A Truly Silent Desktop PC 289
boris writes "The first in a series of turnkey systems seem to be coming through the fence from Hush Technologies. The systems weigh in a little expensive but look to be incredible quality. This is according to the review over at HEXUS.net who have a heap of photos up of the unit as well as an article. Is this finally the step to having a true PC in every living room? HTPC here we come!" These EPIAs are everywhere now; we mentioned the M-100 the other day; less-expensive ready-built systems (in various configurations) are available from SolarPC, too.
Hard Disk Noise (Score:5, Interesting)
I know for a fact that the Via MB are good. I bought one from Mini-ITX [mini-itx.com] and have had it running solidly for about 2 months. No crashes. Nothing. Very Impressed
Rus
why not just buy a thin client? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:why not just buy a thin client? (Score:3, Informative)
Rus
Re:why not just buy a thin client? (Score:3, Informative)
FYI... most of the reviews I've seen of the C3 have said it's a bit slow for DIVX decoding, I'm not 100% sure, but be sure to look into that before you buy one for that purpose.
Seem the FPU on the C3 is really slow. Don't complain too much, though... cutting back on power-hungry and die-space-consuming stuff like kickass FPU's is how they
Re:why not just buy a thin client? (Score:2)
Re:why not just buy a thin client? (Score:2)
Want CPU power at low wattage? Get creative folks (Score:3, Insightful)
Go and buy a Tualatin Celeron ( they're up in the 1.3 or 1.4 GHz range, be sure you get one with 133MHz bus ) and clock it down to 66MHz bus. You'll stil have a machine capable of decoding DVD in software ( a Celeron 400 could do this without breaking a sweat ), and it can be fanless.
What is the world coming to that some company can pass off a
Re:why not just buy a thin client? (Score:2)
Just say NO to NCD and to thin clients (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:why not just buy a thin client? (Score:2)
I've tried it both ways... for most applications it is faster to do root on NFS than to do X. If you do have an I/O intensive app, then you can always still use X.
The real problem is local RAM. Although you can, you don't want to swap over NFS.
Re:Hard Disk Noise (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Hard Disk Noise (Score:3, Informative)
Sure there is a bit of a performance hit, but it saves a fortune on sound proofing.
silent versus quiet (Score:2)
I think you meant to say that IBM drives can be made to run quietly rather than silently, unless the amount of noise that they make is truely zero (which generally is true when the drive is spun down or turned off, but I don't think that is what you were referring to).
Re:Hard Disk Noise (Score:4, Interesting)
Cheers!
Costyn.
Re:Hard Disk Noise (Score:4, Informative)
The only thing that makes any noise at all is the disk.
Its a seagate IV, which also uses FDB bearing ('liquid bearings') I too previously thought this disk was 'amazing' and 'silent', but you'd be amazed how noisy something sounds when there is no other noise around...
Even the electrical hum from my monitor is deafening now!
Re:Hard Disk Noise (Score:3, Interesting)
Which can be a problem. I've got EPIA M series combination and I could not use Seagate's 200GB drive in the box because spinning it up took too much power causing the boot process to hang. A 80GB drive works just fine and the 200GB one boots perfectly using a standard 300W power source.
Re:Hard Disk Noise (Score:2)
Rich
Re:Hard Disk Noise (Score:2)
My old Acer extensa 368d sounds like a drinking fountain that's in cooling mode.
Re:Boot from USB Ramdisk? (Or convert?) (Score:2)
Even with the hard drive masked tightly for sound, I can hear it (especially when it wakes up from sleep... the spin-up sound is unmistakable in a truly quiet room)
Instead of an expensive flash-ram based IDE hard drive, is there a way to boot from a USB Ramdisk? A 64/128MB ramdisk outh to be enough to boot the O/S, load the d
Re:Boot from USB Ramdisk? (Or convert?) (Score:2)
Rus
Re:Boot from USB Ramdisk? (Or convert?) (Score:3, Interesting)
As far as the computer is concerned it is just another IDE device and will boot from it as normal. Even in the over-priced UK this comes in at under forty pounds. Less money and much less hassle than trying to boot from a USB drive.
Re:Boot from USB Ramdisk? (Or convert?) (Score:2)
Of course, its awfully slow if you just have the filesystems on the card, instead you need to play around with using a ramdisk for
Re:Hard Disk Noise (Score:2)
My powersupply fan is the only thing making noise on my system.
Re:Hard Disk Noise (Score:5, Funny)
How about you get rid of that noisy power supply fan, and THEN tell me how quiet your hard drive is?
{GRIN}
That's where I'm at now... got rid of all the fans, and now am down to the minor noises. But when you are being passionate, etc, after watching a movie, you sure don't want a spinning-up HD to make her sit up and say, "what's that strange noise?"... Because then you'll get distracted from the main event, and start babbling at her about thermal recalibration, spin-down, suspend-mode, etc etc... Very quickly she'll realise you are NOT a dentist/lawyer/doctor like you said, but in fact one of those programmers [yahoo.com] you swore to her that you were not, and then lord knows you'd have to be pretty damn lucky if you ever get back the t-shirt of yours she was wearing as she bolts for the door...
Re:Hard Disk Noise (Score:2)
Stick a server in one room, and access it from another room over a network with a dumb terminal or something that doesn't need a fan. Unless you're playing games this should work quite well.
get CompactFlash (Score:2)
Re:get CompactFlash (Score:2, Interesting)
From what I recall most CF are guaranteed for something like 10^6 re-writes while a hard disk for about 10^9.
This is why CF is primarily used in taskings where you are not likely to have things like temp files etc... [e.g. mp3 player, camera]
Tom
Re:Hard Disk Noise (Score:2)
Seagate Barracuda (Score:2)
Re:Hard Disk Noise (Score:3, Informative)
1. My PSU fan is silent. But I mean Silent. You don't hear it unless you stick you ear to it!!
2. I underclocked my CPU. Celeron 533@266, so no fan is needed.
3. I use a laptop HDD, which is very silent
4. I use a DVD-ROM drive that can be told not to spin over a certain speed. I use the "eject" command on linux to set it to whatever I want. 6X is totally silent.
That's it!
A bemused admin writes (Score:5, Funny)
- now I'm starting to get worried
www.tetracite.com [tetracite.com]
I guess so, heh (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I guess so, heh (Score:5, Interesting)
Not suprising with a load avg of 78.29 / 58.63 / 42.64
Not bad really, knowing what a slashdotting is like. lots of mysql threads too.
Re:I guess so, heh (Score:2)
The server is under high load please try and reload the page - it should come back
It *did* come back when I hit reload too... not bad at all, really.
Re:A bemused admin writes (Score:2)
Rus
Re:A bemused admin writes (Score:5, Funny)
please try and reload the page
9/10 but not for the review (Score:5, Interesting)
It's acknowledged that the unit would look great in a lounge or on a hi-fi rack. But nowhere is the video output from the composite and S-Video outputs mentioned.
How easy would it be to get a remote control up and running with the unit? What's the sound quality like? Can the unit drive a high end sound card with the power supply that's supplied?
These are the questions I want answered.
Re:9/10 but not for the review (Score:3, Informative)
Re:9/10 but not for the review (Score:2)
Rus
Re:9/10 but not for the review (Score:5, Informative)
Since s-video has its own connector, you can have both coaxial SP/DIF multichannel digital audio and s-video out.
Re:9/10 but not for the review (Score:2)
So, really, the composite video is nearly useless.
S
Re:9/10 but not for the review (Score:2)
If you're feeling really 'hackish' you could cut a small aperature in the front cover and place the IR eye there, so it would be part of the unit.
Cheers,
Costyn.
Re:Audio (Score:2)
I want details on singal to noise ratio - picture quality, sound quality. What does the picture look like? Does the display have a sodding black border round the edge?
How is the SPDIF output created - does it support DTS?
Just listing ports tells you nothing.
Quiet? Ok... (Score:2, Interesting)
I can't imagine apple addicts find the comparison to an iMac flattering. Any color you want provided you want silver or black.
And at those prices it seems like you're way better off rolling your own, and either stashing it with the help of longer shielded cables, or one of those wireless setups.
already (Score:4, Funny)
We are having major server problems at the moment. Something is up - we will fix this
yup. it's called a damn good slashdotting buddy. you better have some fire extinguishers ready to fix your "server problems"
I was expecting to see a behemoth, but ... (Score:2, Funny)
Most often you don't get good-looking !and! silent at the same time.
Schweeet!
Re:I was expecting to see a behemoth, but ... (Score:5, Funny)
same goes for women...
Re:I was expecting to see a behemoth, but ... (Score:2)
As far as silent systems go, you can't beat Dell (Score:5, Informative)
You can hear a faint whir from the fans if you place your ear next to the system, but otherwise they are completely silent.
Furthermore, they are extremely inexpensive. The latest deal on slickdeals.net [slickdeals.net] was a $340 Pentium 4 2.53GHz system with 256MB PC2700 RAM, a 16X DVD-ROM or a 48X CD-RW, 30GB hard drive and 32MB Rage (in an AGP slot so it's upgradable) Slickdeals went so far as to say "You cannot build your own system for less then this."
I see no reason to spend more money on an underpowered EPIA silent system when a Dell can be had for significantly cheaper.
Re:As far as silent systems go, you can't beat Del (Score:4, Insightful)
I appreciate that for most people "damn quiet" is good enough. Heck, even for me it is. But "completely silent" is an absolute, and it should be used that way.
Re:As far as silent systems go, you can't beat Del (Score:2)
Yeah, I hear that in a lot of Pink Floyd songs
if you like to gamble (Score:2)
Re:As far as silent systems go, you can't beat Del (Score:2)
Re:As far as silent systems go, you can't beat Del (Score:2)
Review (Score:5, Informative)
ntroduction
Possibly the area of greatest interest in the Computing world at present is the Small Form Factor (SFF) PC. They are perfect for a multitude of uses from a replacement for your main pc all the way to a Home Theater PC (HTPC). They have great flexibility due to their size, allowing many new designs to be considered. New to this market are Hush Technologies and they have approached the SFF with one thing in mind, total silence.
They have created a completely passively cooled MiniITX based PC which does away with most of the sources of noise in a normal system and encloses it in a beautifullooking aluminium case. Let's have a look at how good it is in the flesh.
What are the specifications of this PC?
* Via Epia-M 9000: Featuring a 933Mhz VIA C3 CPU
* 256MB of Crucial PC2100 DDR RAM
* 80Gb Seagate Barracuda Hard Disk
* TEAC DVD/CDRW Combo drive
* Morex 55w Power Supply (PSU)
* Dimensions: 37 x36 x 6cm (w,d,h)
* Case material: Aluminium
* Form Factor: MiniITX
The specifications of the system are interesting, the inclusion of the TEAC combo drive is great and the large hard disk allows plenty of storage. I'd prefer 512MB of RAM but 256MB is adequate for the majority of its intended uses. The hard disc itself is renowned for its low noise. It's not totally silent but a lot better than many fixed disks out there. It sacrifices some performance for this but is generally no slouch. Hush provides plenty of options so you can specify the right system for your needs.
I think I should start this review by explaining just what MiniITX form factor motherboards are. The form factor was originally proposed by VIA to be an ultra small form factor, smaller than the FlexATX and MicroATX form factors that were the smallest at the time. The original MiniITX boards were feature rich boards with a CPU soldered onto the board. This was cheap to produce as there was no discrete packaging cost for the integrated processor.
The specifications of the MiniITX form factor state that the board may not be bigger than 170mm x 170mm. As you can see this is tiny when compared to the normal ATX standard.
VIA also aimed to have very low heat output from the MiniITX so it would be more suitable in systems like the Hush. Some of the VIA EPIA series models are passively cooled but unfortunately these are the less powerful models. The higher powered boards require a small heatsink with a 40mm fan and these fans can often be quite noisy so Hush set out to combine the faster EPIA models with a passive cooling system.
Re:Review (Score:2)
Rus
My Athlon is loud..... (Score:2)
It's much quieter than my ceiling fan, though, which I've had on the last couple of days because it's been warm.
Whenever I need silence, everything but the iBook goes off.
The Mini-ITX machine reviews are interesting. I've been meaning to get one to put in this dead Apple IIgs I've got.
Music Studios (Score:5, Interesting)
You'd think that creatives would be the ones Apple would identify as wanting the quiet to think and contemplate.
However buying a PC feels like a real step backwards for me. I am totally socialised to using Mac's in music and now that Logic is no longer supported on the PC it is even harder to consider the switch.
The sooner PCs get silent (like the blessed iMacs) the better...
Re:Music Studios (Score:4, Informative)
The replacement power supply/fans are quite a bit quieter, and the kit is pretty easy to install.
IPX and VIA (Score:5, Interesting)
I've been watching computers waiting for a combination of:
Following this new realization that no one really needs a multi GHz processor for surfing, email, servers, and most all of their coding then the idea of a 30 Watt silent processor has some real appeal.
VIA, with thei EPIA and the Mini-ITX motherboards are poised for some real advances on the user community. While not as power independent as a notebook PC, they can be arguable as portable and certainly more convenient for the desktop cube-ville environment.
The other avenue for computer users to move in is the LSTP [ltsp.org] thin-client workstations like the jammin products. These are small devices with USB, PS/2 ports on the front. This is a new direction
Not intending to get prophetic here, but I really believe that there is need for a product which has a thin-client architecture with the goal of providing only interfaces:
These are all really excellent devices. Now if someone would please sent me the $300 necessary to buy one I would be very happy! I have a lot of noise in my office.
Re:IPX and VIA (Score:2, Interesting)
pages 3 - 6 text (Score:5, Informative)
First Impressions
First impressions count for a lot and with the Hush I wasn't disappointed, the system came in a well packaged and protected box. Opening up the box for the first time I was very surprised when I took the Hush out, it was a very solid piece of metal giving an impression of excellent build quality. The cooling fins on the sides are especially sturdy chunks of aluminium.
I've seen some of the nicest and well built cases in my time but this was something else. This PC would would look perfect next to a video or DVD player. The colour of this particular example wasn't something to write home about, but it was bearable and seeing as you get a choice of colours it's not really an issue. Overall I was very impressed by the system and had good hopes for the performance of it.
The Case
People who know me know will know I'm a case person, that I'm a sucker for a nice looking aluminium case and with the Hush I'm blown away. The pictures of the case really don't do it justice, it's the highest quality case I've yet come across and that includes all the Coolermasters. The fins at the side are very solid and they make a very entertaining noise when you run your hands across them that can get addictive. At the front it's very clean looking, nothing destroys the clean lines unless it's essential to the function. In terms of switch gear and LED's there is only the bare minimum. The power switch is a Bulgin vandal resistant number with blue lighting and those of you in the Modding community will know that these are some of the best looking switches out there. The button action requires a firm push and the switch feedback isn't the greatest but the blue glow the switch makes up for it in spades. The switch means that no power LED is required as the blue glow shows instantly that it's on. This is quite important as the case is so silent, you cant tell its on by listening. Above the switch is a tiny hole for the hard disk LED which is red in colour, I'd have preferred a blue LED but that's just me being fussy.
From the pictures you can see that the optical drive at the front is not your normal 5.25 drive, rather it's a laptop style one taking up a lot less room, thus allowing the case to be lower in profile. The drive is painted to make the drive fit in perfectly with the case and it's very good to see that Hush have thought of these little details, many manufacturers would just throw a beige or black drive in without thinking.
In terms of case access on this system, things are different to nearly all cases. The top panel is held in by 6 bolts. These aren't normal bolts but have two small holes on the head. They require a special tool to loosen them but that said, it's very easy to loosen them and Hush provides the correct tool with retail versions of the system for those needing/wanting to tinker or just look at the insides of the system.
On the bottom of the case there are four very sturdy looking feet with small circular rubber pads on the base. This means you can put the case anywhere without fear of marking the surface. If you have multiple Hush PC's you could even stack them on top of each other.
The Back of the Case
Turning the case round to look at the back you can see the ports are located in a nice ATX blanking plate, there is also a PCI slot (Note there is an option to have two), an extra 2 USB Ports and an extra 2 firewire ports. At the right of these is the input port for the Power Supply. Again, as with the rest of the case, it's very neatly laid out and well built. You can see that this is also Hush Serial Number S001 its always nice to see you have the first of something.
Power Supply
Again as with other parts of this system the Power supply isn't your normal type. In keeping with the passive cooling ethos Hush have used a Morex 55 watt power supply. This consists of an internal circuit board with no cooling and an external laptop style brick which connects to the case via a small connector and then to the plu
Re:page 7 text (Score:2, Informative)
What are the specifications of the Via Epia 90
Re:page 8 - 10 (Score:2, Informative)
Now I thought what would happen if someone wanted to use the Hush as an occasional gaming rig, how would they get on? I tried the Hush out in Quake 3 Arena 1.32 which is going to be a major test for any on-board graphics. Playing at the very lowest resolution available, the game was playable but on a large monitor or it's going to look horrific at 640x480. It was a bit slow but only when there was lots of action on the screen. I then tried out some timedemo's to give it a big test and I
Great dorm pc (Score:2, Insightful)
Excellent for homebrew PVR (Score:3, Interesting)
Cheers,
Costyn.
Re:Excellent for homebrew PVR (Score:2)
um. not sure about this, but I doubt you can just add a TV tuner card. Look how small the case is; if you tried to add pretty much ANY hardware to this, I don't think you'd be able to put the top back on.
However, I was reading up on this Hush thing a few weeks ago. If you want to add a TV card or something, I suggest looking at the Mini-ITX site [mini-itx.com] and looking into building your own machine and buying a different case.
Re:Excellent for homebrew PVR (Score:2)
Looking at the picture [hexus.net] of the back of the case, it looks as though you CAN add an extra card. (The card is seated parallel to the motherboard, not perpendicular as I had initially expected.)
Re:Excellent for homebrew PVR (Score:2)
In any case, if MPEG2 is what you want, the Hauppage WinTV PVR-250 [hauppauge.com] offers hardware MPEG2 compression. They just got basic support for it in MythTV in Linux, too. Linux support for the EPIA's onboard MPEG2 decoder is forthcoming as well (Alan Cox has one).
My only issue would be the AC97-based onboard sound. Hopefully VIA comes out
Re:Excellent for homebrew PVR (Score:2)
Cheers!
Costyn.
Re:Excellent for homebrew PVR (Score:2)
Alan Cox contributed xfree drivers for the chipset these VIA mobos use. There are hooks to use the built in MPEG2 decoder, but a kernel interface needs to be written.
MPEG decoder (Score:5, Informative)
Re:MPEG decoder (Score:2)
It's called a cube (Score:2)
Apple had some of the first truly 'silent' desktop (Score:5, Informative)
Remember the PowerMac G4 Cube [apple.com]? Aside from all of its brouhaha on price, lack of expansions, etc., it was 8 inches square and was a fanless convection cooled machine (and still is, for those of us who still use them!), and 1-2 years before any of these fanless mini-itx form factor machines.
It really is perfect as an iTunes console/DVR at the side of the TV, but priced well above using one for that purpose at the time.
As evidence of a near-identical form factor, folks have managed to cram mini-itx motherboards inside its case [mini-itx.com].
Similar to these mini-itx style boxes, the G4 Cube had internal hard drive and CD-ROM noise, but with NetBoot (or some optical FireWire repeaters and a hard drive in another room) you could run the sucker completely silent.
The only fan that was in Apple original designs was the video card fan for the ATI Radeon graphics cards (Rage 128s were fanless). Unsupported Radeon upgrades were fanless. Most upgrades these days to honk up the processor to a 1GHz+G4 single or dualie add in an 80cm fan at the base of the unit to push air through. Similarly with GF3s or other video cards put inside this case...convection alone isn't enough to cool the chips. Fans and noise will probably be the price of powerful machines in small form factors for some time to come given that minimal heat dissipation is not a primary design goal of high-end CPUs and GPUs.
Re:Apple had some of the first truly 'silent' desk (Score:2)
So lets see... that would put this whole project, what, 4-5 years behind?
Re:Apple had some of the first truly 'silent' desk (Score:2, Informative)
aedan
Heck... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Apple had some of the first truly 'silent' desk (Score:2)
Re:Apple had some of the first truly 'silent' desk (Score:5, Interesting)
As long as they only use lower end G4s or the PPC 970 clocked pretty low, they should be able to get away with convection. As long as they don't use too many newer parts, the price should be low enough to rival iMac sales.
Speed Issue (Score:4, Informative)
Another review can be found on the this [mini-itx.com] website (bear in mind that they sell the Hush though). A comparison of the M and V series boards, including comparative benchmarks for video playback, can be found here [tweaktown.com].
Personally I intend to wait until Hush produce a new model based on the M series.
Re:Speed Issue (Score:3, Insightful)
Nope, this model is based on the M board, as can by seen from the Buy Now [hushtechnologies.net] link.
Cheers,
Ian
Re:Speed Issue (Score:2)
I've had 2 silent computers for a long time (Score:2)
I'm constantly chasing noisy equipment in my surrounding, and have been doing so for years because I suffer from hyperacusis and chronic tinnitus. Those are my time-tested solutions to the problem of no
Slashdoted (Score:2, Funny)
So close (Score:2)
An easy and neat way of adding an IR receiver to the front would be a nice touch, too.
Awww, c'mon now! (Score:2)
Criminys, some manufacturers just take all the fun out of tech-work...
dead hexus (Score:3, Funny)
My Silent PC (Score:2)
I built a PC for my father. The requirement was: it has to be almost dead silent. Now, he's working on an Athlon XP 2000+ with a Radeon 8500 and you almost have to look for the power-LED to tell if the thing is running. Also, the "whole" thing (wasn't a whole PC, but almost) came at about EUR750-800; today I'd guess you could get the parts for at least EUR150 less.
All stock compopnents, a VIA KT400 mainboard, the 2000+ CPU, 512MB of PC333 DDR-Memory and the Radeon 8500 wth the stock fan. The CPU is cooled
Re:My Silent PC (Score:4, Informative)
That's got to be the noisiest component left in it then surely? Unless it's not a 60mm..
A couple of months ago I decided to silence my machine. I nipped to QuietPC.com [quietpc.com]and got a Zalman silent heatsink for my GPU, 2 quiet case fans and a SilentDrive(tm) to enclose (and silence) my hard-disk. I already had a quiet enough PSU and a Zalman Flower on my 1800+.
The result is that I can sleep in the same room as the box (my goal), but it isn't silent. When I lay my head down to rest and the house is quiet the hum from the remaining fans is very audible. However if you come into my room in the day, you can't tell its on unless you stop still and actively listen for it.
I've found that low frequency sounds are quite soporiferous. However the SilentDrive doesn't entirely mask the high pitched whine of my Maxtor 740DX (also the SilentDrive's build quality is absolute poo) and it is that sound that I hear quite clearly on those nights that I just can't quite get to sleep. Interestingly too, the resistor slowed Zalman casefans are far louder than the Enermax PSU fans. Does anyone know if I dare reduce the voltage on the case fans even more?
I have a coolermaster case, so I figured the sound gets transfered easily through the entire metal body. I was right; I made myself some rubber washers and isolated all the fans from the case and the difference in noise was very noticeable. So I figure I shouldn't have fallen in love with the sexy metallic sheen of the Coolermaster and bought the budget Dabs.com like I had originally planned ;)
All in all the Athlon idles at 38C and at 100% load it gets to about 51C, so I might deactivate the case fans and see how that goes.
Basically I was disapointed with the QuietPC products, they work ok, but they rip you off - the case fans were standard Zalmans, but on their site no brand is mentioned and all the products listed are overpriced. Also the results were not as good as I hoped.
But anyway back to the Radeon stock fan. Removing my NVidia 440MX stock fan was the most noticeable change I made! Zalman GPU passive coolers are pretty cheap. It may be worth checking them out if you want that little bit more silence for your dad's box.
A-Tech Heatsink Case (Score:2, Interesting)
Who cares about loud PC's in the living room? (Score:2)
Well, I think that focus is misguided. I have a ShuttleSV24, the first tiny PC that Shuttle made. It's great, but the power supply fan is really annoyingly loud (recent Shuttle mini-PC's apparently have made great strides in this area).
It doesn't matter though, because the system is asleep 99.99%
Caveat Emptor (Score:5, Informative)
I just built a system very similar to these, and it's a blast, but there are some problems. One is that the Morex 55W power supply seems to have some issues, particularly at boot-up, that can result in a hung system. Another is heat. The EPIA boards don't generate a lot, but they do generate some, and other components (e.g. hard disk) do too. VIA does not recommend running the M-9000 fanless; that's precisely why I bought an ME-6000, and the case does have two (very quiet) case fans, and I've still had a couple of lockups that might be attributable to heat. Other users at VIA Arena [viaarena.com] using the same mobo/case combination have reported very similar problems. Overall, there seems to be a growing feeling among the community of people who've actually bought them that systems built around these components might not be silent and stable at the same time. Pick one. :-( Maybe the next generation will be capable of running silently without these stability problems, and it's fine for a hobby project, but I couldn't really recommend this type of system for regular use.
My old Atari ST was pretty quiet (Score:2)
I remember when a high school buddy said he got a new IBM to replace his old Amiga. He turned it on for me and said, "Hear that? That's power."
You don't need the hush to run silent (Score:2, Informative)
I picked up a 120G Seagate Barracuda IV for about $140. This drive is impressively quiet. I leave it running at night, and I can't hear it at all. I've had it running 24/7 for about eight months now.
The box makes less noise than my
More info on building silent PC's... (Score:2, Informative)
What about an Avocent Cstation? (Score:2)
We are thinking of using em for some tight or dirty spots where it is inconvenie
Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA (Score:5, Funny)
In Soviet Russia...the PC silences YOU
Re:C3...? (Score:2)
Re:New feature request for Slashcode... (Score:2)
I'm not surprised this thread comes up every time, if asshats keep dissing the topic as junk.