Yes, the 7800GT is superior to the 7600GT. The 7800GT is slightly worse performing in every benchmark than the 7900GT or the X1900GT. I also leaned towards the X1900GT over the 78/900GT, and I'm glad I did... as ASUS mentioned, temporal AA and high quality AF gives the ATI a very noticeable...
There is currently only one solution that I can think of that will meet your needs. The RAM and X2 4200 will work fine in any AM2 motherboard, but the limiting factor is the AGP capability. As you say, most new motherboards have PCI and PCI-e. If I were you, I would wait and get a bit more...
Wow, you're right... a quick google search yielded 20,200 results, most of which were 'median' related. Good call. Must be a proprietary card built specifically for the company... or a rebranded X800XL or something. Strange.
Anyhow, I didn't find anything that would work for that specific...
I presume you meant "X800XL" or "X850XT" since there is no such thing as an "x740xl" :P
You should be able to monitor the card's core temperature with the RivaTuner utility. Kind of ironic, since this is an ATI card, not nVidia, but whatever.
Anyhow, you should be looking at around 50-70...
keyword is *most* here... there are actually very few 1080p HDTVs available at this time... but they ARE available. Most HDTV people I know have an LCD 720p - like a small wall-mount. People that go for the 40-inchers+ generally have 1080i for now. I don't know for sure, but I believe the 23"...
Correct me if I'm wrong, guys... but I don't think windows xp can be installed successfully to a USB hard drive? I thought that it had issues booting from USB.
If you had looked a little closer, perhaps you would have noticed "that he can read a html document via LAN" with the HTML protocol (i.e. http://192.168.1.200/public/index.htm) which DOES, in fact, prove that he has a web server running on his machine.
In any case, the WRT54G port forwarding...
He already has a webserver on the machine. That is why he's able to access the camera recording computer from "http://192.168.1.200/public/index.htm". So all he should need to do is open TCP port 80 on his router and point it to 192.168.1.200. VPN might be more secure, but it is a very...
It should work fine. You will need to have a DVI cable for your X850XT, and use it to connect to the HDTV. I'm assuming that you will want to hook up your gaming console to the RCA connectors.
The only thing to note is that this monitor is a non-standard HDTV resolution. It will work fine...
you won't need to worry about File and Printer Sharing (which is a VERY good thing). The only port you will need to add to your router's port forwarding list is TCP 80. That is the port that all web browsers use to send and recieve information over the internet or networks.
What is the...
You can get other fans that move plenty of air, you don't need a jet engine... 220 CFM is overkill for any system. To put things into perspective, a quiet room is ~25dB. a VERY loud (and ear damaging) stereo is ~105dB. 65dB is right in the middle. That is not acceptable if you want to be...
I can't give you a definite answer without knowing what this "security device" is, but I can give you a generic answer that works for normal setups. Most networks are attached to the internet through a central hub. That hub should have a static IP, such as 192.168.1.1. If you open a web...
As the others have said, it seems to me you have sufficient cooling. The GPU may be a bit hot, but it's still not hot enough to cause those kinds of problems. If you insist on getting another fan, do NOT get the fan that your friend recommended unless you don't want to hear yourself think...
As ASUS said, no... if you had read the forum posts, you would see that there are some workarounds that may or may not work... if they don't, your only alternative would be to get ahold of some DDR2-533 RAM and update the BIOS with that installed (or manually change the RAM voltage and...
It's your choice to make. I personally decided on the X1900GT because it was slightly less expensive, and real world, there is not a significant difference in performance (you won't notice 3-4 FPS).
There are also a couple other factors that you haven't noted. The X1800XT is already maxed...
Yes, on all but the most entry level boards, you should be able to change the voltage going to memory modules in the BIOS manually. And if a motherboard has issues with memory by default, a BIOS update can fix that as well.
The problem is that you may or may not be able to get into the BIOS...
I believe it's targeted mainly at enterprise-level backup for now.
This technology shows promise, but I'm afraid that just like the ZIP disk, it will be an expensive niche market (even after it drops down to consumer level) that lasts for a few years, but is more trouble than it is eventually...