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rysliv (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
wonder if it can run 100% load on cpu for more than 24 hours straight and in a well cooled custom chassis that can hole 48 of these and with its oun built in network switch 48 port this is a 8u chassis
rysliv (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
10 to 5 watts
crounimich (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
and what about the power consumption ?
djmoon2069 (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
Cool kit!Great for moms & grandmoms!But waaaaaay too expensive for the power.And the power brick is as big as the case!At least it could be built-in (somehow),or the 2 units could be attachable/stackable,so the only thing outside is the power cord.Love this stuff, any way!SEND ME ONE!Erm... please?!?
rysliv (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
i want one
procesor43 (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
bo takich gotowych komputerów (chyba) nikt nie robi
zardinuk (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
CMOS is the main piece that is vulnerable to static discharge. Typically you won't "fry" the motherboard, you'll just screw up the CMOS.
nicholsml (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
I'm not trying to insult you directly man, I'm just stating that if you go into most modern computer repair shops you'll see that unless you are in an unusually high static environment you're not gonna see anyone wearing anti-static wrist bands, we just tap the edge of the work bench to make sure we don't have any built up static and then we dig in....
Gotskillz88 (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
I've never had any problems messing with computers while lacking an antistatic wristband. I've fixed up a large variety of computers by simply touching a piece of metal for a couple seconds before touching a motherboard. of course, I work on a surface thats static resistant, like a table...i dunno, maybe im just lucky?
paddaw (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
please turn the f*****n music off :E |