Took some time off. Wish I could say it was work related but was playing ffxiv =3. I like that everyone here was looking out for your fellow forum member. I thank everyone for your hard questions and I welcome many more if you would be willing to.
To address a few of them I offer what I found.
After pouring over the FCC website was not able to any direct laws governing system building. I did notice they charge a fee for a formal complaint. I play to design all systems using already approved FCC parts and any additional fees would be part of the cost of the build. Any additional delays would be communicated to a customer by preferred method at a preferred interval, daily if requested. Will save this one for the lawyer.
Final cost would be fully disclosed in the form of a spreadsheet so that before submitting payment customer can see for themselves and check our math. I believe so strongly in the quality of our products that once a few people have purchased their friends will see what a great investment our cases are.
As far as maxing out the ram goes Photoshop is capable of using a majority of it. There are also virtual machines which can be used to launch multiple versions of the same application. For example 4 logins of your favorite mmo.
I took a look at the Raidmax and my first thought was not enough fans. If your still intent on going the water cooling route may I suggest Dangerden.com they have great videos on the subject. You can also find helpful people on water cooling on almost any of the overclocking forums. The point of maxing out the number of fans in a case was to see how far air cooling can be pushed before water cooling becomes absolutely necessary. They make an excellent case over Frostytech.com about the lack of benefits of water cooling the processor. It will however greatly help with graphics cards. Be prepared for the delicate task of removing the heat-sink from the graphics cards. It is possible to order cards with the water blocks already installed.
I have a google story I’d be happy to share sometime. For now the website lacks meta tags and as a result has a diminished rank on google, also the majority of traffic has been from direct link typing with twitter generating a close second.
For now I am the sole owner, customer, builder, sales and marketing. We may or may not have orbital lasers targeting our competition. Please keep the questions coming and thank you for your time.
As the title states, I am sitting aside 10 grand to build myself the ultimate gaming/multitasking PC. You have free reign on everything except the power supply and the video cards. I am going with a 1250 watt Corsair PS and 2 ATI HD 6990 Crossfire video cards (Not sure which brand yet though). I do want a separate sound card, something high end that I can plug into the surround sound system I am building around my PC area. I am also looking into cooling for the cpu and video cards. Before I forget do not worry about the case, that has already been bought and one last thing I do not care if the system is AMD or Intel based though I have always leaned towards AMD when I build my own systems. I do want this one to kick some ass. Thanks in advance
I bought a 1.3k computer 2 months ago and i play wow on ultra 40 fps. just saying lol,
I bet you could build a Gaming rig with Triple 6990 cards (3 way SLI) with a top of the Line 6 core I7.And doit for under 4k and still come out with a machine that will last your 4-5 years , and still bump almost all games on ultra settings with high fps, for well under 5k.I bet you could doit with even maybe 4k.You just have to be smart about how you shop.you don't need a huge solid state drive 1st off.and I bet you could barely notice any difference in a 10k rig.give it a shot.alot of what u will spend money on is over kill and will have no different affect on your system compared to some cheaper parts.and you can over clock those 6 core I7 's to over 5 ghz and still be very stable.But 10k is a huge waste imo.with the key components your system will still be a beast in 4-5 years then if u fell like it build another 4-5 k machine
.We have ben able to do builds for under 1500 bucks by bargain shopping and being patient for deals on parts that run top benchmark scores amongst the high end machines.
After pouring over the FCC website was not able to any direct laws governing system building. I did notice they charge a fee for a formal complaint. I play to design all systems using already approved FCC parts and any additional fees would be part of the cost of the build. Any additional delays would be communicated to a customer by preferred method at a preferred interval, daily if requested. Will save this one for the lawyer.
Section 302(b) of the Communications Act of 1934
More to the point, you may be interested in filing as well, which is exactly what they could file against an operation such as yours:
Originally posted by korndog22 I bet you could build a Gaming rig with Triple 6990 cards (3 way SLI) w
That would actually be 6-way Crossfire, since each 6990 has 2 GPUs, and it wouldn't work. Crossfire only supports up to 4-way (or 2 6990's).
Now, theoretically, you could put 3 6990's in a single computer. It would be hard to cool, and may require a 20A electrical outlet, but it's possible. It's just that you can't Crossfire all of them together, one (or more to the point, two GPUs) would have to operate as a separate video devices.
There have been studies where people will pay exuberant prices for items based soley on their price tag. People will often look at items that are similiar and if they differ in price tend to purchase the higher priced item. In cases where people dont purchase the higher priced item, it takes lengthy decision making to convince themselves that a lower priced item is actually better.
in studies where they took identicle items and priced each differently, consumers purchased the higher priced item overwhelmingly.
The $10,000 computer for gaming is a really good example of this. The consumer doesnt realize that games and software can only utilize so much of a computers hardware and even when (if) the software or game catches up to utilize this hardware, something would have came out to out perform this at a fraction of the price. The 10k computer may offer things that a 2k computer does not, the catch is that the difference in cost doesnt support spending 5 times the amount of the 2k computer.
There have been studies where people will pay exuberant prices for items based soley on their price tag. People will often look at items that are similiar and if they differ in price tend to purchase the higher priced item. In cases where people dont purchase the higher priced item, it takes lengthy decision making to convince themselves that a lower priced item is actually better.
in studies where they took identicle items and priced each differently, consumers purchased the higher priced item overwhelmingly.
The $10,000 computer for gaming is a really good example of this. The consumer doesnt realize that games and software can only utilize so much of a computers hardware and even when (if) the software or game catches up to utilize this hardware, something would have came out to out perform this at a fraction of the price. The 10k computer may offer things that a 2k computer does not, the catch is that the difference in cost doesnt support spending 5 times the amount of the 2k computer.
This higher price is happing for few years now all think NVIDIA is better becouse its more expensive, but AMD makes verygood cards for last few years and alot more cheaper specially the 69xx series is alot better for less buck:)
There have been studies where people will pay exuberant prices for items based soley on their price tag. People will often look at items that are similiar and if they differ in price tend to purchase the higher priced item. In cases where people dont purchase the higher priced item, it takes lengthy decision making to convince themselves that a lower priced item is actually better.
in studies where they took identicle items and priced each differently, consumers purchased the higher priced item overwhelmingly.
The $10,000 computer for gaming is a really good example of this. The consumer doesnt realize that games and software can only utilize so much of a computers hardware and even when (if) the software or game catches up to utilize this hardware, something would have came out to out perform this at a fraction of the price. The 10k computer may offer things that a 2k computer does not, the catch is that the difference in cost doesnt support spending 5 times the amount of the 2k computer.
Studies? Hah. All I need to do is look at my wife's habits. Sigh.
The best PC would be a PC that blocks 99.9% of all dust from getting into your PC, try to get something that filters dust really well, + some good cooling like using a thermaltake case with the big fans.
Comments
Took some time off. Wish I could say it was work related but was playing ffxiv =3. I like that everyone here was looking out for your fellow forum member. I thank everyone for your hard questions and I welcome many more if you would be willing to.
To address a few of them I offer what I found.
After pouring over the FCC website was not able to any direct laws governing system building. I did notice they charge a fee for a formal complaint. I play to design all systems using already approved FCC parts and any additional fees would be part of the cost of the build. Any additional delays would be communicated to a customer by preferred method at a preferred interval, daily if requested. Will save this one for the lawyer.
Final cost would be fully disclosed in the form of a spreadsheet so that before submitting payment customer can see for themselves and check our math. I believe so strongly in the quality of our products that once a few people have purchased their friends will see what a great investment our cases are.
As far as maxing out the ram goes Photoshop is capable of using a majority of it. There are also virtual machines which can be used to launch multiple versions of the same application. For example 4 logins of your favorite mmo.
I took a look at the Raidmax and my first thought was not enough fans. If your still intent on going the water cooling route may I suggest Dangerden.com they have great videos on the subject. You can also find helpful people on water cooling on almost any of the overclocking forums. The point of maxing out the number of fans in a case was to see how far air cooling can be pushed before water cooling becomes absolutely necessary. They make an excellent case over Frostytech.com about the lack of benefits of water cooling the processor. It will however greatly help with graphics cards. Be prepared for the delicate task of removing the heat-sink from the graphics cards. It is possible to order cards with the water blocks already installed.
I have a google story I’d be happy to share sometime. For now the website lacks meta tags and as a result has a diminished rank on google, also the majority of traffic has been from direct link typing with twitter generating a close second.
For now I am the sole owner, customer, builder, sales and marketing. We may or may not have orbital lasers targeting our competition. Please keep the questions coming and thank you for your time.
Sincerely,
davidray@deepspacecase.com
I bought a 1.3k computer 2 months ago and i play wow on ultra 40 fps. just saying lol,
OP, as others are saying, you DON'T need to spend that much.
Seriously, just go with some great parts and put the rest in the bank. Otherwise you are just throwing away money trying to make things add up to 10K.
Godfred's Tomb Trailer: https://youtu.be/-nsXGddj_4w
Original Skyrim: https://www.nexusmods.com/skyrim/mods/109547
Serph toze kindly has started a walk-through. https://youtu.be/UIelCK-lldo
I bet you could build a Gaming rig with Triple 6990 cards (3 way SLI) with a top of the Line 6 core I7.And doit for under 4k and still come out with a machine that will last your 4-5 years , and still bump almost all games on ultra settings with high fps, for well under 5k.I bet you could doit with even maybe 4k.You just have to be smart about how you shop.you don't need a huge solid state drive 1st off.and I bet you could barely notice any difference in a 10k rig.give it a shot.alot of what u will spend money on is over kill and will have no different affect on your system compared to some cheaper parts.and you can over clock those 6 core I7 's to over 5 ghz and still be very stable.But 10k is a huge waste imo.with the key components your system will still be a beast in 4-5 years then if u fell like it build another 4-5 k machine
.We have ben able to do builds for under 1500 bucks by bargain shopping and being patient for deals on parts that run top benchmark scores amongst the high end machines.
http://www.engadget.com/2011/03/10/pure-luxury-takes-darwinmachines-hammerhead-pc-adds-primo-part/
thought it was funny
The following statement is false
The previous statement is true
Section 302(b) of the Communications Act of 1934
More to the point, you may be interested in filing as well, which is exactly what they could file against an operation such as yours:
http://transition.fcc.gov/eb/Orders/2006/DA-06-2497A1.html
They used all FCC-approved parts as well, but because the entire system wasn't tested, it fails to comply with Section 302(b).
Not that I am wishing you ill-will, I think what you are doing is a good idea, and I applaud it.
That would actually be 6-way Crossfire, since each 6990 has 2 GPUs, and it wouldn't work. Crossfire only supports up to 4-way (or 2 6990's).
Now, theoretically, you could put 3 6990's in a single computer. It would be hard to cool, and may require a 20A electrical outlet, but it's possible. It's just that you can't Crossfire all of them together, one (or more to the point, two GPUs) would have to operate as a separate video devices.
There have been studies where people will pay exuberant prices for items based soley on their price tag. People will often look at items that are similiar and if they differ in price tend to purchase the higher priced item. In cases where people dont purchase the higher priced item, it takes lengthy decision making to convince themselves that a lower priced item is actually better.
in studies where they took identicle items and priced each differently, consumers purchased the higher priced item overwhelmingly.
The $10,000 computer for gaming is a really good example of this. The consumer doesnt realize that games and software can only utilize so much of a computers hardware and even when (if) the software or game catches up to utilize this hardware, something would have came out to out perform this at a fraction of the price. The 10k computer may offer things that a 2k computer does not, the catch is that the difference in cost doesnt support spending 5 times the amount of the 2k computer.
No game on earth for prolly next few years need 2x 6990 its an OVERKILL lol.
Under 5k you can have super highend gaming rig.
But ok you wanne show NASA you outperform them goahead:P
This higher price is happing for few years now all think NVIDIA is better becouse its more expensive, but AMD makes verygood cards for last few years and alot more cheaper specially the 69xx series is alot better for less buck:)
Studies? Hah. All I need to do is look at my wife's habits. Sigh.
The best PC would be a PC that blocks 99.9% of all dust from getting into your PC, try to get something that filters dust really well, + some good cooling like using a thermaltake case with the big fans.