Originally posted by: RossMAN
How would you say this compares to the Dell Dimension 4600 (for $100 more you get Windows XP Home, GeForce 5200 video card and 2 year warranty)?
Originally posted by: bamacre
Yeah, I see the pics and all from the link above, but reading HERE I don't see anything about an agp slot. It says it has a PCI 8MB video card.
Also didn't see 80GB hard drive for the same price.
Originally posted by: bastula
Originally posted by: RossMAN
How would you say this compares to the Dell Dimension 4600 (for $100 more you get Windows XP Home, GeForce 5200 video card and 2 year warranty)?
Yes, I would also like to know this as well. What do you guys think about purchasing the extended warranty? I would kind of lean towards it because my Dell Inspiron 8200 died a few days ago and its going to cost me about $300+ to get it fixed since it is out of the 1 year warranty period.
Is it worth it to get an extended warranty on a desktop/server? I mean it makes sense on a laptop since the parts are proprietary, but I am scratching my head on this one. I know the motherboard on this system is proprietary, but the power supply and other parts are not.
Any ideas?
Originally posted by: RossMAN
gpgofast - Why are you using the USB version of the Hauppauge WinTV instead of the internal PCI?
http://dcse.dell.com/ifr/PowerEdge/PESC420/product_overview.aspOriginally posted by: RossMAN
I wonder what the differences are between the 400SC and it's successor, the 420SC?
Originally posted by: gpgofast
Originally posted by: RossMAN
gpgofast - Why are you using the USB version of the Hauppauge WinTV instead of the internal PCI?
Got it at Compusa last week for roughly the same price as the PCI version. Main benifit for me over the PCI version is you can get EITHER the remote OR the FM tuner with the internal card. You get BOTH FM and Remote with the USB2 version AND there is no performance difference between the two versions. The USB2 performs as well as the PCI AND you can move it easily from 1 machine to another if you wish.
Many thanks for the link, Lanyap. Appears the SC420 will offer two distinct differences: integrated SATA support only (and appears, no EIDE/ATA support?) and the integration of two PCI Express slots (one x8, and one x1). Definitely a bit more along the lines of a server grade machine.Originally posted by: Lanyap
The 400SC might be a better deal than the 4600 if you already have the upgrade parts and Windows that you can load and you are a DIY'er. The 4600 is better if it already has everthing you need and because of the warranty. Some features of the 400SC (USB & AGP) are not supported (tech support that is) by Dell. I have both and like them for different reasons.
Originally posted by: paopao
I have two Kingston PC2700 sticks (256MB and 512MB); could I just put in the remaining 2 slots and hope they are working with the 2X128MB ram shipped with?
Originally posted by: ActuaryTm
Many thanks for the link, Lanyap. Appears the SC420 will offer two distinct differences: integrated SATA support (and appears, no EIDA/ATA support?) and the integration of two PCI Express slots (one x8, and one x1). Definitely a bit more along the lines of a server grade machine.
Originally posted by: paopao
would a pair of identical PC2700 256MB RAM (pulled from a HP desktop) serve me better?
My mistake. You're absolutely correct - typically, either of the general configurations I've dealt with in the past were of the EIDE/ATA variant, or towards the SCSI end. That should have read "integrated SATA support only", as in the discontinuation of EIDE/ATA support; hence the statement afterward. It certainly isn't a significant departure, but definitely one of the few things changing. Appears SATA will replace the EIDE channels on the board completely.Originally posted by: JDMnAR1
Actually, the 400SC has two SATA connectors on the mobo already.
The SC420 document I linked to is somewhat conflicting, but it appears that the MB only has one IDE connector for opticals. I assume that is correct since you still need/want optical drives for servers and they don't have any that are SATA. Also looks like there is no onboard sound.Originally posted by: ActuaryTm
My mistake. You're absolutely correct - typically, either of the general configurations I've dealt with in the past were of the EIDE/ATA variant, or towards the SCSI end. That should have read "integrated SATA support only", as in the discontinuation of EIDE/ATA support; hence the statement afterward. It certainly isn't a significant departure, but definitely one of the few things changing. Appears SATA will replace the EIDE channels on the board completely.Originally posted by: JDMnAR1
Actually, the 400SC has two SATA connectors on the mobo already.
In looking back now at the specifications, appears I failed to mentioned that the SC420 will require registered ECC memory, it appears (a bit of a guess, would have to see the specifications on the newer board. Presently, the 400SC does not require registered ECC, or ECC at all). Also gain one additional PCI slot total, though a total of two (as mentioned above) are of the PCI Express variety.
Thank you for pointing out that mistake. Now corrected.
Originally posted by: RossMAN
I wonder what the differences are between the 400SC and it's successor, the 420SC?
