Did we get an outcome here?
would be interested in final specs:D
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This is the system spec for best energy saving:
CORE2QUAD Q6600/2.40GHz 150
Asus P5E3 Intel X38 DDR3 3GbHDD 58
2Gb(2x1GB) DDR3 1066MHz 30
Western Digital Green RE2-GP 500GB SATA 40
Earth Watts 430 Watt ATX12V v2.2 PSU 21
DVR-K06 Internal DVD/RW + Case mount 315
LGE L1919SSF 19" LCD 12
NX86T256H 0
SlimStar 820 Solargizer pack 30
SlimStar 820 Solargizer pack 30
80mm Fans 50
None - Supply USB drive 10
The column of figures is the energy saved on a component level as a percentage over the system I was going to order based purely on price/performance.
This is the actual spec I have submitted for quotes and was a bit of a compromise between energy saving, purchase price and performance.
Please bear in mind that this is not a gaming machine it's for business.
CORE2 DUO E8400 3.00GHz/ 6MB/ 1333FSB/
GA-P35C-DS3R
1x2GB DDR2 800Mhz
Gigabyte NX86T256H DDR3 256MB
Western Digital Green RE2-GP 500GB SATA
Earth Watts 430 Watt ATX12V PSU
LGE GSA-H55NBBK 20x +- Dual Layer
LGE L1919SP-SE 19" LCD
MS Basic Keyboard & Optical Wheel Mouse
Case with 50mm fans if possible
No FDD
this might be worth a read too
AnandTech: Gigabyte goes "Green" with DES software
I wonder if Gigabyte will retrofit it to older S series boards?
according to my 'boards overclocking software my core2 duo often sits around 2 ghz instead of its rated 2.66.
though I think if I wanted to go green I would have to dump the vid card that pulls over 100 watts,,,
naw,,,,,:cool:
Do I want to be green?
or do I want to run this?
Press Release
:twisted::cool::cool:
try that on your P3:p
Green is fine, sometimes.
That PC spec was for work computers but I woldn't run it for a home PC.
For a start the green costs too much to begin with and I wouldn't spend a few hundered more on a pc than I need to.
I would consider the green PSU it's not much more $$$ and save a fair bit of energy.
As for the 8800, $600-ish for a video card !!! I'd want half a PC for that !