So I finally got my motherboard for the build. My original order went on backorder, and they didn't come in stock until last Friday. Well, I got it this Wednesday, BUT! I can't use it because my 8800GTX is too big for the SG06 case... which I didn't find out till I put everything together. So I quickly bought a HD5770. However, that won't arrive till tomorrow... More waiting. I can't even use my old PC because I took out the harddrive and videocard. Bah, thank goodness I have a laptop.
Plus I think I caught a cold :( I hope it's not the bacon flu... This weekend sucks.
Posted by Kirby on February 28, 2010, 6:19 pm
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Building, new PC!! Waiting pretty much on that motherboard to be available. It went out of stock right as I bought everything... Probably not upgrading the videocard for now.
The case, DVD drive, and CPU I bought from a person for cheap. The H50 I bought from Bestbuy. The RAM I bought from Circuitcity.com.
Update: FINALLY bought the motherboard! Hopefully will get the thing up by next weekend.
Posted by Kirby on February 6, 2010, 4:51 pm
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Blog Posts:Real world benchmarking is an euphemism!
I was reading Bit-tech.net today and found a review of the new successor to Thermalright’s TRUE 120, Thermalright Venomous-X. They gave a bad review for it, not because it performed bad, but rather because it didn’t perform better than its competition, while costing more. Fair enough. However, littered throughout the comments are people talking about the testing setup, and how it does not accurately reflect "real world" conditions. Often bringing up HardOCP's methodologies. Some suggestions are good, but overall it just seems people want the reviewers to test their world. That IS NOT how you benchmark.
If your real world and benchmark numbers do not correlate, then your benchmarking methods are wrong. That’s correlate, not exactly the same. Benchmarks will rarely, if ever, give you numbers that match exactly what you get at home.
A benchmark should tell me statistics, indexes of how it will perform under certain conditions. For example a heatsink: how it performs under high/low wattage, high/low cfm, and maybe high/low ambient. All other factors should remain exactly the same. The case, the fan, and the high/low number should all be the same. Unless I’m missing something, I don’t believe you even need a CPU. A heating element with a CPU top, and a thermal probe in it would do just as well. For all intents and purposes, your heatsink is just moving heat away from your CPU. It doesn't care what GHz it's running at. Nor does it care what brand it is. As far as the CPU goes the only thing that it cares is how much heat the thing is throwing out, and the surface it's contacting.
As for the “real world” argument from HardOCP, I believe they made the change when their benchmarks gave them a conclusion for a videocard that should have been smooth gameplay. However from their end user point of view, it wasn’t. I understand the reason they made the change, they didn’t want to give a good review for something that isn’t. But I believe they went the wrong route in fixing this issue. Now, the video benchmarks are largely subjective. Their world is not the same as mine, and what they believe to be good enough may not be for me. Even if I were to takeout the subjective part, it’s become extremely difficult to discern from their data which is actually better and if so, is it worth the price difference. 4AA @ 40fps vs 8AA @ 30fps, while also one is 1920 but the other is 1680? That is waaaaay to many variables.
Instead of changing the whole benchmark, they should have looked for the reason why and improve upon the original benchmark. Why was the gameplay jittery even though the FPS would indicate otherwise? Could there be something else that we need to test for that we’ve never noticed in the past?
Can you imagine if SSD reviewers never looked at small non-sequential transfer rates when they noticed stuttering? What if Anandtech said “I’m going to IM a bunch and see which feels smoother”? That would be real world, but would it tell you how much better an Intel is compared to OCZ?
Maybe that wasn't possible? Well I still question the "real world" testing methods. I don't go to a review to tell me what setting I can play a certain game on a certain videocard at. I go to tell me which hardware is better, and by how much. I don't care if it doesn't reflect the real world as long as it reflects how it would compare to other hardware. That is how I purchase.
Posted by Kirby on January 25, 2010, 9:10 pm
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Apparently, Rockstar San Diego employees are working 70-80hr weeks consistantly to meet deadlines. Not only do they do it, they're expected to do it, and not working 12hr days gets you a bad performance review. Their post-production vacations are even canceled on them last minutes... Take out air conditioning and that's sweat shop conditions...
Now as bad as I feel for the wives and the employees, that letter just sounds... weird. When I read it, I hear some evil condescending mage talking with a Mufasa accent.
"Thus bringing to light, the current Rockstar management has grown a thirst for power as it enables itself to grow in the Rockstar's structure."
It actually reads kind of like what Tycho over at Penny-Arcade would write.
Maybe are they roleplaying?
Posted by Kirby on January 19, 2010, 6:45 pm
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Before I saw this video I thought Onlive wasn't going to be a direct competitor to consoles on the high end, merely a supplement for mid- to low-end gaming. After seeing this, I'm starting to believe the death of consoles, well as we know it at least.
Update: So from further reading on reviews, it seems that demonstration is kind of a best case scenario. It seems the lag is fairly notable, for people who aren't on T3 connections, and the video quality is noticeably lower than an average $500 gaming rig. But it works, and depending on their pricing, it might be a good platform to try games on.
Posted by Kirby on December 30, 2009, 5:00 pm
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I don't know why, but I've hated websites like facebook and myspace since the moment I saw them. Well, disliked facebook, but hated myspace, and don't get me started on xanga. I guess I had a better image of facebook because it was supposed to be a college blog (initially) vs. myspace which seemed to me a 12-15yr old infestation nation.
I opened an account with facebook years ago, when a friend of mine told me to. I look around, added some pictures, joined a single group, added a few other people, and promptly left within one hour. Funny thing is, I didn't even add the friend that told me to join in the first place. Or maybe I did and they didn't accept? *cries in a corner*
I didn't return to the site until about a few months ago. Someone "friend" me, who I knew from high school. The first link somehow logged me in instantly, but after I logged out I couldn't log in anymore because I had forgotten what e-mail I had used LOL It wasn't until a few days ago that I remembered it.
Apparently I had received a couple of friend add request from people I knew in high school. They're good people, if I met them in real life, I wouldn't mind hanging out with them, but we weren't awesome friends or anything. So now I'm left thinking, should I add them? All of them? Does that mean I have to post on there? What will I post?
I don't know... High school wasn't my favorite years. School in general actually... *Shakes fist at academic learning* Plus, it's much easier to rant and vent when people don't know you. After all, hiding behind the mask of anonymity, one can say anything.
PS: Merry Christmas =P
Posted by Kirby on December 26, 2009, 2:46 am
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I'm considering installing Drupal. It's supposed to be very powerful and extremely modular. Even big commercial entities use it: like Disney, Sony, BBC, etc. However, it's also supposed to be very complex.
With the last modification of the frontpage news, I think PHP-Nuke has started to show some of it's limitations. There's several things I prefered with the original News module that the Forums module simply does not do, or does very inefficiently. Posting images, html previewing, and various html codes, just to name the few that comes to mind. There's also somethings that both will not do. Automatic image resizing would be top of my list.
However, I've gotten very used to PHP-Nuke. I know exactly how to create a new theme. I know pretty much how the module and block system works. It does pretty much everything I want already. I don't exactly want everyone to be able to post html in the forums, so I guess I could add a feature that only allows administrators to post unfiltered. Image posting isn't really a big hassle, and I can add the resize option to the uploading module. More things to mod. I still haven't finished the frontpage mod lol...
Posted by Kirby on December 22, 2009, 9:48 am
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So after much work, I've gotten the frontpage to link to the forums data tables. Now all posts will be in the forums.
There's a LOT of data that was inadvertently dropped on longer posts while I was doing this. So many older forums posts and comments will get cut off in mid sentence for no reason. I'm afraid that will just be left like that. It would take a tremendous amount of time to go in and fix them. They aren't exactly important either.
There's also some minor superficial things I also need to fix on the main page, but I'm happy with how it's working at least (mostly).
If anyone notices any errors or something not working right (or at all) please tell me.
Posted by Kirby on November 27, 2009, 2:34 am
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So I was looking around for anime and came across a remake of Dragon Ball Z. It seems they are pretty much just touching up the original and making it wide screen. Well, they're technically redrawing each scene, but they are using the original anime as the template. So, it should be identical in terms of plot development. So finding this I decided to look for some fansub releases, I'm such a pie... Well I came across one and what caught my attention then wasn't the Dragon Ball episodes, but new InuYasha episodes. Apparently InuYasha is being continued with the original voice team and original animation studio. Yum!
Episode 1
Yep! That's right. It's is being simulcasted on Hulu. BTW the old episodes are on Hulu as well http://www.hulu.com/inuyasha. It comes out every Sunday, but I haven't found out what time on Sundays.
There were 56 volumes published when InuYasha was finished as a manga, 35 of those volumes were made into 167 episodes of anime. So doing the extrapolation, the remaining 21 volumes would take about 100 episodes, which is about 8 seasons, or 2 years to finish. So assuming they air every season, this will probably finish airing in September of 2011.
*Update* Apparently the videos get published on Saturday night on Hulu. I don't know if it's because I haven't seen the show in couple years or maybe they skipped forward some, but I'm kind of lost on what the hell is going on. I don't remember where these 2 new Naraku incarnations came from. The one with the paper cranes and the one with the spike shell. Meh... Maybe I'll watch the last few episodes again, when I'm not too lazy.
Posted by Kirby on October 23, 2009, 12:29 pm
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