Show us your SU Machine
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mine...
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it's strictly because I need it for business use...
or perhaps this...
naw
http://www.sketchucation.com/forums/scf/sas/CornerBar/GRAB_042.JPG
http://www.sketchucation.com/forums/scf/sas/CornerBar/ScreenShot_001.jpg
http://www.sketchucation.com/forums/scf/sas/CornerBar/GRAB_045.JPG -
Nice Kris, are you using a Matrox card or those Matrox TripleHead2Go components? Or PCIE and a PCI GPU cards combo?
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TripleHead2Go...
got it on ebay for 220
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It just to bad that its only AGP out and not dedicated DVI. Maybe I'll start a new thread on this. Interested on your input, been wanting to do this for a while and now it can be done with no fuss.
I know theirs more pics out their...keep them coming.
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not true danielson... they now have DVI Digital TripleHead2Go...
ahhh the plot thickens
http://www.matrox.com/graphics/en/gxm/products/
it says digital but it doesn't actially say DVI
ok here it is...
http://www.matrox.com/graphics/en/gxm/products/th2go/digital/home.php
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Here's my cramped corner. I got this sit-stand desk a few months ago so I thought I'd share.
My machine isn't anything terribly special, it just sits under the desk and beeps once in a while.
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@unknownuser said:
What's with the pink telephone Edson, is that for lady use only ?
images play tricks on us, james. what you thought is a phone is actually a bunch of post-its sitting under a pack of kleenexes. the real phone is to the left of my keyboard.
cheers.
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When I see your machines I feel kind of a
My is 7 years old and it is mater of a time when it will stop
What to say- 256 MB RAM -
Yes,aliend have landed at take all my ram memory.No,not kidding,I have 256 mb ram
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I think what he means Edson, is the beige phone, with a pink hue...
I don't think it too effeminate...
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@krisidious said:
I think what he means Edson, is the beige phone, with a pink hue...
I don't think it too effeminate...
oh, that one. let me tell you something curious about that phone. it is almost an antique: it is the phone i used during the time i lived in philadelphia. i brought it back with me when i returned home in the far away year of 1983!!! can you belive that?
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I like Ivica's Light Saber...is that a light Saber? And Monster's Godzilla. Movie buffs just like me.
More pics boys and girls
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So far my favorite space has been Edson's; large open room with lots of table space, and a wall of books selves. I have so many books it's not even funny. That's what I'm looking for whey I buy a home this year. Space for my computer, film gear, books, animation disk, and my flat file.
danny - I have so much movie crap (and toys) it's a bit ridiculous. I currently don't have enough wall space to hang all my posters and artwork. A garage sale is probably in my future.
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You got it jan! Commodore C-128
BTW- It had a chip that ram CPM, not DOS! I mostly stayed with the Commodore section. Talk about fast bootup! hahah@regh said:
Okay- this one precedes Sketchup by a couple of years, but it had some graphics capabilities.
Anyone recall these?@jan vdb said:
Hi RegH
I think it is a Amiga 1000 or Commodora 128
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@monsterzero said:
So far my favorite space has been Edson's; large open room with lots of table space, and a wall of books selves. I have so many books it's not even funny. That's what I'm looking for whey I buy a home this year. Space for my computer, film gear, books, animation disk, and my flat file.
justin, thanks for the compliment. just to make you envious of me, both side (party) walls are lined with shelves for books. this is a house i built for myself in 2006. the studio space faces a small back garden.
regards.
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I think my office--which is slightly Baroque by most standards--usually attracts more attention than my computer: whatever processor I happen to like or can afford stuffed into the same Lian Li tower case. There are two more-or-less obsolete notebooks computers on the other side of the table, both currently running Linux for no particularly good reason. My desk lamp is a sculpture by local artist Paul Wolcott. And, yes, that is a skull on the mantelpiece, in a Wedgwood bowl. No, I don't know whose.
[Lewis Wadsworth]
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ok Lewis...
I have to see the outside...
the crown and ceiling panels are spectacular...
the double solid 8' or 9' doors...
and most of all did anyone notice the curved window treament and curved wall at the end? oh yeah how old is that building? 150 years?
fantastic... oh yeah I forgot about the computer... was there one in there? I didnt notice..
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Thats quite a unique workspace. Its very similar to my previous employers office which was a georgian building in Edinburgh's New Town though much more toned down on the decor.
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@krisidious said:
ok Lewis...
I have to see the outside...
the crown and ceiling panels are spectacular...
the double solid 8' or 9' doors...
and most of all did anyone notice the curved window treament and curved wall at the end? oh yeah how old is that building? 150 years?
fantastic... oh yeah I forgot about the computer... was there one in there? I didnt notice..
It's under the table, just a nice aluminum tower: Win XP SP2
Intel Pentium Dual CPU 3.20GHz, 3.20GHz hyperthreading OFF, 3.25 GB RAM, Intel Desktop Board D955XBK
Nvidia GeForce 7800 GTX Video BIOS 5.70.02.11.01 256 MB PCI Express x16 Forceware 94.24
Monitor: 1680 x 1050 pixels on HP f2105
...I'm going to upgrade it to a Core Duo once Vista is less of a nuisance.
The house is a 1865 Italianate bowfront masonry townhouse with sandstone trim...in other words, a "brownstone." I'll try to find a good outside photo...it's less startling from the exterior. Whoever bought this place from the builder would have finished the interior off as they desired with off-the-shelf (by nineteenth century standards) wood and plaster cornice moldings, and they clearly had a taste for the...shall we say, lushly ornate. Miraculously the details survived (everything is chipped, dented, and in some places even scorched now, but it's still nicely decadent). The parlor was the most useless space until I decide to make it my office..it's 13' wide by 13' high by 23' long with curved narrow ends that are impossible to use for anything. I just toss my furnishings around and pile them up to against the walls to keep it from feeling too much like a viewing room at a funeral home.
In case you're wondering, the rest of the building is interesting in some areas but largely unremarkable...I rehabbed it ten years ago (my first project, actually), and I was just today trying to find the drawings...it's about time to fix up some of the mistakes I made the first time around and make the place more of a home for a family and not only for an eccentric architect.
[Lewis Wadsworth]
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