I misread the price as $100, and you almost got paypaled before I finished reading the sentence. Bump for a great seller and a still-good deal on a nice laptop. GLWS
BB in my area doesn't price match on third party merchants, and they only sell the 04G-P4-2984-KR directly.
Staples says they don't obligate themselves to price match non-stocked items.
So, no luck here. Thanks for the heads up, though! If it's still around tomorrow maybe I'll take my...
Not exactly what you mentioned, but the TW700 from Microcenter fits the price point, and it's actually quite nice if you don't mind Windows 8 instead of Android.
Yes, it supports 4x2gb sticks of ECC or non-ECC unregistered memory. Those should be fine.
The SHLC variant has one x16, and two x8 physical. One of those is x8 electrical, the other x4. See page 25 of the TPS.
This board isn't really designed for overclocking at all. It might be able to do...
That's annoying, they should have the option of using a different port to make it easier to manage.
Have you tried adjusting the throttle option?
I don't see any way to set up the QoS the way you want with the stock firmware. DD-WRT supports that device, maybe you could get better results...
Note also that it's listed as "ECC Unbuffered", rather than ECC registered that's normally associated with larger memory capacity. The H8QGi supports 256GB of unbuffered memory in 32 DIMMs, (i.e., 8GB each) so that memory won't be supported.
That said, I don't think anyone actually makes 8GB...
Neat-o. It's very similar to the Adafruit display, which is basically an Ipad display with the same display board, but a little bigger.
Eh, I'm in for one. It's a convenient enough size, and I've wanted to own a high-DPI display since... sixth grade?
Multiply by the proposed rate:
So my router and other network equipment downloads 9 GB per hour, but consumes 0.3 kWh per gigabyte, so it takes 2.7kWh per hour to run it. That means I must have a 2700 watt average power consumption during that time.
The Cisco 6000 series routers are...
"File sharing" is a little unclear: it could apply to anything from a thousand-user data share down to one user streaming x264 over network at 10mbps. I have an E5-2620---which is just a little faster per core and has six cores instead of four---but like I said CPU usage is never a problem, even...
The 2603 is certainly enough for general home/media file serving, but it really depends what you're doing with the machine. FWIW I have dual E5-2620s for running VMs on the same machine, and hardly ever touch full utilization.
The X9SRL is a nice board. Intel is generally a little more...
I dunno, they're pretty fast (I have two in my home box) but I don't think they're the fastest drives we as humanity can produce. They're only x4 pci express 1.1, which is only 1GB/s. I mean, that's pretty snappy, but the Micron P320H (on x8 pcie 2.0) does 3.2GB/s.
I got my FusionIO drives...
It looks like you should disable the ASR feature in the BIOS, and see if you get a BSOD or something. You should also try the IML (Integrated Management Log) viewer and see if that tells you anything useful.
I have a Liebert GXT3-2000RT230 UPS, and just got a battery cabinet for it off ebay. Simple question: do I need to remove the load to connect the external batteries, or can I do it live?
The manual mentions you can hotswap the internal batteries, but as I read it says nothing about the order...
255.255.0.0 is a perfectly valid subnet. It's a bit more extra space than you might need for a network that size, but it shouldn't be a problem. Can you ping the gateway from the client? Is DNS set up properly on the client?
Does your FC card support Ethernet? I have an Emulex card which uses the oce driver and does 10gbe just fine. That might solve the problem.
I used iSCSI for a while, but found NFS a lot more flexible. It might be worth investigating that.
This sounds like the problem with the corn, the chicken, and the fox crossing the river.
You can't evacuate data from a device like you want. This requires a feature called "bp-rewrite" which has been requested for years, but it's a hard problem and there's no sign it will be implemented any...
What does "zpool status" report while things are working versus when they're not?
How about "stmfdm list-lu -v", "stmfadm list-view $MYLU", and "stmfadm list-target -v"?
Does "fmadm faulty" show anything?