Author Topic: PC spare  (Read 2112 times)

This is a stupid question but,

Can I get any other PC for under $30? I need it for my friend to be able to work on projects with me at my house.

I don't have any money spare to spend on even a $200 crap PC.
you wanted to buy a computer

for $30

are you loving serious

This is a stupid question but,

Can I get any other PC for under $30? I need it for my friend to be able to work on projects with me at my house.

I don't have any money spare to spend on even a $200 crap PC.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B009SQQF9C/sr=8-1/qid=1400374078/ref=olp_product_details?ie=UTF8&me=&qid=1400374078&seller=&sr=8-1

Quote
Price:    $37.49 & FREE Shipping. Details
Can I get any other PC for under $30? I need it for my friend to be able to work on projects with me at my house.





Quote from: ibm
The IBM System x3200 M3 offers enhanced performance to help you take on the dynamic challenges of running IT with an emphasis on security, simplicity, efficiency and reliability - delivered at the right price in a single-socket tower server. The x3200 M3 supports the Intel Core i3 processors for exceptional performance. Because your organization must manage growing volumes of data while maintaining high performance, the x3200 M3 offers vast memory capacity and disk storage



Memory capacity refers to RAM.
'and disk storage'
please read before calling people handicaps
« Last Edit: May 17, 2014, 09:15:54 PM by ZombieDude »

This is a stupid question but,

Can I get any other PC for under $30? I need it for my friend to be able to work on projects with me at my house.

I don't have any money spare to spend on even a $200 crap PC.
I saw this computer online for 97 dollars once, and it had really stuff specs and a tiny ass hard drive
if that's what he wants then fine

'and disk storage'
please read before calling people handicaps

How about you kindly sit the forget down and learn some terminology


According to PcMag

Quote
The terms used in this industry for storage and memory are not straightforward. Computers use storage to hold programs and data until purposely changed or removed by the user. Memory is required to execute the programs and process the data. Even though memory implies "remembering," memory is a temporary workspace.

Source:  http://www.pcmag.com/encyclopedia/term/63352/storage-vs-memory

How about you kindly sit the forget down and learn some terminology
as far as i can tell the magazine is telling you that some people use the term 'memory' for storage and some people use the term 'storage' for memory.
besides, if it said 'disk storage' and its already said 'memory', what the forget else can you assume it means by 'disk storage'?


SCSI drives work fine. I've never had a problem with an IBM SCSI and an NVidia SCSI PCI Adapter.

I never said there was anything wrong with them. Just most people don't have them kicking about.