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"It makes a sound like God Himself getting an erection. You know, a faint thrumming whirrr and a little halo?"

So, my graphics card threw a heat sink and needed to be replaced under warranty.

They didn't have any more of my cards, so they sent me a replacement.

My Nvidia GeForce GTX 295 and I are going to have a little bit of ALONE TIME together now.

HO-LEE-SHIT.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-03-20 04:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kowh.livejournal.com
Just 2 slots on the mobo, but yes, 4 slots at the back of the computer. Why not use them? Everything else is on the motherboard these days so the slots are usually empty.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-03-22 12:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lafinjack.livejournal.com
True, the last time I really paid attention to desktop PC tech everything was on PCI cards and the whole transition to everything-on-the-motherboard was just beginning.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-04-01 04:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] corruptedjasper.livejournal.com
By the time PCI was getting to be in use (later 486, mid-line pentium 1), and quite a bit before, all the basic stuff was on a single card (Multi-IO), and all you typically had in a PC was graphics, Multi-IO (2xIDE, floppy, 2xserial, parallel, sometimes proprietary mouse), and a sound card -- or if you were a gamer, you had two Voodoo 2 cards with it, of course.

When ATX hit (mid to late Pentium/P-MMX), the multi-IO card came integrated on the motherboard (My Asus TX-97E was actually an AT-format version of an ATX board, that had those 6 connectors as lots of pin headers), and you just had graphics, sound, and network.

Far cry from the old days, when even expansion from the base memory of your XT could well be on an expansion card on the 8 bit ISA bus, let alone the hard drive controller, floppy controller, serial port card, etc.etc.

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