated and we are back on the road again.

The empty Purple Dragon case was thrown in the iron and steel skip at the local dump. It served me well for many years.

Neat NAS

Those of you that have follow my blog know that I'm a big supporter of Windows Home Server. Unfortunately this brilliant software is doomed and the Windows Server 2003 which is the basis for WHS version 1 is now out of support. I still run WHS v1 on a full tower DELL server as the centre of my home network. However I only turn it on when needed as it is too expensive with three hard disk drives, a dual core CPU and lots of fans to run 24/7. The shared folders are safely split across the three drives and when one failed it was easy to replace and recover without any important data loss.


So I was looking for a small, energy efficient NAS to run all the time and provide:
- my music library for the Sonos wireless music system
- recent photos to show on my Nexus tablet
- backup storage for client's computers before I start working on them
- shared marketing documents that can be accessed remotely.

Data protection, resilience and performance were lower priorities than availability. So a single disk NAS seemed to fit the requirements. The WD MyCloud 2Tb for £110 seemed a good price being not that much more expensive than a USB external hard drive. Interestingly, the dual bay/drive version was over twice the price.

Setup wasn't easy as to start with the NAS not discoverable on my LAN. A firmware upgrade and some extra help from the excellent WD support line fixed any problems. The NAS is now mapped as an extra drive on all my systems. Remote access is not easy as it relies on Java which I've removed from all systems, and also recommend that my clients do this too. Another problem was that Windows 7 Home will not allow backup to a network drive. The Professional and Ultimate versions do however. Microsoft shoots itself in the foot yet again as home users will not buy backup software.

This certainly is a neat bit of kit providing almost exactly what I wanted. I haven't tried the 'snapshot' backup service yet as this is isn't a priority.

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Cheapest hardware ever

I've just bought my cheapest complete PC hardware ever for just under £130. Ebuyer are offering the Acer Aspire XC-603 without operating system for just £129.99 including free postage. This neat small form factor PC has an Intel latest technology, low-power Quad core Celeron J1900 running at 2GHz nominally and 2.4GHz in turbo mode. Plus 4Gb DDR3 memory, 500Gb hard disk drive, DVD writer, card reader, and four USB 2 and one USB 3 port. All assembled in one very nice looking case with a brushed aluminium effect front panel. It runs very quietly and come with a years warranty too.

Follow the instructions to re-flash the BIOS and then simply load Windows 7 Home Premium for a neat PC that costs less than £200. Or load Windows 8.1 directly if you are feeling adventurous. Either way you end up with a responsive computer which can easily handle Internet web surfing and emails, word processing and digital photo editing for home or office use. The quad core Celeron if fine for these tasks and clicking on a desktop icon always opens a new window quickly. You can expand the memory for the future to 8Gb if needed. Substituting or adding a SSD would also increase performance.

Well done Acer! In these days of smartphones and tablets it is good to see the desktop computer hitting back.

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Ubuntu 14.04 LTS replacement for Windows XP?


Every couple of years I download the latest version of Ubuntu Linux and try it out. Generally I'm disappointed in its installation, operation, user interface and software applications.

So what has changed?


Firstly a new LTS (Long Term Support) version called Trusty Tahr with a generally liked new user interface and the end of support for good, old Windows XP. I downloaded the Desktop version ISO and installed it on a DELL Optiplex GX520 compact tower the a 3GHz Intel Pentium D and 2Gb memory; i.e. a typical ten year old computer. Firstly the installation went extremely smoothly and for once I didn't have to use the command line/terminal window at all. It even came pre-loaded with the latest versions of useful applications like LibreOffice, Firefox, Thunderbird and a neat photo management application called Shotwell.

What I was left with a modern looking desktop interface that appears to be better and less scary than Windows 8 Metro and is easier to use. I was easily able to add my preferred Google Chrome browser. I even played Forge of Empires on it.

I'm getting a lot of concerned customers calling me about the expiration of Windows XP. After going through the usual options of a new Windows 8 PC, not worth upgrading a five year old computer, buying a reconditioned one, etc. this seems a great value solution to just load this onto their old hardware. It is another option that can be considered. A lot of my customers just want to surf the web, read emails, load digital photos, etc. Ubuntu 14.04 is a really good way of doing just this.

So the Linux desktop has finally found a reason to exist. A great piece of software and an opportunity. I used to program Unix System V for a living so the command line interface is no stranger to me but I just hate using it to do simple things like install applications.  My only concern is why did they have to put the windows close button on the left like a Mac?  95% of the world's users expect to see it on the right.