![solar eclipse maestro on a hackintosh solar eclipse maestro on a hackintosh](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/IwvBhNuTTFc/hqdefault.jpg)
- #SOLAR ECLIPSE MAESTRO ON A HACKINTOSH 1080P#
- #SOLAR ECLIPSE MAESTRO ON A HACKINTOSH UPGRADE#
- #SOLAR ECLIPSE MAESTRO ON A HACKINTOSH FULL#
- #SOLAR ECLIPSE MAESTRO ON A HACKINTOSH PRO#
- #SOLAR ECLIPSE MAESTRO ON A HACKINTOSH PC#
![solar eclipse maestro on a hackintosh solar eclipse maestro on a hackintosh](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/byxRCz3WdxM/maxresdefault.jpg)
Processor 2: Z80 2 MHz (clone of the Microsoft SoftCard) Storage: 140 kiB 5.25" FDD (soon to add a Nishida Radio UNISDISK, which will add SD support with mass storage) Processor 2: Z80 2 MHz (part of the RAM card) Graphics: Integrated into chipset, with 1 MiB VRAMĪpple //c (got this one signed by Woz at KansasFest 2013) Graphics: Integrated VIDC20 with 2 MiB VRAMĬase: Acorn A7000 case (previous owner modded it, the motherboard was the same form factor between the two) Storage: 40 GB Samsung PATA HDD, 2x 1 TB Hitachi SATA HDDĬarrera Cobra LX (I forget this thing's name, I know it has one) Storage: 160 GB WD 2.5" SATA HDDĭell Dimension 2100 (bhtooefr-server) Storage: 160 GB Samsung PATA HDDĪcer Aspire One D250 (KiaAvella) Storage: 3x Toshiba 1 TB 7200 RPM drives in raidz1Īpple iBook G4/1.2 GHz, 12 ", Late 2004 (bhtooefr-ibook, I think) Motherboard: Derived from Quanta QSSC-295MB I think Storage: Samsung PM830-based 256 GiB SSDĭell CS24-SC (uncannyvalley, actively on the network) Graphics: GeForce "GT 650M" (yet clocked faster than a GTX 660M, stock)
#SOLAR ECLIPSE MAESTRO ON A HACKINTOSH PRO#
MacBook Pro Retina 15", Mid-2012 (bhtooefr-mbpr, actively on the network)
#SOLAR ECLIPSE MAESTRO ON A HACKINTOSH FULL#
The full list (not including handheld devices (so the eMate, being based on a handheld OS, gets left off)), minus the machines I already listed – most of this is in storage – in rough order of processor power: That’s actually not everything, just my most powerful desktop, the retrocomputer desktops that aren’t in storage or elsewhere, and my work desktop.Īlso, most of the legacy machines don’t run 24/7. People who buy low-end CPUs are the ones most likely to utilize integrated graphics, not the other way around! I will never understand Intel’s logic of including the “higher tiers” of IGPs only with expensive CPUs. One exception would be that of integrated graphics. Put a Haswell Pentium G3220, 4gigs of RAM, a reasonable SSD and you can get one hell of a machine for peanuts.
#SOLAR ECLIPSE MAESTRO ON A HACKINTOSH PC#
I’ve also assembled a desktop PC for my girlfriend past month and was simply amazed at the power you can get for 350 euros nowadays. After changing 3-4 components, it actually made more sense simply to give up on the poor thing altogether.
![solar eclipse maestro on a hackintosh solar eclipse maestro on a hackintosh](http://kpobservatory.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Lunar-Eclipse-Poster.jpg)
I had upgraded it with the afformentioned SSD and it remained a great rig for everyday use (and with a 4890 Radeon, could even stand a bit of gaming) but it finally just started giving up the ghost, one component at a time. I’ve only recently disposed of my Core 2 Duo E4400, which I’ve had for almost 7 years now. I like using an FM2 chip because it gives me the option of using Mini ITX motherboards, which in turn gives me some interesting case options down the road.ĬPU : Core i5 3470, stock speed for the time beingġ,5TB Samsung HDD (a 5400rpm left over from an older pc)ġ28GBs Crucial M4 SSD (this one ripped off the old pc, too)Ĭorsair GS700 power supply (lots of annoying coil whine, I actually regret buying Corsair, this time)
#SOLAR ECLIPSE MAESTRO ON A HACKINTOSH UPGRADE#
Sometimes I want to upgrade just for the fun of it, but I just haven’t run into any performance drop lately that warrants spending money. The only recent game that gives this system trouble is Metro: Last Light, and even then the game still looks beautiful. I even had it hooked to a 1440p monitor for a time, and even then everything still ran great. With a 65 watt CPU and a 230 watt GPU, it’s quite energy efficient.Īt 1080p, it can run almost any game (and I play a lot of them) at max graphics settings at 1080p. What I love about this system is that it runs cool and quiet. I tend to build on a budget, so there isn’t anything spectacular here, except for the SSD. I use this as my gaming PC (I have another slower system for general use).
![solar eclipse maestro on a hackintosh solar eclipse maestro on a hackintosh](https://eclipse-maps.com/Eclipse-Maps/Gallery/Pages/Annular-total_solar_eclipse_of_2013_November_3_files/HSE2013_Overview_tC1.png)
#SOLAR ECLIPSE MAESTRO ON A HACKINTOSH 1080P#
Monitor: ASUS VN279Q Black 27″ 5ms HDMI Widescreen 1080p LED PSU: Raidmax RX-630Z Smart Modular ATX Power Supply 630w Storage: Corsair Force Series GT 480GB SSD What about you guys? Do you all have state-of-the-art gaming PCs, or are you laggards like me? My main desktop is essentially an Excel, Photoshop, text editing, and web browsing workhorse, so I don’t feel much of an upgrading itch-especially with 8GB of RAM and an SSD under the hood. The thing is, I use my much faster (and pretty much always up-to-date) GPU test rig to play games. Storage: 1x Crucial C300 256GB, 2x 320GB WD Caviar SE16 (RAID1), 2x 1TB WD Caviar Green (RAID1) Here, I’ll kick things off with my own, somewhat decrepit desktop rig: Our topic question is simple: what are the specs of your desktop PC(s)? We thought we’d change that today with a new Friday night topic. We spend a lot of time reviewing and recommending parts to you guys, but we rarely get a chance to find out what parts you ultimately go with.