Craton
Mostly passive, contrarian.
- Joined
- 6 February 2013
- Posts
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- 2,518
For me it's Gigabyte especially with its Dual BIOS but yeah, ASUS and even MSI are right up there. Foxconn is another.Say... who in your opinion is the most reliable MoBo maker (for a desktop running Intel CPU)?
FWIW: I'm a bit of a techie in my day gig and service the consumer and the corporate alike.
It is worth the smallish learning curve for going with Win8.1, one doesn't have to use the Modern UI as you can set the system to boot to the Desktop instead of the tiled Modern UI for those without touch screen systems.
OpenOffice or Apache OpenOffice as its now called is a great free alternative to M$ Office. It will open M$ docs/x, excel and ppt and save in these and pdf.
Thunderbird for email is cool.
AMD architecture is indeed adequate and usually cheaper as well but the residual value is poor relative to Intel based product. If you like to recycle your hardware and upgrade every few years, AMD based systems are a poor choice.Intel or AMD? Personal choice but don't dismiss AMD just because Intel is the current king of the block. So a good rule of thumb when building a system is to aim for future proofing as much as one's budget will allow.
Agreed, Win 8.1 is now my preferred destop O/S though I am not a gamer so have no concerns about backward compatibility with a game library.Win8.1 is 3 x more secure than Win7 and 10 x more secure than WinXP. Win8 didn't float my boat but Win8.1 is better and have upgraded all my systems to this platform. I do still run Win7 on the test bench and play with Mac, Mint Linux and Ubuntu from time to time.
Win8.1 does not provide the functionality of the old desktop Start menu but there's a great freeware product called Classic Shell http://www.classicshell.net/ that does. The Win8 Metro interface is primarily useful for touch screen devices.It is worth the smallish learning curve for going with Win8.1, one doesn't have to use the Modern UI as you can set the system to boot to the Desktop instead of the tiled Modern UI for those without touch screen systems.
Thanks heaps, Craton
You saved me a lot of pain/ searching/ trial and error.
As mentioned elsewhere, I've been totally put off by M$'s grab for control; therefore, I refused to port Live Mail across to the new Win8.1 machine and planned to research alternatives.
As I've been using Mozilla's Firefox for years, I am delighted to find Thunderbird. Set it up for the first of my POP accounts and received and replied to the first message within ten minutes. Brilliantly easy!
Thanks again!
Ditto for your other comments; I have made the same experience with Win 8.1;
The only reason why OpenOffice isn't for me: I have a large number of Excel macros running most of my business applications. Unfortunately, OO won't run those, and I dread rewriting many man-months of Macro-4 code that's still working perfectly in MS Office 2010.
I've had a great run with a Gigabyte S Series m/board running with an AMD processor. Having Dual BIOS is very reassuring.Say... who in your opinion is the most reliable MoBo maker (for a desktop running Intel CPU)?
I've had a great run with a Gigabyte S Series m/board running with an AMD processor. Having Dual BIOS is very reassuring.
AMD architecture is indeed adequate and usually cheaper as well but the residual value is poor relative to Intel based product. If you like to recycle your hardware and upgrade every few years, AMD based systems are a poor choice.
Agreed, Win 8.1 is now my preferred destop O/S though I am not a gamer so have no concerns about backward compatibility with a game library.
Win8.1 does not provide the functionality of the old desktop Start menu but there's a great freeware product called Classic Shell http://www.classicshell.net/ that does. The Win8 Metro interface is primarily useful for touch screen devices.
For those interested in a low cost lightweight notebook, consider also the Macbook Air. The Air's construction and battery life leaves the competitors far behind and you can, via Bootcamp, dual boot to either OS X or Win7 / 8. The retained value of the Air is also superior to the competition. I expect the next generation of Air to also include a higher resolution screen (presumably retina.)
My computer just died this morning. It won't get past the BIOS screen and can't register the keyboard. May be it "heard" me typing about new MoBo and got upset.
I will need to give it some TLC tonight...
Or I need that new MOBO sooner than I thought.
Anyone looking to buy a new laptop / pc can check out the dick smith ebay store - 20% off all their products listed up to a maximum of $500 discount per transaction.
http://deals.ebay.com.au/#sunday
use code CDISKSMITH20 on checkout.
The below laptop at $400 would make a decent browsing and basic use computer.
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Acer-Asp...4135990?pt=AU_comp_laptop&hash=item3cdfe182b6
I've just been browsing for a basic tablet and found iPad Mini and ASUS Nexus 7.
I just want for internet browsing, ABC news streaming, iView etc while travelling.
Budget pricing is desired < $300 if possible. Can these use Skype and send receive email ?
Any other options in this market segment ?
What else can these things do ?
Thanks
I've just been browsing for a basic tablet and found iPad Mini and ASUS Nexus 7.
I just want for internet browsing, ABC news streaming, iView etc while travelling.
Budget pricing is desired < $300 if possible. Can these use Skype and send receive email ?
Any other options in this market segment ?
What else can these things do ?
Thanks
G'Day Sir,
I had an iPad for a short time, but sold it on eBay.
While it is true that iPad has a web browser (Safari) and lets you access email, they don't tell you that your email connection may have limitations, depending where your existing email is being hosted. For example, if I wanted to delete an email from my Server, I had to physically log on to the email server and remove it. On my Windows PC, whether I use Live Mail or Outlook, all accounts can and have been set up so inbox and outbox mirror each other. And if I move an email from an inbox to a Local folder, it's automatically removed from the Server's Inbox as well.
It certainly hasn't been an issue with me and I have been using iPads since the iPad 2 came out. I use Apple's Mail app to access my Gmail emails and have had no problems to date. Not only does it delete or archive mails on the server, it also flags them as read, so if I switch to another device (iPhone or Mac) it will be seen there as having already been read. Even if there are limitations with the supplied Mail app (not that I am aware of any), there are alternatives from other app developers, some free or just a few bucks.
It may depend on the email protocol:
I've never used gmail, although I've been forced - reluctantly - to set op one yahoo account. Both of those run with MAPI, I believe, and that protocol could well work OK; it's the PoP accounts on my Domain Server that I had problems with.
I don't synchronise my personal data through "Clouds" of either persuasion. (Are Apple iClouds and the various M$ offerings of One.Net compatible? Not sure...) I keep everything on my own Win7 Server HDD. That created additional problems when I tried to access pictures and data files on iPad, or save snapshots taken with the iPad to my Windows-based desktop server.
I have a 16 GB Ipad 4 that connects with WIFI or 4G. The WIFI is great through my router and can remote control my A/V receiver via an app. and connect to internet. Apps for most things are free or pay, Internet access via Telstra 4G is fast. Takes video and photos. Touch n swipe screen (clear screen film wise choice), Safari search engine is basic. Plenty of other bells and whistles. I use mine to read and listen to books with Kindle and Audible apps., to play chess and checkers, to play my music through the A/V receiver loudWhat else can these things do ?
Thanks
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