Jump to content

Hoempfel

Member
  • Posts

    19
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Awards

This user doesn't have any awards

About Hoempfel

  • Birthday Nov 30, 1990

Contact Methods

  • Steam
    Hoempfel
  • Origin
    Hoempfel
  • PlayStation Network
    Hoempfel
  • Xbox Live
    Hoempfel
  • Twitter
    Hoempfel

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Amsterdam, the Netherlands
  • Interests
    Tech, Games, Movies, General geeky stuff, Footbal/Soccer
  • Occupation
    Student

Hoempfel's Achievements

  1. Best thing about the One m8 is of course the build quality, hands down
  2. I have a boot 128 GB Samsung 830 SSD in my desktop for the fast boot speeds and some primary software that benefits greatly from the SSD. But since the SSD is not big enough for all my games I have a 1 TB HDD for games and secondary software that don't need to be on my SSD. Further more I have a My book Live Duo with 2 x 2 TB HDD NAS in Raid 1. I use this NAS for my backups and media files. I chose for a NAS solution because I can access it from my PC but also my Raspberry Pi running XBMC or any of my other devices like my Android phone or tablet. Twitter @hoempfel: https://twitter.com/Hoempfel/status/378545938714722305
  3. Did't knew it'd be that easy ;) Thanks everyone for the tips, I'll update once I have it set up
  4. Okay here is my situation; Right now I live at home where there is a 'private' internet connection and I have all my things set up to it. My desktop, laptop, tablet, NAS etc etc. I will be moving into a student home where there is a wifi connection that is shared with the floor. In this case that would be ten people sharing the same wifi connection. I already figured out how to use an wireless access point and a switch to convert the wifi signal into a wired connection, but is there also a way to have all my devices inside my own 'private' network? I wouldn't like the idea of everyone being able to peek into the public folder of my NAS and other stuff. Not all my devices have to be in this private network, but at least my desktop, laptop, raspberry pi (running raspbmc) and NAS should be, and that I can sync files over these devices. If anyone can help me with this, it would be greatly appreciated.
  5. depends on where you want to transport it to... It doesn't have handles on it, and I didn't take transportation into account for buying it... With all my hardware loaded up in it, I would say it's fairly heavy and with the aluminium front I wouldn't want to damage it in transport
  6. The 350D was a breeze to build in. The cable management is a dream and it looks fantastic. The build quality on the parts is really good too.
  7. I haven't seen many build with that HyperX memory, and it was a lucky find that I stumbled on it ^_^
  8. I agree with you, but this Kingston HyperX RAM was much much cheaper :P and it still looks pretty bad ass imho
  9. You ask and I deliver
  10. Nice build :D Our specs are pretty similar in our builds ^_^ One thing though, the RAM sticks are not really a match for the rest of the color scheme, but that's a minor point
  11. Up front is the stock 140mm fan, but I'm going to switch that with a Noctua fan. It will be more silent and it doesn't matter aesthetically. Thanks man :) It's really convenient
  12. Good point, thanks for the tip. I might just do that Drive bay is temporary. Gonna get a USB optical drive enclosure ;)
  13. Gawd I know right! :angry: The PCI cables are so stiff... need some more time to fix that, I'll post an update after I've done so. Haha just got this rig and I'm loving it so far :P It was really easy to make, I'm sure you can build it yourself if you have the funds ^_^
  14. Orion Dino Beatdown Dear lord, that game is seriously broken...
×