Ah my mistake I didn't think of spreadsheets.. Widescreen would definitely benefit those.
There was a time I thought I would never need dual monitors. Then I had a job in receiving where I needed to use (literally) two different programs for the receiving process, SAP & MAXIMO. As comfortable as I am using Alt+Tab, two monitors sure made a hell of a difference there.
At home, one wide screen monitor is plenty. I don't PC game at this point, I'm only working from a docked laptop.
I suppose when/if I build another behemoth of a desktop computer, I will either have dual wide screens (if I can get edgeless) or a double wide curved screen.
from comments I've read, the curved screens are of dubios benefits on a tv, but for a monitor they make sense because the bring the edges closer to the user which can be very helpful when you get above the 24-27" range.
Though whether we'd have gotten curved monitors if not for the curved tv screens I don't know.
For a TV, I reckon it would depend on how big and how close you are to it.
This picture I found a few years ago makes me really want a similar set-up, even though I can't think of a personal need for it. With that kind of wraparound, you're practically in VR territory.
View attachment 2940
No, but someone slipped me some LSD once - not something I want to revisit. Looked Deepdream up on Wikipedia - very trippy but not sure how one would apply it for any practical use. I assume its VM is actually some sort of thin app although not Windows-based, unlike VMware ThinApps.I just installed a oracle virtual box on my ubuntu os and well found out I should of just installed the deepdream program directly. the reason I installed the Oracle VB. ;( has anyone worked with the deepdream virtual machine or the machine itself?
Build a machine for a friend, based it on the last system I made a while ago, just changed the CPU for a A10 APU, the other one had a slightly higher clocked Athlon FM2+ chip, couldn't use it because this friend did not have a graphics card that fit the machine and I was on a budget.
So it's a standard black mid tower, Asrock board, FM2+ A10 APU 3.9Ghz 4.1 turbo clock IIRC, the thing had a Wraith cooler, pretty damn good if I say so, 350 watt PSU, chose an Antec, reviews were good, good voltage regulation and very low ripple, 60Gb SSD and a 1 TB HDD, 8GB RAM for storage, card reader and DVD writer, added an extra fan so it has an intake and an exhaust fan, this all for a few cents less than 400 Euro.
This and the previous machine I build are of course low budget machines but the machines they replace were mid to high end machines from about 7-8 years back, the difference in speed is still very large.
https://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/apu-gpu-wtf-a-guide-to-amds-desktop-processor-line-up/What's the difference between an APU and CPU?
might have been bad timing (or not depending on the budget). AMD have just release a slew of new APUs.
http://www.anandtech.com/show/11819/amd-bristol-ridge-apu-retail-available
They're still Excavator core chips so besides the memory controller (DDR3 vs DDR4) they're not all that much different as far as I can see, the more interesting bits will be Raven Ridge which will be Ryzen based, I assume these will be faster and with Polaris/Vega based graphic cores.
PATA rules!
I build my FX 8350 in 2013 (crap?! that long ago already?) to replace a Phenom II 955, the 8350 is about three times faster I gather from its behaviour, yeah, new mainboard usually means reinstalling Windows... and yes, it might be a good idea to do so, it clears crud and you'll have much more recent drivers to start with.
Building a second machine is a good idea, use it to backup all imprtant files onto it and you also will have a working machine if the main 'puter decided to blow up in your face..![]()
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That's a great idea. Drop it off at a local Good Will or Salvation Army. I doubt a flipper would seek to make any money off of it and it'll likely end up going to a poor family who could really use another computer.I looked to see what the old CPU/motherboard combo might be worth on eBay, and it's less than $20.Not sure it's even worth the attempt if that's all I can get out of it. Any recommendations on what to do with it? I might have enough parts laying around that I could cobble together a complete system out of it. I know I have a case, PSU, video card, and some other junk. Could always slap that together and give it to somebody who doesn't have a computer. Any other ideas?
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