I have this board and am quite happy with it so far. I'm currently running an i5 2500k @ 4.5GHz on it without any issues. I picked it up with the Microcenter $50 off cpu/mobo deal.
You'll definitely want to get familiar with Java first, but once you've done that I've found Mark Murphy's CommonsWare series to be particularly helpful: http://commonsware.com/. They're also updated fairly regularly to cover changes in new Android releases.
He has three titles available...
I used a Rosewill Silicon Image card PCI 4x internal, 2x external SATA 150 in an older system I put together as a Linux file server. It's been running fine for a few months now and is only $25 at Newegg
It is only SATA 150, but since it's on standard PCI that will be the first bottleneck anyway.
I'm planning to build a fileserver in the near future to keep all my data in one place. The plan is to run Linux with a software RAID5 setup. It will be accessed via 100mbps ethernet, although it would be nice to have support for gigabit if I ever go that route. I'm looking for some help in...
Just a bit of information from one of my past failures:
I had a system running on an MSI K8N Neo2 platinum that would not even post with a particular bad SATA disk connected. So, although unlikely, this is one more thing to test. However, motherboard, CPU, and RAM are still the most likely...
As far as I know, you generally need to drop to 2T when running 4 modules. There may be certain CPU/Motherboard/RAM combinations where you're able to run 1T with 4, but I don't think it is often the case. On my system I had to drop to 2T when I went up to 4 modules (K8N Neo2, 3500+ Winchester...
I have a secondary hard disk on my XP machine that is in the process of dying. In an attempt to recover some bad sectors and get enough life out of it to copy the data off, I scheduled a disk check to run on the next boot. Unfortunately, the drive seems to be too far gone to complete the disk...
I have a secondary hard disk on my XP machine that is in the process of dying. In an attempt to recover some bad sectors and get enough life out of it to copy the data off, I scheduled a disk check to run on the next boot. Unfortunately, the drive seems to be too far gone to complete the disk...
I use it, with only a couple issues:
1. Haven't found any drivers for my Canon ip1500 (so now it's connected to laptop).
2. Lack of Virtual CD mounting software. I know Daemon Tools has an x64 version out, but it fails to install on my x64 machine. Workaround: don't be lazy and actually...
I always just go straight for fdisk whenever possible. If I do need to resize partitions, it's either GNU Parted or Partition Magic, depending on filesystem.
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