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jtdemille

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  • Posts

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Profile Information

  • Gender
    Not Telling

System

  • CPU
    Intel i5-4690K
  • Motherboard
    Gigabyte GA-Z97X-UD3H-BK
  • RAM
    16GB G-Skill ARES 1866Mhz
  • GPU
    MSI Radeon HD 7750
  • Case
    Antec Eleven Hundred
  • Storage
    Western Digital Black 1TB, WD Red 3TB, ASUS Blu-ray burner
  • PSU
    Thermaltake Toughpower XT 675W
  • Display(s)
    VIZIO E241i-A1 1080p 60Hz
  • Cooling
    Corsair H80i
  • Keyboard
    Logitech wireless keyboard
  • Mouse
    Logitech wireless mouse
  • Sound
    SteelSeries Siberia Elite Prism
  • Operating System
    Windows 10 + Linux (Distro undetermined ATM)

jtdemille's Achievements

  1. I am literally running a potato. I've currently got a GTX 750 Ti, it works okay, but getting something better would be amazing.
  2. This projector seems pretty cool. It would be AMAZING to have something like that.
  3. My computer has been needing an SSD for years. The last SSD I had was a cheap-o 60GB that was fried by the computer turning off.
  4. ----EDIT---- Didn't notice 2nd page, ignore this.
  5. Maybe try calling your ISP. They could have paused your service when they noticed the DoS attack.
  6. An SSD for my brother. He has so many games and he already annoys me about slow internet. The least I could do is make his local games load fast. As large as possible that could fit in the budget (that's why no link)
  7. My key is NOT generic. AND it is not my Win7 key, it's a new one. I don't know why you got a generic
  8. AFAIK, that is very wrong. Your 7/8.1 product key is made invalid, and you get a NEW Windows 10 key. (It is made valid again if you revert) If you make big changes to hardware, you need to activate via phone. This applies to OEM, and sort of retail
  9. No, if you choose to revert after an UPGRADE, it will make your old key valid and your new one invalid
  10. DO NOTE THIS: Linux Mint isn't your only option. Other options (such as openSUSE, Fedora, Debian) might not be as user-friendly, but you should take a look at them. One thing to keep in mind: If using SUSE or Fedora, you're looking for an RPM file, not DEB, and the package manager for Fedora is "dnf" (ex: "dnf install x"), while with openSUSE the package manager is "zypper". Ubuntu is based off of Debian, and Mint is based on Ubuntu, so it should be similar between them
  11. No, this is false. AFAIK, the Windows key is converted once you upgrade. The Windows key you had is no longer valid
  12. Next thing is to put a black casing around everything.
  13. I usually just go and look at the problem unprepared, and if I cannot fix it, I bring the electronics device home and keep the customer updated on it.
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