General Gaming Article |
- Cooler Master Intros QuickFire XT Mechanical Gaming Keyboard
- Build a PC: Recommended Builds (July 2013)
- Who Wants Some Free Stuff?
- Ask the Doctor
- Newegg Daily Deals: Logtiech G19 Black Gaming Keyboard, Corsair 430W PSU, and More!
- Thousands to Join "Restore the Fourth" Protests Against NSA Spying
- Gigabyte Aims to Ship Record 20 Million Motherboards in 2013
- Newegg Launches a Daily Deals Site for Impulse Shoppers
- Neatgear's R6100 Router Boasts 802.11ac Connectivity for a Benjamin
Cooler Master Intros QuickFire XT Mechanical Gaming Keyboard Posted: 03 Jul 2013 04:21 PM PDT Available now in Blue and Red Cherry MX Switch modelsGaming peripheral maker Cooler Master on Tuesday announced the addition of yet another product to its mechanical keyboard lineup. The all new Cooler Master Storm QuickFire XT is for those whose passion for numpads is just as intense as their love of gaming. In its press release, the company described QuickFire XT as having "the same extremely solid construction that won the hearts of QuickFire Rapid owners," and the similarities in their designs are quite obvious. In fact, the QuickFire XT is, as the company put it, the numpad-less QuickFire Rapid's sibling, albeit a sibling with the full complement of 104 keys. Like the Rapid, the QuickFire XT also uses Cherry MX switches and laser-marked keycaps (comes with extra keycaps and key puller).
The QuickFire XT is available now from the Cooler Master store in Blue and Red Cherry MX Switch models for $89.99 and $99.99, respectively. Although mentioned in the press release, Green and Brown Cherry MX Switch options aren't available yet. Follow Pulkit on Google+ |
Build a PC: Recommended Builds (July 2013) Posted: 03 Jul 2013 02:23 PM PDT Baseline, performance, and ultra PC builds!What time is it? It's time to build a PC with our Blueprints! This month, we've built three rigs at three approximate price points: Baseline, Performance, and Ultra. Baseline gets you a powerful, no-compromises rig, suitable for gaming and content creation at 1080p. Performance gets you more, and the Ultra is for those who want a killer PC. These rigs are lab-tested and editor-approved. Feedback is, of course, welcome. Tell us what you think!
Don't confuse "baseline" with "underpowered," as the Intel Core i5-4670K hauls ass, and the rest of this rig is plenty powerful. This month, we upgraded the video card from an AMD Radeon HD 7870 GHz Edition to the Radeon HD 7950, since the 7950 also has more horsepower and an additional gigabyte of video RAM, which is handy for high-res textures and long draw distances. To get there, we downgraded the PSU and SSD, going from a 720W Cooler Master to a 500W Corsair, and a Samsung 840 Pro to the SanDisk Extreme. The new SSD is plenty snappy, and 500 watts is sufficient for a system with a single GPU. We're also retaining last month's transition to the OEM version of Windows 8. Most of the parts previously selected for this tier still deliver great performance for the price, so not much has changed this month. Corsair had a deal on its HX850 power supply, though, so we took advantage of that. It has superb build quality and a long seven-year warranty. Also this month, the 256GB Samsung 840 Pro was about the same price as the 240GB Neutron GTX we had in here previously, so we swapped them since the 840 Pro is a bit faster. As with the Baseline system, we're sticking to Windows 8. These are the OEM versions, which means that the activation code is tied to the motherboard. The trade-off is that it costs much less than the "full" version.
After seeing two Nvidia GeForce GTX 780s work their SLI magic in our test rig, we were compelled to put them in the Ultra system, which had a single GTX Titan in it last month. The GTX 780 is basically a gaming-oriented version of the Titan, with two SMX units and double-precision compute removed. When overclocked, a GTX 780's gaming performance comes within spitting distance of its big brother, so two of them are truly a dream come true. This motherboard and power supply will also handle a third 780 without breaking a sweat. The BEFX power supply is one of the best in its class and comes from Seasonic. Since it's fully modular, you can replace all the cables if they get damaged or if you want to make cosmetic changes, and it makes for less clutter too. Its fan also uses a "hybrid mode" setting, where it doesn't even spin up when the system is idle, ensuring quiet operation when you're just surfing around or watching videos. The overall build quality is reportedly a bit better than the Cooler Master Silent Pro unit it replaces. |
Posted: 03 Jul 2013 01:43 PM PDT We're giving away a Crucial M500 120GB solid state drive and a three-year license for iolo's System Mechanic softwareWe know there are two things that our readers love; Pure PC Power, and free stuff. Since we've always got your PC power needs covered, we figured you might need some gear, and we love running contests, so here's our newest one. In this contest one winner will receive both a Crucial M500 120GB SSD and a three-year license to iolo's System Mechanic software. You can check out the review of Crucial M500 SSD here on the Maximum PC website. Though we haven't reviewed System Mechanic software, we've heard good things about it. Here are the official blurbs about the contest prizes: Crucial M500: http://www.crucial.com/store/partspecs.aspx?imodule=CT120M500SSD1 System Mechanic: http://www.iolo.com/company/pressrelease.aspx?pressreleaseid=cebfe631-c315-4aac-8a86-2629b29da1c3 How to EnterSend an email to contests@maximumpc.com with the subject "Crucial and iolo Contest" and in the body your answer to this question – When discussing flash memory, what does MLC stand for? Along with the answer, email us your complete name, age, adress and zip/postal code. One prize winner with the correct answer in alignment with reporting by Maximum PC will be randomly selected by July 05, 2013. This contest is available to readers in the USA (excluding Arizona) and Canada (excluding Quebec). This giveaway has rules, so please read them on the next page. |
Posted: 03 Jul 2013 01:33 PM PDT The doctor tackles Recovering a Laptop RAID, PSU Questions, Wireless Uploads, and moreRecovering Data from a Laptop RAIDI have an MSI GT683 laptop with two 500GB hard drives in RAID 0. My motherboard failed under warranty. The laptop is not worth repairing, so they are sending me a new laptop. The new one is an MSI GT783R with two 750GB hard drives in RAID 0. The techs did send back the drives from the old laptop in the hopes that I could recover data from the RAID. Could someone explain how to remove the data from two hard drives in RAID 0 and reinstall on my new laptop? I have a stand-alone hard drive dock used to clone hard drives and also an adapter used to transfer info from one hard drive to another. Unfortunately, neither device works in my situation. How do I get the data from my old drives? - Dan Tiefenbach The Doctor Responds: It's difficult to restore data from a RAID without using the same chipset/RAID controller as was used to create it. However, given how similar the new laptop is to the old one, you may be in luck. Since you were able to remove the drives from your old laptop, you ought to be able to do the same on your new laptop. And since both are Sandy Bridge notebooks in the same general product line from the same vendor and both use the same HM67 chipset, your old RAID should be visible on the new computer once you have enabled it in the BIOS. Replace the 750GB drives in the new laptop with the 500GB drives from the old laptop. Hopefully, the RAID will be recognized and you can boot from the drives. If so, copy the data you need to an external drive. Then remove the 500GB drives and replace the 750GB drives in the same configuration they were in when you got the new laptop, and move the recovered data to the new laptop. If you're a bit skittish about swapping the drives, you can try file recovery software such as Quetek's File Scavenger available from Quetek.com. We've long been fans of File Scavenger as a recovery tool. Set your default Library locations to a storage drive to keep space-hogging files off of your SSD No More Room on the SSDNine months ago, I put together a sweet little system. Almost every article I read recommended a 120GB boot SSD paired with a bigger mechanical-storage drive. This may have been practical then, as SSDs were notoriously expensive at the time of this build. However, it is nine months later and my SSD is nearly full! I have 6.89GB free! I wish I had bought a bigger boot drive, even with the exorbitant prices of the time. You are still recommending these small drives for your budget and intermediate builds. Let me give my advice to anyone considering building a computer with these miniscule drives: don't! I don't even have any games on mine. I've picked up bits and pieces of articles about how to conserve space on boot drives, but apparently not enough. Could you go through step-by-step all the ways you know of to make Windows send the proper data to the storage drive so I could at least put one game on my boot drive? Could you also recommend a good program that could clean the junk off of my boot drive? - Paul Lamb The Doctor Responds: You're right, SSDs are now cheap enough that you should be getting at least a 250GB model as your boot drive, to avoid the kind of trouble you're having now. Let's see if we can't free up some space on your 120GB drive now, though. First, make sure the default save locations for each of your media Libraries points to a folder on your storage drive. By default, those libraries save to your SSD. That's bad. Go to Explorer and right-click your Documents library and select Properties. Under Library Locations click Add, go to your storage drive, create a new folder called Documents, and then select Include Location. Back under Library Locations, select the folder you just created and hit "Set save location." Do this for each Library—music, documents, video, pictures, and any other libraries you've created. Be sure to move your public libraries, too, if you plan on sharing music on your network. Now, move any documents from their original locations on your boot drive (say, My Music) to the new location on your storage drive. Make sure they've copied over correctly and then delete them from your C:\ drive. This should free up a lot of space. You should also go back to each Library's Properties menu and remove the old C:\ drive locations. You should also make a Downloads folder on your storage drive and make sure your browsers download to that folder rather than the default, which is in My Documents. Finally, download WinDir-Stat (free, www.windirstat.info). Run it on your C:\ drive and it'll give you a visual representation of exactly what's taking up space. Move any lingering documents to the storage drive. Don't just go deleting large files willy-nilly, though. Three Questions about Power SuppliesI recently upgraded my HP Blackbird 002 with a P9X79 Deluxe with a Core i7-3820, a Samsung 840 Pro with a Barracuda 3TB for archive, and 16GB of Corsair Dominator Platinum 1866. I'm still using the water cooler that came with the original system, and have two XFX Radeon HD 6950s in CrossFire. Every once in a while, the computer will trip a breaker forcing me to switch the computer onto one circuit and have my peripherals plugged into another. My questions are these: Would swapping out the 3-year-old power supply for, say, a modern Corsair modular PSU be more energy efficient? Is 1,100W overkill for my system as listed above? Would I be better served with an 860W PSU? Last, if I swap out PSUs, can I use the existing modular power-cabling or is that just a horribly bad idea? - Matthew Bryington The Doctor Responds: Yes, a modern power supply should be more efficient than the behemoth that came with the Blackbird. You mentioned Corsair and an 860W PSU, so you've clearly been doing some research. Corsair's AX860 PSU is 80 Plus Platinum certified, so it's very energy efficient. It's also fully modular and it should be more than enough power for your system. To answer your third question, no, you can't use the same modular power cabling. It won't fit and even if it did, it's a bad idea. Take the opportunity to do a fresh rewire. And don't worry—even though new PSUs don't have that 10-pin power connector for the SATA backplane, HP in its wisdom enabled the backplane to be powered by one 4-pin Molex connector or two SATA power connectors instead. That backplane will work just fine for your current drives, even the SSD, if you get a 3.5-inch-to-2.5-inch adapter that fits (IcyDock makes one). The backplane is just a straight pass-through and you will still get 6Gb/s SATA speeds out of a 6Gb/s SATA drive as long as it's plugged from the backplane into a 6Gb/s SATA port. You didn't ask, but the Doc thought he'd mention it anyway, since he had to figure this out recently. |
Newegg Daily Deals: Logtiech G19 Black Gaming Keyboard, Corsair 430W PSU, and More! Posted: 03 Jul 2013 10:22 AM PDT Top Deal: You wouldn't bring a knife to a grenade fight, so why hop on the battlefield wielding a run-of-the-mill keyboard? You deserve better! Have a look at today's top deal for a Logitech G19 Black 104 Normal Keys USB Wired Standard Gaming Keyboard for $120 with free shipping (normally $200 - use coupon code EMCNXV35). It has a color LCD game panel, 12 fully programmable G-keys, and custom color backlighting. Other Deals: Corsair CX430M 430W 80 PLUS BRONZE Certified Modular Active PFC Power Supply for $50 with free shipping (normally $70; additional $20 mail-in rebate) Sapphire Radeon HD 7870 GHz Edition 2GB 256-bit GDDR5 Video Card for $190 with free shipping (normally $240 - use coupon code:[EMCXNXV23]) Toshiba 3TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache Internal Hard Drive for $115 with free shipping (normally $140 - use coupon code:[EMCXNXV22]) Corsair Vengeance 16GB (2 x 8G) 204-Pin DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800) Laptop Memory for $119 with free shipping (normally $140 - use coupon code:[EMCXNXV25]) |
Thousands to Join "Restore the Fourth" Protests Against NSA Spying Posted: 03 Jul 2013 10:05 AM PDT Will NSA hear the rally cry?While many people in the U.S. are planning barbecues with family and friends, an evening of fireworks, and other ways to celebrate Independence Day, thousands of others are planning to join nationwide rallies in protest against recently revealed spying activities conducted by the National Security Agency (NSA). Dubbed "Restore the Fourth," the effort was put together by Reddit and has drawn support from a number of other online entities, including Mozilla. "Reddit didn't take well to all the information about the news leak as far as NSA goes," says Michael Reed, Restore the Fourth's director of communications, according to Time. "So we started organizing there, and the next thing you know, we're organizing in over 100 cities and it's only getting bigger." Indeed it is. Rallies will take place all over the U.S. in cities both big and small. And in addition to Mozilla, the campaign has drawn support from WordPress, 4chan, Fark, and Cheezburger.com, along with certain celebrities. "How long do we expect rational people to accept using terrorism to justify and excuse endless executive and state power?," actor John Cusack said during a press conference announcing the protests, according to PCWorld. "Why are so many in our government, our press, our intellectual class afraid of an informed public?" Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden leaked information about the NSA's surveillance program and the Internet companies it's been working with. He now faces a number of charges, including theft of government property. Restore the Fourth is, in part, an effort to draw the spotlight away from Snowden and back on the issue at hand. |
Gigabyte Aims to Ship Record 20 Million Motherboards in 2013 Posted: 03 Jul 2013 09:40 AM PDT DIY sector is still going strongIs the PC market in a slump? That's all we keep hearing about from market research firms, but over here on the do-it-yourself (DIY) side, there's plenty to be excited about. We have new Haswell processors to play with (or Richland if you're rolling with AMD), and AMD and Nvidia continue to try and one-up each other with faster graphics cards and beefier bundles. Now is a great time to be in the market for a new build, and Gigabyte expects to cash in. According to Digitimes, Gigabyte shipped 4.8 million motherboards in the second quarter of 2013, bumping its total to 9.9 million units for the first half of the year. Gigabyte expects to ship even more in the second half, and if it does, the company will set a personal record of 20 million motherboards shipped in a single year. Not too shabby given all the gloom and doom in the headlines. Though Gigabyte's motherboard business is strong, the company has also resumed production of it own brand notebooks and tablets, of which it hopes to ship 230,000 units combined in 2013. In addition, Gigabyte dabbles in smartphone devices, though they're mainly sold overseas. Follow Paul on Google+, Twitter, and Facebook
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Newegg Launches a Daily Deals Site for Impulse Shoppers Posted: 03 Jul 2013 09:13 AM PDT An online sanctuary for spendthriftsIt's getting easier by the day to blow through a paycheck, isn't it? Sure, gas prices are high from coast-to-coast, but if you're an impulse shopper with a Internet connection, you have about as much chance as Bill Paxton did in Aliens. That's because daily deal sites are all over the web. It's become such a 'thing' that even Newegg is getting in on the action with its NeweggFlash portal. Through NeweggFlash, Newegg offers daily bargains in a wide variety of categories, everything from technology and consumer electronics to housewares and skincare. Designed to sell out of inventory, you'll find deals for up to 75 percent off the regular selling price. Deals are refreshed each day at 9 AM PST. "We're thrilled to launch NeweggFlash and join in on the flash sale phenomenon," said Soren Mills, chief marketing officer at Newegg. "Newegg is proud of the deep relationships we've built with our vendor partners over the years. It's these relationships that allow us to offer very compelling deals on NeweggFlash and give us an edge over competing flash sale sites." Deals are for members only, though joining is free. If you already have a Newegg account, simply sign in and you're good to go. To kick off the grand opening of its deals site, Newegg is giving away a number of items, culminating in a grand price award of an Asus Automobili Lamborghini VX7SX-DH72 15.6-inch Core i7 2670QM laptop with Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit. You have until August 31 to enter. |
Neatgear's R6100 Router Boasts 802.11ac Connectivity for a Benjamin Posted: 03 Jul 2013 08:36 AM PDT A cheap upgrade to 802.11ac territoryNow might not be the best time to upgrade your home networking equipment to 802.11ac since a final standard has yet to be ratified, but if you're gung-ho to make the leap anyway, there are plenty of companies that will oblige. Count Netgear among them. Not only is Netgear offering an upgrade path to 802.11ac, it's new R6100 dual-band router is $100, a relatively cheap price tag considering it's a next-generation router. The R6100 offers combined Wi-Fi speeds of up to 1,200Mbps (300Mbps at 2.4GHz 802.11n + 866Mbps at 5GHz 802.11ac), though that's a bit misleading since you can't actually create a super connection out of the two. Even still, 867Mbps is pretty fast, provided your networking equipment is compatible with 802.11ac. "In the last couple of years, there's been an explosion in the number of Wi-Fi devices connected to the home network. If it doesn't already, your house will soon have smart TVs, gaming consoles, Blu-ray players, and media servers in addition to smartphones, desktops, laptops and tablets," said Sandeep Harpalani, Netgear's director of product marketing for core networking products. "To future-proof your network and keep it humming along at peak performance, you're going to need to upgrade to AC wireless. The newest smartphones and Macs already have 802.11ac inside. It enables you to be more productive at home and to experience the world of entertainment available through the Internet in a seamless fashion." Other features include DLNA support, guest network access, built-in parental controls, advanced QoS, ReadyShare USB access, and a few other odds and ends. For wired connections, be advised it's equipped with four 10/100 LAN ports rather than 10/100/1000. |
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