Wimminz – celebrating skank ho's everywhere

September 22, 2013

Nooo Peee Ceee – Final


OK, brain dump time..

Almost invariably these mobo’s like the PX79XPRO have in addition to the Intel X79 sata ports some others, in my case Marvell, but you find Highpoint etc too, and these are always used for software raid.

  1. Never use software raid, never, ever, ever, if you want a raid set up go out and spend the bucks and buy a pukka LSI or Adaptec card.
  2. Never ever use these ports for anything except “last” when all the other sata ports are full.

Software raid is like fucking a bloated bitchy entitlement pwincess skank, hardware raid is like fucking a hot 16 year old slut with a great body who worships your cock… so the moral here is unless you have used hardware raid you don’t know shit about how raid is supposed to look and feel and perform.

When doing a new build;

  1. set up the bios
  2. with NO network cable installed (network hardware possibly wont work anyway without the drivers) install winders flavour of your choice
  3. make a folder called “Drivers” on your HD, make a new folder inside this for your drivers CD‘s, mobo, gfx, etc
  4. copy the entire contents of each cd to the appropriate folder
  5. go to control panel > device manager, look at all the hardware without drivers, work your way through it updating the drivers and telling it to browse to the “drivers” folder and search sub-folders, if it can’t find one, move on to the next.
  6. repeat #5 with the aid of another PC, Google and the hardware makers website support / download section if required.

Basically the idea here is to install the drivers, not all the bloatware and crap that using the cd in auto-run mode will install, Asus, like everyone else, are cunts for this… the reason for unplugging the network cable is you want the manufacturers drivers, not Microsoft ones via MS update.

If the drivers asks you to reboot, LET IT, don’t be tempted to save time by whacking half a dozen in before rebooting…

You need ALL the drivers sorted before going any further, or even thinking about installing software or testing your PC for speed or reliability.

On another PC, go to ninite.com and tick all the stuff you want, click get installer, save to a USB stick, put on new build. It will be a tiny file, 300k or so in size.

Then you can connect the network cable and run the ninite exec, and let the background winders update.

Prior to doing all this, at the build stage, hot air rises, so your fans should promote this, my build has a 120 mm fan low at the front of the case drawing air in, and a 120 mm fan high at the back of the case expelling the air, creating a good flow path through the case, the big noctua HSF is angled to work WITH this flow, not against it or across it.

Always “offer up” the motherboard before installing it, personally speaking I place the mobo on something soft but firm, a clean dish towel laid on a table is fine, then install the following;

  1. CPU
  2. HSF
  3. RAM

and then install that into the case… this can make some screws awkward to get at, but a tiny dab of grease or Vaseline on the end of the screwdriver will hold all those screws to the screwdriver.

Don’t cable tie and tidy your cables away until after you have checked nothing is fouling or pulling on anything else, and that the build is basically working.

Don’t force anything, even though everything is within spec, you can get situations where some shit just don’t fit, that big Noctua HSF just fouls the side on lots of cases, because those cases go outside spec and put windows or dished centres or grilles or fans and crap in the side door, stop the build and go and buy a proper fucking case.

Once your basic PC is built and sorted, you have your windows updates done, via ninite you have your a/v software (I like !Avast) in, and you have some basic utils, NOW IS THE TIME to ensure you have a good system restore point, and set up backup, ideally to a network location such as your NAS, if you don’t have a NAS box yet, use your old PC to build one.

NOW you are ready to install your software, and start with the shit that is going to stay on there longest, so, no matter how much you are itching to try GTA-V on that baby, Office comes first.

Everything installed and working, one last job…

  1. right click the disks in my computer and select properties > disk cleanup
  2. hopefully you grabbed auslogic defrag in ninite, so do a full defrag and optimise, yes, even on an SSD on a new build.
  3. do a full, in depth a/v and malware scan.

Good to go..

September 20, 2013

Noo Pee Cee… part one


Before rabbiting on about swinging dick components and suchlike, I think it is worthwhile to discuss the philosophy and thinking behind selecting them, as not everyone is the same.

The *current* main PC is now about 6 years old, an old socket 775 Core 2 Duo on A-bit X38, which over the years has has some swapsies upgrades of GFX card, disks and finally SSD.

Six months ago it quite happily played Skyrim at 1920 x 1080 on the 46″ screen with everything turned on.

Before that the main PC was an Pentium 4 @ 3 GHz.

Before that I can’t remember for sure.

Before that a 300 MHz slot 1 Pentium

So you can see I have a refresh cycle that isn’t that frequent, so each upgrade is a real one, rather than incremental.

I have always allocated the budget as being 25-30% on the mainboard, 25-30% on the CPU, and the remainder on the remainder.

I have always stayed a step or two away from the best possible available at any price components.

I have always favoured Intel CPU’s, and have always tried to buy on the tock cycle (Intel does tick tock where tick is a new architecture and tock is the revision of that) unless I was going to build at the end of a tock cycle.

I have always been *extremely* fussy about mainboards, quality and exceeding all the specs being everything, whizz bang go faster stripes and shit being nothing.

I never overclock.

I never use stock heatsinks.

I always use sealed steel cases of decent quality, nothing with windows or tons of grilles to let dust in and noise out.

I always build tidy and pay great attention to thermal rejection and internal airflow etc.

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So, start as always with the motherboard, it’s got to be an intel, so really a choice between two sockets, and for me socket 2011 is a complete no brainer, it is more future proof than 1155.

A-bit are no longer with us, and it is a main PC and not a server, (if it was a server it would be Supermicro or Intel) so pretty much to my mind that means Asus.

Asus do quite a range of X79 socket 2011, and as usual I avoid all the “gaming” models and the base model, which leaves you a choice between two versions of the PX79PRO, the standard version or for 40% more the so called workstation version, and frankly I can’t see the justification for the extra bucks.

Mobo sorted, let’s move on to CPU.

Socket 2011 I can choose between Sandy Bridge, Ivy Bridge, or Xeon, only *significant* differences between the i7 range and the xeon range is xeon’s are multi cpu capable, and have potentially more cores… up to 12 at present, double the i7 which comes in 4 or 6 core flavours at present.

Multi CPU capable is pretty pointless, but I can at some point in the future when prices have dropped put a “twice as powerful” CPU in.

So “tock” is Ivy Bridge, and the 4 core 4820k Extreme it is, why not six cores, because I am not going to install triple GFX cards, and that is the only justification for the extra cores at present… desktop software *still* isn’t multi-core optimised beyond 2 cores per process… and anyway the 4 core 4820k appears as 8 cores to the OS etc.

HSF, Noctua D14, because as HD used to say back in the seventies, anything else is less…

RAM, well thanks to going for a X79/2011 mobo we have quad channels, so let’s feed that bitch, 8 sticks of 4 gig DDR3 with a base spec of 1866, which is the fastest *standard* timing the mobo supports, and since anything more than 4 gig is invisible to a 32 bit OS it has to be a 64 bit OS.

Mass storage, always the bottleneck, SATA3 maxes out at 6gbit, and a *good* SSD can fill that, but any system is slowed down by having a slow hard disk fitted internlly anywhere, so dual 256 GB OCZ Vectors, mass storage is on the NAS box on the gigabit LAN, so I have 8 TB of storage 40 feet away on a gigabit connection, 1000 mbit / 8 = 125 mbytes / sec, but being realistic spinning mechanical disk doesn’t average much more than 60/70 mbytes sec overall, so sticking it on the end of gig-e doesn’t slow it down any, and not sticking it on the mobo direct attached doesn’t slow down the SSD’s.

PSU is modular by choice, much tidier, better airflow, and buy em by weight not output, so a 600W Corsair CXM will do the job… yes it is enough, GFX and CPU between em use a max of 350 watts, and switch mode PSU’s work better at a decent loading, same as a diesel.

Which only leaves GFX, and I was simply going to swap the very capable Radeon 6850 (itself an upgrade from an earlier Radeon 3850) from the old main PC to the new one, then I thought, meh, fuck it, ships, spoiled, ha’p’orth or tar, and grabbed a Radeon 7870, but made of point of buying an Asus to match the mobo and a Direct Cu model to cut fan noise and improve cooling etc.

The case itself is a bog standard Cooler Master Silencio 450 midi tower job.

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Hopefully, you can see the workings here, and the philosophy applied to this build was exactly the same as all the others, choose the mobo first, and carefully, it is the backbone of the system that you are going to be using in my case for the next 5 years or so, and everything else more or less chooses itself by compatibility with the mobo, and with my general ethos and rules of thumb.

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Part 2 I’ll deal with the build, OS selection (7 or 8.1) and real world use and speeds…

In my experience one of the better speed tests is to grab an archive of around 5 gig of multiple complex files, I usually use something like a rar copy of backup of the internal storage on my mobile, and pack and unpack it on various drives at various compression level settings from “store” to “max”…

On the current Core 2 Duo Q6600,  even on the internal SSD, because it is an early sata interface on the old X38 mobo, this is *usually* a disk bound operation, depending on rar settings.

More CPU intensive stuff is more complex, because you have to differentiate between the CPU bogging down, and the CPU being starved by the RAM.

I should also state at this point that one of my policies (hence the never over-clocking, always using quality components, always building tidy and watching cooling) is that the fastest PC is one that never ever ever crashes.

I don’t care how fast your immersed in liquid helium cooled overclocked to a motherfucker PC is, if, for example, it doesn’t stay up and stable long enough to finish that level in the game or convert that video or compress that archive, then it is useless to me…. my Core 2 Duo is faster…

In terms of money here we are talking £1,200 UK Pounds Sterling for the bits, which is not beer money, but if you build properly and each build gets 5 years use like mine do, then per year or per day it really isn’t very much at all.

The build I am doing is a loooooooooong way from the ultimate that could be built, I did one of these for a customer about 6 months back, a single full tower case containing a single PC running win7 pro, and the parts list came to a shade over £20k…… £3k worth of GFX cards, £14k 3.4 Tb PCI-E SSD 2.8 gb/sec read write, £2k CPU, the fucking thing was and is unbelievably fast, but the guy is editing “4k” video, so it has apparently already paid for itself.

But, the build I am doing is about as far as you can go and still be “sensibly” spending money, go any further and you find yourself in the land of diminishing returns per buck spent….

Cut back on the budget 20% and you’d lose more than 20% of the performance.

so, watch out for part deux.

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