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	<title>Dave&#039;s Place / Metamusing &#187; new computer</title>
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		<title>Suckegg rides again</title>
		<link>http://www.metamusing.net/weblog/2008/05/13/suckegg-rides-again/</link>
		<comments>http://www.metamusing.net/weblog/2008/05/13/suckegg-rides-again/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 May 2008 00:37:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>dlh</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Gaming]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Techno Geek]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gaming rig]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[new computer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[steam]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.metamusing.net/weblog/?p=1540</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Windows sucks, sucks so profoundly that words cannot express my loathing for it, yet it&#8217;s the standard OS for gaming and I love my gaming action, so I&#8217;m stuck with it. I took Friday off last week because windows registry cruft had finally gotten to the point where the machine was taking ~5 minutes to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Windows sucks, sucks so profoundly that words cannot express my loathing for it, yet it&#8217;s the standard OS for gaming and I love my gaming action, so I&#8217;m stuck with it. I took Friday off last week because windows registry cruft had finally gotten to the point where the machine was taking ~5 minutes to finish booting and no amount of registry scouring could cleanse it of the problem, plus the boot volume was writing a disturbing amount of error messages to the logs, making me fear for its life. It was time for the &#8216;once every couple of years&#8217; clean install of windows.</p>
<p>Since I was having to go through this, I took the opportunity to buy a new motherboard and videocard. The motherboard only supported 1066 bus speed, leaving me unable to upgrade to newer faster cpu&#8217;s including the new wolfsdale 45nm cpus. The videocard has had overheating problems since the day I bought it &#8211; it&#8217;s an ATI 1900xt and I basically dislike the thing. Performance wise it was ok, but it&#8217;s been loud and flaky due to the heating problems the whole time I&#8217;ve owned it.</p>
<p>I went cheap but effective on the motherboard side of things, with a <a title="newegg product listing for the gigabyte GA-P35-DS3L motherboard" href="http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128059">Gigabyte GA-P35-DS3L</a>. It&#8217;s lean on the features but the right price and with a solid review and reliability record. The one thing it lacks is firewire, which my last board also lacked and I survived without (though not without the occasional annoyance). It doesn&#8217;t support DDR3 RAM either, but I figure I am at least one machine away from moving to DDR3 anyway.</p>
<p>On the videocard end of things, I switched to Nvidia after at least 4-5 ATI cards in a row. ATI still produces decent cards but the 8800GT I bought is basically the value performance leader these days and ATI cards continue to run hot and loud. I didn&#8217;t want a repeat of my last ATI card is what it boiled down to. It also helped that I found a deal on an <a title="newegg listing for an ASUS nvidia 8800GT video card" href="http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814121224">ASUS for around $150</a> after a rebate.</p>
<p>The build went pretty uneventfully. The only problems I had were initially getting it to boot, which turned out to be because the cooler on my CPU has a broken peg which was causing it to not stay seated against the cpu. Boot, overheat, shutdown immediately. I figured it out pretty quickly and brute-forced a solution. Next time I upgrade the CPU I&#8217;ll toss the cooler. The other problem was me being a dummy coupled with bad labeling on my RAM. For some reason I had it in my head that I had 4GB of Patriot RAM, the the labels on the RAM are misleading, so I spent a ton of time fiddling with ram slots and BIOS memory timing settings before I had a V8 moment and realized all was already working well &#8211; I had 2GB and the machine was seeing it correctly.</p>
<p>On the OS side of things, I did a couple of things differently. For the first time I used a slipstreamed installer disc, in this case one with service pak 3. I had an initial blue screen with it but the second install went smoothly, and it was a beautiful thing to go to windows update and see only a small handful of patches instead of the usual hours worth of patches to apply. I also installed Ubuntu 8.04. I&#8217;m going to try and force myself to only use windows when I&#8217;m gaming and linux the rest of the time. We&#8217;ll see how that goes.</p>
<p>Anyway I just figured I&#8217;d write up how the build went, as I&#8217;ve done a number of times in the past. The whole thing took me a full day and then some, though portions of it were spent watching progress bars creep by, fiddling with my DS or PS3 while I waited. The current build&#8217;s name is &#8216;suckeggridesaga,&#8217; which is short for &#8216;Suck Egg Rides Again.&#8217; Every one of my machines has been named some version of suck egg, cause, well, you know &#8211; Windows really does suck eggs.</p>
<p>Oh &#8211; one other thing to mention. Steam, as in the software service from Valve, is just awesome. I have at least a dozen games installed in Steam, and to get everything up and running again all I had to do was install a new copy of the steam client, log in once, then log out, copy 70 some gigs of data into the steampowered folder, and re-login to the client, and all my games just worked. Compare that to installing a dozen games using the physical media, then installing all the patches and adding in all the mods and addon content. There&#8217;s no contest &#8211; digital distribution is totally the way to go. The same was basically true of my gametap stuff as well &#8211; I copied over the client and binaries and all my games were good to go. Physical media for PC games can bite me. Given the choice, I will go digital distribution every time.</p>
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