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high rez computers Anonymous
screw you /hr/maphrodites. it's Dark Blade time.
>> Anonymous
I have no idea what I am looking at
>> Anonymous
>>189078
Agreed.
>> Anonymous
>>189078
Tacky case mod.
>> Anonymous
nice toaster
>> Anonymous
thats an old microwave dude you should get a new one
>> Anonymous
I thought Colored Apple stopped making those...
>> Anonymous
>>189078
read the title. it's Dark Blade time.
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
So it doubles as a Nite Lite?
Can you use it as a vaporizer/humidifier too? (Lol where's the Vicks cup?)

Rich kids make me twitchy.
>> Anonymous
>>189286
the guy spent a year working on it in his spare time at work in one of those places that has those fucking awesome CNC machines.
>> Anonymous
>>189290
Oh, ok then. That's good. Ailenware kids make me puke. Case modders who have their own jobs are at least 1 notch higher in my estimation. Did this guy do set construction for sci-fi tv, bychance, or was he just really into case modding?
>> Anonymous
Shiny cup holder?
>> Anonymous
Not really my style, but nice craftsmanship.

Pathetic to hear from the lurkers who just bitch about whatever comes their way. Maybe the reason the guy has a little money for his hobby is because he doesn't sit around bitching about "rich kids" all day and actually does stuff besides fapping.
>> Anonymous
>>189305

most guys with cool looking case do just buy them off some site and put leds or cathodes in them. however, there are some seriously badass custom jobs that is the true art of case modding. ever seen the half-life case? it was epic. i'd post pics, but i don't have any hr ones.
>> Bat Guano
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UNIVAC I (UNIVersal Automatic Computer I) the first commercial computer made in the United States (1951).
It predicted the outcome of the 1952 Presidential election within a 1% margin of error.
See? Even the UNIVAC liked Ike.
>> Bat Guano
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When vacuum tubes ruled the punch-card world of computers.
>> Bat Guano
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A Remington Rand employee and J. Presper Eckert (center) demonstrate the U.S. Census Bureau's UNIVAC for CBS reporter Walter Cronkite (right).
>> Anonymous
A lot of this is just too much overkill for me, but I really like the 4 lcd's on this. That is nice.
>> Bat Guano
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The slide rule (aka 'slipstick'), a mechanical analog computer.
This one is a Pickett model N902-T simplex trig, a typical student model. The back has instructions for use and a table of fractional powers of 2, to the 64th, and their decimal equivalents.
>> Bat Guano
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Pickett circular slide rule with two cursors. Reverse has additional scale and one cursor.
>> Bat Guano
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Pic: Punched card system of a 19th Century loom.
As early as 1725 Basile Bouchon used a perforated paper loop in a loom to establish the pattern to be reproduced on cloth, and in 1726 his co-worker Jean-Baptiste Falcon improved on his design by using perforated paper cards attached to one another for efficiency in adapting and changing the program. The Bouchon-Falcon loom was semi-automatic and required manual feed of the program.

In 1801, Joseph-Marie Jacquard developed a loom in which the pattern being woven was controlled by punched cards. The series of cards could be changed without changing the mechanical design of the loom. This was a landmark point in programmability. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_computing_hardware
>> Bat Guano
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Geo. W. Richardson's Direct Reading Slide Rule - 1909.
Found at:
http://www.sliderulemuseum.com/SRM_Home.htm
>> Anonymous
>>189392
Read>>189305
>> Anonymous
>>189262
Wow.. isn't that case kind of hot?
Even when I game, my case and CPU never rises above 40 degrees Celsius. (usually idles around 32 degrees Celsius)
>> Anonymous
>>189565
Maybe his hardware owns the shit out of yours.
>> Anonymous
>>189544
STFU SCOTT
>> Anonymous
>>189569
That's unpossible. I just built this machine last week.