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Location: United StatesMember since: 14 May 2014

All Feedback (831)

everydaygadgetz (237161)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
Verified purchase
Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
autocaredepot (108975)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
Verified purchase
Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
hazedirect (22736)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past month
Verified purchase
Good buyer, prompt payment, highly recommended. :)
royalequipment (8091)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
Verified purchase
Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
holoency (597)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
Verified purchase
Great communication. A pleasure to do business with.
uneeksupply (493180)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
Verified purchase
Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
Reviews (6)
23 October 2014
The Asus P4V800D-X: One of the best x86, 32-bit motherboards out there.
This motherboard is, if not, one of the best x86, 32-bit boards that you can buy. Comes with: PCI, AGP, and PCI-Express x16 support, along with 24 ATX power pin connection, 2 SATA hookups, up to 4 GB of DDR-400 RAM, 800mhz bus size with Hyper-Threading support, Overclocking abilities, 2 IDE connections with RAID, can run the P4 extreme edition CPU's,(But that's if you can find the damn things.) and more features. The 6 channel audio is clean, and can also be very loud even at low volume. This board also has a green light, right below the SATA hookups, that turns on if the board is up and running. For an ATX board it's pretty small, that's a good thing and a bad thing. Due to it's small size, there's not as many connections as an ATX motherboard would have. So you are limited to what you can put on this board. Another problem is that the BIOS, by default, has the hard drive setting on RAID, not SATA, which can make SATA undetectable; but it can detect IDE with no problem. The internet speed can only go up to 100MB, which kinda sucks. The latches on the video card slots are useless, and they break off easily. The PCI-Express x16 slot only runs at x4 speed for some reason, making AGP x8 a little bit faster. Won't try to run this board on Windows 7 either, as that operating system is a performance pig and takes up a lot of memory just to run it; better off with XP. Most people would say that 64-bit is the way to go, but to make a high-performance, 64-bit computer would take 5 to 10 times the money to make in comparison to a high-performance 32-bit. Not only that, but 32-bit is easier to work with, and 64-bit is never utilize right, making it not as quick as people say.(Still quicker than 32-bit though.) I'm not a fan of Vista or Windows 7, and don't like how they feel like an updated, more restrictive version of XP, can't say anything about Windows 10 though. The P4V800D-X is a really good motherboard, and is fast as hell for a 32-bit. Definitely worth the money if you like 32-bit systems.
1 of 1 found this helpful
23 October 2014
Want fast and green, buy the Western Digital Caviar Green 500 GB drive.
This drive is big, fast, and kicks major ass. For what I paid, feels likes I stole it. It's also green, which will save anyone money on the utility bills. This is a SATA II hard disk drive, which makes it fast, but a little dated. But if you going from IDE to SATA, you will see a big difference in speed and everything else. If you're putting this on a older computer, like a 32-bit, you will not run at full speed, but it beats IDE anytime. This drive has 32MB cache running at 7200 RPM, which is good, but the Velociraptor is a SATA III hard disk drive with 64MB cache running at 10,000 RPM; which is also made by Western Digital. Want green, go with this drive; want fast, buy the Velociraptor along with a solid state hard drive for faster boot-up times. (Just don't be pissed off if your bills go through the roof, the Velociraptor will do that.)
23 October 2014
Logitech F310, cheap and useful.
The F310 is not best controller out there, but it's a good one with it's quirks. I wanted a controller that can I can use on the PC and the PS3, without coughing up a lot of money, and this is what I found. I going to take about the bad parts first cause the good outweigh the bad. The d-pad is half ass, better than Xbox 360's bullshit d-pad, but not great; Feels loose. The triggers are responsive, but are rather small; Wish they can be bigger. Last, the colored buttons are also responsive, but feel flat. I basically have to reach for them. Now on to the good parts. Thumbsticks are great, feel like the PS3 thumbsticks. The grip is big and ergonomic, feels like the best of the PS3 and Xbox 360 controllers. Start, back or select, and mode all work. What mode does is switch the controls from the left thumbstick to the d-pad, but there is no need to do that as the d-pad is inferior to the thumbstick anyways. There is a switch on the back that has X on the left and D on the right; X is for PC, and D is for PS3 and Xbox 360, Wii doesn't work. I have never used the button in the middle, nor got it to work. I pressed it on a PS3, and it did nothing. The cord on this is longer than the standard PS3 cord, so don't worry about pulling on the wire or repositioning your couch. It also has no rumble or dualshock feature, but there is a controller that Logitech made called the F510, almost the same as this controller, but has dual rumble features. All in all, this is a nice controller, but not one to be proud of.
4 of 4 found this helpful