Alright, my server cannot be found on the network.
My router isn't at it's own IP like it should.
What the fuck did they do when they were fixing the DSL line outside the house?
[editline]17th June 2014[/editline]
Alright, seems like my NETGEAR was coughing blood and required a reboot, seemingly fixing everything.
[QUOTE=~Kiwi~v2;45129765]
need a linux person to help me out here
i have a usb that i would like to split into 2 volumes (windows cant do this for whatever fucking reason so im having to use gparted) question is how and what method should i used with gparted to split both partitions(i only have 1 usb)[/QUOTE]
Are you trying to make an live-usb? If so, why don't you just activate persistent mode to keep your data?
However, partitioning an USB should not be harder than partitioning an HDD, the only limit that I know of is that you cannot partition the drive you are booting from. What kind of problem do you have exactly?
My dog lays down where my chair should be below my desk making it impossible to work.
Thankfully my floor is just painted concrete and I can just push him to the side.
Edit: General Chat
[QUOTE=~Kiwi~v2;45130063]thats my exact issue and persistent mode i can't seem to find under ubuntu[/QUOTE]
Are you making the live-usb from Linux or Windows? If Windows, then most of the GUI live-usb creators have an checkbox to make it persistent (Try ex. [URL="http://www.linuxliveusb.com"]LiLi[/URL]).
If you are making it from Linux (Guessing Ubuntu) then you should have an tool named "Make Startup Disk" or something similar. On the bottom of this tool there is an glider which you can use to select how much space you want to dedicate to the persistent mode.
If you are making it from Linux, but not Ubuntu, or you do not have the tool then try following this CLI tutorial: [url]https://help.ubuntu.com/community/LiveCD/Persistence[/url]
Note that none of these methods work when the system is online. Aka, you cannot change the drive while running of it. If you have no installed os, but need to create the live-usb then I'm sure there is some kind of hackish CLI way to do it, but the simplest is to either create an other tempoary live-usb, or an live-cd to do it from.
So I was checking out a business product on the AT&T and I provided that it was a personal purchase.
It directed me back to the homepage.
GG, AT&T
hm, my dad's laptop needs a new ssd drive, and i know nothing about them
he probably doesn't store much, what should i get?
120gb samsung evo is cheaper per gb than the 250 one, i haven't heard anything about other drives
JFC IT IS SNOWING RIGHT NOW.
Seriously. 17. of June and it is snowing. The fuck is going on here?
[QUOTE=Giraffen93;45130309]hm, my dad's laptop needs a new ssd drive, and i know nothing about them
he probably doesn't store much, what should i get?
120gb samsung evo is cheaper per gb than the 250 one, i haven't heard anything about other drives[/QUOTE]
Is he just browsing and checking email? In my experience your average user has about 60-80 gb of data. If anything more, a 120 might be tight. Check out the Crucial M500 and Seagate 600's as well. They're great drives and you can often find a 240gb on sale
[QUOTE=Levelog;45130786]Is he just browsing and checking email? In my experience your average user has about 60-80 gb of data. If anything more, a 120 might be tight. Check out the Crucial M500 and Seagate 600's as well. They're great drives and you can often find a 240gb on sale[/QUOTE]
yeah it's the average user
the evo is on sale at $180
holy shit that m500 240gb is only $146, is that really legit?
they'll ship today if i order within 25 minutes, would be neat
any other recommendations?
[QUOTE=Giraffen93;45130309]hm, my dad's laptop needs a new ssd drive, and i know nothing about them
he probably doesn't store much, what should i get?
120gb samsung evo is cheaper per gb than the 250 one, i haven't heard anything about other drives[/QUOTE]
Personally, I just buy used Intel SSDs.
[url]http://www.ebay.com/itm/Sale-Intel-SSD-320-Series-120GB-2-5-SATA-II-Solid-State-Drive-SSDSA2BW120G3H-520-/261499598910?pt=US_Internal_Hard_Disk_Drives&hash=item3ce297383e[/url]
Sure, some might caution against buying used SSDs, but they're guaranteed 100% life on Intel SSD Life toolbox and I have a bunch of them in my system. They work excellent.
I'm looking to probably cash in on a new build in August and I've just strolled across Broadwell. Is it worth waiting for the new chips to come out? I plan on getting a 4670k at this point and don't really know if it's going to offer anything better.
or what about haswell refresh?
I'd never wait more than 3 months for a newer technology. That being said, I have no idea what the intel roadmap looks like right now
[QUOTE=Hizan;45131920]I'm looking to probably cash in on a new build in August and I've just strolled across Broadwell. Is it worth waiting for the new chips to come out? I plan on getting a 4670k at this point and don't really know if it's going to offer anything better.
or what about haswell refresh?[/QUOTE]
Maybe if you have a specific chip in mind (like the 20th anniversary Pentium or similar high end chips), but going with what's available and delidding / watercooling is not going to set you back a lot.
[QUOTE=Giraffen93;45130803]yeah it's the average user
the evo is on sale at $180
holy shit that m500 240gb is only $146, is that really legit?
they'll ship today if i order within 25 minutes, would be neat
any other recommendations?[/QUOTE]
Yeah. The Crucial is a really good drive.
[QUOTE=~Kiwi~v2;45126680]I'm about to resurrect the APU Laptop that my girlfriend has. All i need to do is install linux cause no hdd.
never mind had to clear cache, odd that happened to my avatar oh well
[editline]17th June 2014[/editline]
[t]http://i.imgur.com/u5wk7HA.png[/t]
why hello there[/QUOTE]
"print screen app linux"
1.open terminal
2.type scrot
3.screenshot get
[QUOTE=Chubbs;45133106]"print screen app linux"
1.open terminal
2.type scrot
3.screenshot get[/QUOTE]
and there's a terminal window in the screenshot
anyone have an nzxt h440 case? it looks really nice with the psu cover in the bottom and the front door and such, but I currently own a source 220 case and it's cheap, it's bent flash drives and cables in the usb slots and it's just overall shit. obviously it's a budget case, I think I paid $35 for it, are nzxt any good in the higher end case market?
[QUOTE=altern;45133682]anyone have an nzxt h440 case? it looks really nice with the psu cover in the bottom and the front door and such, but I currently own a source 220 case and it's cheap, it's bent flash drives and cables in the usb slots and it's just overall shit. obviously it's a budget case, I think I paid $35 for it, are nzxt any good in the higher end case market?[/QUOTE]
I bought an Antec case off craigslist and its built like a brick shithouse
[QUOTE=~Kiwi~v2;45135520]it was a while since i had used linux :v:
[editline]18th June 2014[/editline]
[video=youtube;k5nKRcd_bm4]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k5nKRcd_bm4[/video]
Jesus shit that fucking resolution[/QUOTE]
The Titan series is extremely overrated to be honest
[QUOTE=B!N4RY;45136252]The Titan series is extremely overrated to be honest[/QUOTE]
Having a symbolic flagship as well as a card that people with too much wealth can dump cash into is useful, however.
[QUOTE=B!N4RY;45136252]The Titan series is extremely overrated to be honest[/QUOTE]
Aren't they basically a gimped 780 with more memory?
[QUOTE=B!N4RY;45136252]The Titan series is extremely overrated to be honest[/QUOTE]
They're overrated for gaming (a 780 Ti matches the Titan Black in any game), but for compute they're basically bottom-end Tesla cards. They have unlocked double-precision compute, which means they absolutely kick ass for scientific computing.
The Tesla K40 costs north of $5000. The only way it beats the Titan Black is by having even more memory (12GB instead of 6GB), and by having ECC and clustering support. And I would imagine the Tesla card gets much better support service.
Obviously, without the clustering support most people won't be using Titans on a big compute cluster. But a fair number of people need lots of compute power on their workstation, which Titan can easily do. So for people doing, say, fluid dynamics, having a Titan card or two in their workstation actually is the cheap option.
[QUOTE=MasterFen006;45136351]Aren't they basically a gimped 780 with more memory?[/QUOTE]
Not really gimped, but has more memory and more DP cores. I think the Titan Z series basically replaced the existence of the GTX 790.
[QUOTE=B!N4RY;45136252]The Titan series is extremely overrated to be honest[/QUOTE]
That and the r9 295x2 beats the shit out of the Titan Z on 4k etc.
[QUOTE=B!N4RY;45136520]Not really gimped, but has more memory and more DP cores. I think the Titan Z series basically replaced the existence of the GTX 790.[/QUOTE]
Just like the 780 sort of undercut the original Titan, I think NVidia will release a x90 GPU when they feel the need for it.
Currently, the bean counters at NV must have worked out that they will get more $ having the Titan Z as their only Dual GPU card, so hence why we haven't got another one, obviously people [I]are[/I] buying the Titan Z.
Besides, the power savings of maxwell really would lend themselves to Dual GPU, its quite clear that getting two GK110s on one PCB is a bit of a challenge.
As a guess, how much power draw would the Maxwell series (860, 870, 880) possibly use? Because they'll not only be a second gen Maxwell GPU but they'll also be a smaller architecture (I think the 750Ti was the same as Kepler IIRC).
What I'm more surprised at is that the Titan Z is actually 2 Titan Black's on the same PCB iirc. Wouldn't most dual gpu cards be 2 chips somewhere between the regular and black?
Soo, in Windows 8 makes this file called "Thumbs.db" which interferes with my batch script to check if files exists before it moves. I can't run a simple "del Thumbs.db" because it can't find it while the dir command finds it and sees that it contains files.
distance alpha is buyable
wallet no it isn't even steam sale time
[QUOTE=Levelog;45137029]What I'm more surprised at is that the Titan Z is actually 2 Titan Black's on the same PCB iirc. Wouldn't most dual gpu cards be 2 chips somewhere between the regular and black?[/QUOTE]
With Kepler you can't have anything between the Titan and Titan Black - they're only one SMX apart.
Also, Nvidia's pretty much always done top-tier GPUs in their dual-GPU cards. The 690 was two 680s, the 590 was two 580s, the 295 was mostly two 285s (they had some ROPs disabled and a smaller memory bus), the 9800 GX2 was two 9800 GTXs, and that's as far back as I'm willing to look.
They do use lower clocks, but only because of TDP issues.
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