I haggle over car prices, not when the item is purchased by dipping into the "toll change" in my car.
I'm just saying that there are instances where it can be more complicated than it has to be by trying to save cash online. You have to weigh the whole "savings vs. instant gratification" thing...
Yeah...they had the wicked cool idea of putting little stickers with the exact purchase price right on the little suckers too. I didn't have to guess or anything. You know....so they got that goin for em too. ;)
Must control fist of death. I don't even know what to say. The whole thing is just...so......wrong. 2 should be 1. 3 should be 2. 5 should be 3. 1 should get a newegg gift certificate for spending so much dough on premodded crap. Someone even said it earlier.....even if it wasn't fake........THE...
You are a bigger man than me. I don't have it in me anymore to leave a machine i've just built for two hours. Once you have, in your ballyhoo excitement to have your new toy completed, not had the heatsink on secure enough and it pops half way through a prime95 burn in session.....you too may...
I had one that came with a bare bones system I bought a few years ago. It was cheeze. I just put it in a crap P3 i had laying around and played with it but it had no real purpose. The range sucked. Maybe a better unit would be cool.
if you just buy the cathode that has a switch and go buy your new rocker, just lay the contents of the two packages out on a table and , even with no wiring/elec experience, it will all just......make sense.
Should I feel like a ninnie for buying my leds at radio shack? They have a buttload and I can get any resistors, solder, etc I may need as well. I have questions....they have answers. You know how I do.
can you see which header on the mobo is the right one? most of the time they are marked with HDD or something similar. Some older and/or proprietary mobos have three pins and the +/- are the first and third pins. To match this, the case had a three pin wide connector but with only two wires. You...
you are not going to get much for that $$. And there is almost always another (MAYBE NOT BETTER) tool option. I have used band saw, dremel, hole saw, etc in place of jig saw many times.
Thermaltake fireball is nice. It comes with a switch. You could make your own which look a little snazzier but this gets it done. This way you only have to put up with the noise when you are doing something intensive. It's pretty quiet even when running too @ 21db.
You can grab it here