by Tdarcos » Sun Nov 07, 2010 4:57 pm
I went to Micro Center Friday evening and purchased a Dell Optiplex 740. A 2.2 ghz 64-bit machine with 80 gig hard drive and 1 gb of memory. With DVD (reader I presume), refurbished off-lease, with 90 day warranty, for $199.99. Brought it home in my lap in my wheelchair, carrying it home on bus, metrorail train and bus.
I installed a number of open source applications including Firefox, Audacity, Inkscape, and then installed The Orange Box so I can do what I wanted, to be able to again play Half-Life 2, Portal, Garry's Mod and run Counter-Strike maps single user either in CS or Garry's Mod. (I know CS and Garry's mod are not part of Orange Box; I bought those later.)
There are a couple of really realistic looking third-party maps of the World Trade Center I have that run in CS so I can see more-or-less how it looked.
I was really disappointed I never got to see the place directly, because, ironically, our whole family was in New York City to see the original Coyote Ugly barroom, on Sunday, September 9, 2011.
I do like the fact Steam allows you to install the games you own on an unlimited number of machines as long as you're the only one using any particular machine for that account.
Best of all it uses XP Professional, not piece-of-shit Vista. Has 8 USB ports, but the one thing I don't like is it uses USB mouse and USB keyboard, I've found they tend to be less reliable over PS/2 connected mouse/keyboard.
But you actually still end up with 8 USB ports left without an extra hub because the keyboard adds two more ports, one you can plug the mouse into, so the net effect is you don't lose any.
Another reason for getting a (newer) computer is that I have an HD video camera I bought to replace my previous camera that did standard video. My old computer can't handle HD for video editing. Since the new one is a 64-bit machine it should be okay.
The speaker and microphone jacks are on both front and back, so I plug the speakers (Inland, $6.99), in the back and run them behind my monitor. I had to buy new speakers anyway, I knocked over the previous ones off my desk onto the floor and probably broke them. I've been suffering with headphones the last couple of weeks.
All of my MP3s are stored on an external hard drive so I can listen to them on this machine simply by moving the USB cable to this machine.
The (Dell) keyboard has additional small buttons above the function keys for controlling Internet Explorer, I presume (back, forward, stop, reload and home). It has a control for Windows Media player, with the mute, stop, previous track, next track, play/pause button, music button, and a volume knob. I kid you not, the volume control is an actual knob! (The HP keyboard I have for my Pavillion has volume up and volume down buttons)
About the only thing I don't like is the "six pack" typein control button set. On my Pavillion the keyboard is
Insert | Pause (break)
Home | End
Delete| Page UP
(two
button | Page DOWN
height)
On the Dell, it's
Insert | Home | Page UP
Delete | End | Page Down
Which means if you type by touch - I do - hitting the top edge on the HP gets end, on Dell it gets Page Up.
My Pavillion is supposedly slightly faster at 2.8 Ghz but I haven't noticed much difference. I put in a $14 USB wireless "chewing gum sized" adapter, installed the software and the Internet works.
The Dell and the Pavillion are both Tower models; the Dell is about 1/2 as wide because the DVD drive is mounted sideways but will allow you to insert the disc horizontally and it does work ok. The Pavillion has you mount CD/DVDs flat. (The Pavillion is about 8 years old, I think; I do remember that the drive is not the original one; I replaced a CD-R or CD-RW with a DVD writer. I have an external USB DVD writer I bought last year so I don't have to do that again.)
The Dell is designed to operate either horizontally as a desktop or vertically as a Tower. The HP apparently only operates as a Tower.
I am using the new Dell computer to post this message.
I have a KVM switch in the back of the closet I haven't used lately, I might hook it back up to switch machines on the monitor so I can use both simultaneously. On the other hand, both have wireless Internet and file sharing works, I could put the Pavillion over in the corner, have VNC server running and run it headless, when I need to use it for something, start VNC client and run it in a window.
That would allow me to remove the original keyboard and mouse off my desk.
So, anyway, basically that's what I did with the $200 I got last month for being an election judge in the September primary election. I've been wanting to play Half Life and the other HL-based games again for better than a year, ever since my other computer stopped working (and was stolen, another story.)
I have another $250 coming for being election judge in the General Election and taking the training class. I think I'll buy an all-in-one to replace the scanner I lost in the eviction. My laser printer is also informing me I'm running out of toner, which is probably about right, I bought it August, 2009 as a remanufactured model (for $79 with a a $30 mail-in rebate or $49 net), including a rebuilt cartridge advertised at an estimated 800 pages (about 90% of new).
It's a Brother laser, so I might look into something from Brother. This is the second of their laser printers I've owned, I more-or-less threw the first one away after about 4 or 5 years, when the drum started to go bad, and I suspect it was around the 3000-5000 page range. I've had very good luck with Brother, their prices are competitive and the TCO is in line with what they claim for toner and drum use. I might have kept the old Brother and replaced the drum like I did when the toner cartridge ran out, only the printer originally cost me $149 and a replacement drum is around $150; you do the math.
Then I discovered I could have turned the old printer in for store credit, I could have bought something else. Oh well, it's not important, I'd have lost it in the eviction anyway.
One thing it's a hell of a lot faster on is start-up time. When I start up the HP, and it gets to Explorer, showing the desktop, it still requires 20 minutes of initialization before you can use it; the Dell is basically ready to use within about 1 minute of the desktop appearing, and that's only because I have to wait for the wireless adapter to negotiate a DHCP lease with my firewall/router.
I went to Micro Center Friday evening and purchased a Dell Optiplex 740. A 2.2 ghz 64-bit machine with 80 gig hard drive and 1 gb of memory. With DVD (reader I presume), refurbished off-lease, with 90 day warranty, for $199.99. Brought it home in my lap in my wheelchair, carrying it home on bus, metrorail train and bus.
I installed a number of open source applications including Firefox, Audacity, Inkscape, and then installed The Orange Box so I can do what I wanted, to be able to again play Half-Life 2, Portal, Garry's Mod and run Counter-Strike maps single user either in CS or Garry's Mod. (I know CS and Garry's mod are not part of Orange Box; I bought those later.)
There are a couple of really realistic looking third-party maps of the World Trade Center I have that run in CS so I can see more-or-less how it looked.
I was really disappointed I never got to see the place directly, because, ironically, our whole family was in New York City to see the original Coyote Ugly barroom, on Sunday, September 9, 2011.
I do like the fact Steam allows you to install the games you own on an unlimited number of machines as long as you're the only one using any particular machine for that account.
Best of all it uses XP Professional, not piece-of-shit Vista. Has 8 USB ports, but the one thing I don't like is it uses USB mouse and USB keyboard, I've found they tend to be less reliable over PS/2 connected mouse/keyboard.
But you actually still end up with 8 USB ports left without an extra hub because the keyboard adds two more ports, one you can plug the mouse into, so the net effect is you don't lose any.
Another reason for getting a (newer) computer is that I have an HD video camera I bought to replace my previous camera that did standard video. My old computer can't handle HD for video editing. Since the new one is a 64-bit machine it should be okay.
The speaker and microphone jacks are on both front [i]and[/i] back, so I plug the speakers (Inland, $6.99), in the back and run them behind my monitor. I had to buy new speakers anyway, I knocked over the previous ones off my desk onto the floor and probably broke them. I've been suffering with headphones the last couple of weeks.
All of my MP3s are stored on an external hard drive so I can listen to them on this machine simply by moving the USB cable to this machine.
The (Dell) keyboard has additional small buttons above the function keys for controlling Internet Explorer, I presume (back, forward, stop, reload and home). It has a control for Windows Media player, with the mute, stop, previous track, next track, play/pause button, music button, and a volume knob. I kid you not, the volume control is an actual knob! (The HP keyboard I have for my Pavillion has volume up and volume down buttons)
About the only thing I don't like is the "six pack" typein control button set. On my Pavillion the keyboard is
Insert | Pause (break)
Home | End
Delete| Page UP
(two
button | Page DOWN
height)
On the Dell, it's
Insert | Home | Page UP
Delete | End | Page Down
Which means if you type by touch - I do - hitting the top edge on the HP gets end, on Dell it gets Page Up.
My Pavillion is supposedly slightly faster at 2.8 Ghz but I haven't noticed much difference. I put in a $14 USB wireless "chewing gum sized" adapter, installed the software and the Internet works.
The Dell and the Pavillion are both Tower models; the Dell is about 1/2 as wide because the DVD drive is mounted sideways but will allow you to insert the disc horizontally and it does work ok. The Pavillion has you mount CD/DVDs flat. (The Pavillion is about 8 years old, I think; I do remember that the drive is not the original one; I replaced a CD-R or CD-RW with a DVD writer. I have an external USB DVD writer I bought last year so I don't have to do that again.)
The Dell is designed to operate either horizontally as a desktop or vertically as a Tower. The HP apparently only operates as a Tower.
I am using the new Dell computer to post this message.
I have a KVM switch in the back of the closet I haven't used lately, I might hook it back up to switch machines on the monitor so I can use both simultaneously. On the other hand, both have wireless Internet and file sharing works, I could put the Pavillion over in the corner, have VNC server running and run it headless, when I need to use it for something, start VNC client and run it in a window.
That would allow me to remove the original keyboard and mouse off my desk.
So, anyway, basically that's what I did with the $200 I got last month for being an election judge in the September primary election. I've been wanting to play Half Life and the other HL-based games again for better than a year, ever since my other computer stopped working (and was stolen, another story.)
I have another $250 coming for being election judge in the General Election and taking the training class. I think I'll buy an all-in-one to replace the scanner I lost in the eviction. My laser printer is also informing me I'm running out of toner, which is probably about right, I bought it August, 2009 as a remanufactured model (for $79 with a a $30 mail-in rebate or $49 net), including a rebuilt cartridge advertised at an estimated 800 pages (about 90% of new).
It's a Brother laser, so I might look into something from Brother. This is the second of their laser printers I've owned, I more-or-less threw the first one away after about 4 or 5 years, when the drum started to go bad, and I suspect it was around the 3000-5000 page range. I've had very good luck with Brother, their prices are competitive and the TCO is in line with what they claim for toner and drum use. I might have kept the old Brother and replaced the drum like I did when the toner cartridge ran out, only the printer originally cost me $149 and a replacement drum is around $150; you do the math.
Then I discovered I could have turned the old printer in for store credit, I could have bought something else. Oh well, it's not important, I'd have lost it in the eviction anyway.
One thing it's a hell of a lot faster on is start-up time. When I start up the HP, and it gets to Explorer, showing the desktop, it still requires 20 minutes of initialization before you can use it; the Dell is basically ready to use within about 1 minute of the desktop appearing, and that's only because I have to wait for the wireless adapter to negotiate a DHCP lease with my firewall/router.