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legacy-dirtydog repliedMust be something wrong then, it shouldn't take that long on that hardware. Have you installed your chipset drivers? Sounds like your hard drive isn't running in the proper mode.
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legacy-supun repliedNew hardware is no guarantee that the maps will load faster.
I had a P3 1GHz, 768M, cheap IDE drives and had no problems with load times. When I upgraded to a AMD64 4000+, 1G, and a SATA II drive, my load times when through the roof using the same UT2004.ini. Waiting 2 minutes for a map to load is too long. Even the intro screen takes forever to load.
EDIT:
I just benchmark-ed the drive speeds against my old IDE and SCSI. The SATA is defiantly faster.
SATA II -SAMSUNG HD160JJ
/dev/sda:
Timing cached reads: 3688 MB in 2.00 seconds = 1842.44 MB/sec
Timing buffered disk reads: 174 MB in 3.02 seconds = 57.55 MB/sec
SCSI U160 -SEAGATE ST318452LW
/dev/sda:
Timing cached reads: 784 MB in 2.01 seconds = 390.69 MB/sec
Timing buffered disk reads: 146 MB in 3.03 seconds = 48.18 MB/sec
IDE - Maxtor 6Y120P0
/dev/hda:
Timing cached reads: 780 MB in 2.00 seconds = 389.28 MB/sec
Timing buffered disk reads: 118 MB in 3.03 seconds = 38.91 MB/sec
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legacy-rippy_dog repliedOriginally posted by lxskllr
As far as I remember sdram and ddr sdram have the same number of pins.
DDR RAM N of pins = 184
http://www.tigerdirect.ca/applicatio...4537&CatId=145
SD RAM N of pins = 168
And I checked a couple other RAM sticks from both categories just to make sure.
EDIT: Oh, btw.. *points to thread title* This is NOT a Dell debate thread, try to keep it that way okies?
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legacy-alBchu repliedyou have $120
buy this for $80
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16822144203
and get the 512MB of ram for $40...
problems solved.
p.s.
with your rig, you can't play at all details maxed minus trilinear... ok well maybe you can... but 10-25 fps isn't playing, it's stuttering.
p.p.s. less than 60 FPS = stuttering.
p.p.p.s if it's not 85 FPS solid in deathmatch, it's not good for your eyes.
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legacy-lxskllr repliedOriginally posted by rippy_dog
I've got an "AMD Athlon XP 2400+, MMX, 3Dnow, ~2.0 ghz"
That's as far as dxgiag goes :P The box is in the house somewhere but I'm not gonna go look for it, and I don't wanna download software just for this. I'm just gonna open my pc up later tonight and see how many pins the current RAM stick has. From that I can figure out what type it is.
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legacy-rippy_dog repliedI've got an "AMD Athlon XP 2400+, MMX, 3Dnow, ~2.0 ghz"
That's as far as dxgiag goes :P The box is in the house somewhere but I'm not gonna go look for it, and I don't wanna download software just for this. I'm just gonna open my pc up later tonight and see how many pins the current RAM stick has. From that I can figure out what type it is.
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legacy-lxskllr repliedOriginally posted by rochin
Exactly my point the OS is included in the cost. And yes my dell case is very quiet. I have added 1 fan for better air flow. It blows air out the back of the case from the back of my 6600. And the power supply is totally great. alot of people bash dell. I have no idea why. Sure it isnt the uber system but hell its a fair price. I think the main reason is they dont sell AMD systems. I am guessing they have a reason for that.
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legacy-rochin repliedOriginally posted by lxskllr
You're charged for the OS even if it isn't on a separate invoice, it's still factored into the cost.
You can't get a good case and psu for $30 each. I gave the minimum prices that could be found that would aproximate Dell quality.
Dells 250w power supply is second to none. I pushed mine well passed the limit with a Bfg 6800oc overclocked even further, 3 added case fans, 2 harddrives, 2 optical drives, and all pci slots filled with miscellaneous ****.
Dells case is also top notch. It's heavy and very quiet, the only drawback is airflow isn't the best, although that won't matter because you won't be overclocking it anyway. It keeps things cool enough for a stock configuration.
I paid $60 for my last case, and while prettier than Dells, with better airflow, it isn't built as well as my old Dell case. I didn't trust the psu that came with it either so I put in a $100 fortron psu because I'm now overclocking and I doubt the cheap psu that came with the case is up to the task.
My assessment stands.
Exactly my point the OS is included in the cost. And yes my dell case is very quiet. I have added 1 fan for better air flow. It blows air out the back of the case from the back of my 6600. And the power supply is totally great. alot of people bash dell. I have no idea why. Sure it isnt the uber system but hell its a fair price. I think the main reason is they dont sell AMD systems. I am guessing they have a reason for that.
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legacy-lxskllr repliedOriginally posted by vrxGz
Afaik, Dell doesn't charge for OS... so comparitively, that shouldn't be factored in.
You can get both a good case and PSU for $30 each, and if you search around for sales long and hard enough, you'll be able to get both in a combo package for $35.
I believe that puts her under-budget, again.
You're charged for the OS even if it isn't on a separate invoice, it's still factored into the cost.
You can't get a good case and psu for $30 each. I gave the minimum prices that could be found that would aproximate Dell quality.
Dells 250w power supply is second to none. I pushed mine well passed the limit with a Bfg 6800oc overclocked even further, 3 added case fans, 2 harddrives, 2 optical drives, and all pci slots filled with miscellaneous ****.
Dells case is also top notch. It's heavy and very quiet, the only drawback is airflow isn't the best, although that won't matter because you won't be overclocking it anyway. It keeps things cool enough for a stock configuration.
I paid $60 for my last case, and while prettier than Dells, with better airflow, it isn't built as well as my old Dell case. I didn't trust the psu that came with it either so I put in a $100 fortron psu because I'm now overclocking and I doubt the cheap psu that came with the case is up to the task.
My assessment stands.
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legacy-vrxGz repliedOriginally posted by lxskllr
+Case $50
+OS $90
+psu $50
$132.47 over budget, try again
You can get both a good case and PSU for $30 each, and if you search around for sales long and hard enough, you'll be able to get both in a combo package for $35.
I believe that puts her under-budget, again.
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legacy-rochin repliedOriginally posted by lxskllr
p4 3.4 ht (from Intels little known dropped and damaged line)
160 sata hd (from maxtor with chipped platters)
cdrw(doesn't actually read or write cds)
dvdrw +- dual layer (dual layer actually refers to the lineup in the case it's 2nd down from the top)
1024 mb ddr2 533( gives a multitude of errors, actually only 64k is good)
6600( really a Voodoo2, everybody knows Nvidia doesn't let Dell use their good chipsets)
I'm having trouble seeing where the **** components are. They may not be for the enthusiast, but they're all top quality parts guarantied for a year or longer. You can't overclock or modify heavily but it will run well within spec for many years.
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legacy-lxskllr repliedOriginally posted by killalot0
huray someone found a dell that's cheaper then when you make it yourself. truth is if i would buy and build a computer yourself you wouldnt use those parts to begin with. the parts a good gamer need/wants arent those i can tell ya. if you want a real gaming comp you shouldnt buy a dell. (that dell is cheaper with making garbage shouldnt even be the issue here)
p4 3.4 ht (from Intels little known dropped and damaged line)
160 sata hd (from maxtor with chipped platters)
cdrw(doesn't actually read or write cds)
dvdrw +- dual layer (dual layer actually refers to the lineup in the case it's 2nd down from the top)
1024 mb ddr2 533( gives a multitude of errors, actually only 64k is good)
6600( really a Voodoo2, everybody knows Nvidia doesn't let Dell use their good chipsets)
I'm having trouble seeing where the **** components are. They may not be for the enthusiast, but they're all top quality parts guarantied for a year or longer. You can't overclock or modify heavily but it will run well within spec for many years.
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Xenocide repliedI didn't bother reading the entire thread, but i found a better computer than the thread starter's at a garage sale for free
lol
:haha:
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legacy-killalot0 repliedhuray someone found a dell that's cheaper then when you make it yourself. truth is if i would buy and build a computer yourself you wouldnt use those parts to begin with. the parts a good gamer need/wants arent those i can tell ya. if you want a real gaming comp you shouldnt buy a dell. (that dell is cheaper with making garbage shouldnt even be the issue here)
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