Logitech G5 Laser Mouse - Mouse - laser - wired - USB Feature
Logitech G5 Weighted USB 2.0Laser Gaming Mouse General Features: 2000 dpi laser engineAdjustable weight cartridge Full Speed USB interfaceTracking Resolution: 2000/800/400 dpi (user selectable) Image Processing: 6.4 megapixels/secondMax. Acceleration: 20g Max. Speed: 45—65 inches/second (depending on surface)USB Data Format: 16 bits/axis
Logitech G5 Laser Mouse - Mouse - laser - wired - USB Overview
The Logitech G5 Laser Mouse is the gamer's choice with a 2000 dpi laser engine for blinding speed and ultra-smooth tracking and Full Speed USB of up to 1000 reports/sec. The G5 36 gram adjustable weight cartridge gives you hundreds of variations on balance and heft - including one that's perfect for your unique gaming style. Polytetrafluoroethylene gaming feet provide the ultra-smooth glide you want in a performance-grade mouse. Logitech's SetPoint software to customize your mouse with advanced features such as game detection and "on-the-fly" adjustable sensitivity (including independent x and y axis settings).
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Standard Gaming Keyboard Mouse: Logitech G9 gaming grade laser~~&~~ Logitech G5 2-Tone 7 Buttons 1 x Wheel USB Laser 2000 dpi Mouse Mouse ...
RATE MY SUPER COMPUTER (DESKTOP PC) SPECS!! ?
Dec 18, 2008 by mycameraspeaks | Posted in Desktops
First, Thank you for coming in!!
I am planning to buy a custom built desktop and other gadgets to go with it. I would appreciate if you could take some time to comment on the following desktop PC specs. If you think of any better or best change, do let me know.
All-In-One Printer: HP Deskjet F4180 Printer, Scanner and Copier
Printer Cable: 3m High Speed USB 2.0 Printer Cable
External Hard Drive: Seagate 750GB USB 2.0 SATA2 (32MB Cache - 7200 RPM)
Webcam: Corded Logitech QuickCam Pro 9000 Carl Zeiss Optics and Autofocus
VOIP Headset: Corded Logitech ClearChat Comfort Headset for VOIP Chatting, Listening Music and Playing Computer Games
You have 4 Gb of Ram but the problem is that Windows Vista Home Premium 32-Bit is going to read only 3Gb of ram, so 1 gb is becoming useless. So if I were you I would go with 64-bit operating system and not 32-bit
Pushok * | Dec 18, 2008
the only thing i would get better of is the graphics card i would go with 2 graphics cards but thats just me other then that i would say bad ass christmas pressy lol 9.7 overall
rpclyon08 | Dec 18, 2008
Welll, it sounds like you have been to the computer store and picked up one of everything off the shelf...LOL. Nice computer by the way!
Here are my recommendations - unless you need a V92 modem because you cannot get DSL or Cable Modem, what are you doing buying this outdated, has-been PCI card? The only thing I can think of is that you want to scan and fax stuff, which is ok, if you have a land phone over your cable or DSL provider. That is the only thing that makes sense to me. So if you have cable or DSL, and you don't care about faxing, I would drop that one out of your system and save the whole big $10 bill for it.
If it were me, I would get TWO internal hard disks and just drop the external disk - why have an external unless you intend to take it with you somewhere, likeon the road? Just buy two serial ATA hd's and make both of them internal.
I would go with a Radeon HD 4850 or in your case, a Radeon HD 4870 card which is better than the one you are getting and has newer technology behind it.
I would IMMEDIATELY dump AVG antivirus, it is a lousy antivirus program and instead, get either Kaspersky, Check Point Zone Alarm Security Suite or NOD32. AVG earned a lousy rating just this month in a Maximum PC Magazine security suite shoot-out comparing 10 antivirus programs. AVG came in at a lousy 5 on a 10 scale.
If you are a student you are eligible for the ACADEMIC COPY of Microsoft Office 2007...I know, I have bought two copies, since I recently took a couple of Microsoft Certification Courses from a school, and it cost me about $85 on sale. You get the entire Office Suite with the ACADEMIC VERSION, including MS Access 2007, which the STUDENT and HOME editions do NOT have. Make sure that whomever is quoting this computer gives you the ORIGINAL DISK AND THE KEY for all software. DO NOT let them just load this in as an OEM dump and give you NO disk and NO key.
Other than those things, I am thinking you have racked up about a $1200 computer here...mind telling me what the bottom line is on this one? Just curious. - email me, if you don't mind.
Jim | Dec 18, 2008
Is my new bought, made computer a good performer?
Aug 12, 2008 by triniman | Posted in Desktops
OS-
Windows XP SP3
Hard Drive-
Western Digital Caviar SE 320GB 7200 RPM 8MB Cache
RAM-
OCZ Gold 8GB (4 x 2GB) 240-Pin DDR2 SDRAM DDR2 800
Motherboard-
MSI P45 Diamond LGA 775 Intel P45 ATX Intel Motherboard
Monitor-
HP w2207h Black 22" 5ms HDMI Widescreen LCD Monitor
Processor-
Intel Core2 Quad Q9400 2.66GHz LGA 775 95W Quad-Core Processor
Power Supply-
Thermaltake Toughpower W0132RU 1000W ATX12V / EPS12V
Sound Card-
HT OMEGA CLARO 7.1 Channels PCI Interface
Speakers-
Creative I-Trigue 2300 18 Watts 2.0 Speaker
Graphics Cards-
XFX GeForce 9800 GX2 1GB 512-bit GDDR3 PCI Express 2.0 x16 HDCP Ready SLI Supported(x3 SLI)
Power Protection-
TRIPP LITE BCPRO1050 1050VA 705 Watts BC Personal
Printer-
HP Color LaserJet 3600N Personal
Scanner-
Canon CanoScan LIDE90 USB Interface Flatbed Scanner
CD/DVD Drive-
LITE-ON 4X Blu-ray DVD-ROM 12X DVD-ROM 32X CD-ROM SATA
Computer Case-
LIAN LI PC-V1100BPlus II Black Aluminum ATX
Fans-
MASSCOOL FD08025B1M3/4 Case Fan
ARCTIC COOLING Freezer 7 Pro 92mm CPU Cooler
Keyboard and Mouse-
Kensington Black Wired Keyboard
Logitech G5 2-Tone Laser Mouse
Saitek J62 P2500 Rumble Force Pad
Its 64 bit XP
That is a great machine that you have got there... but I would also suggest you if you dont already have it... that move out of FANS for cooling the system and get LIQUID COOLING....
Your machine deserves that.... other then that its a great machine...
The geforce video card with Nvidia 9800 gx2 chipset is also great... but I would have gone with Nvidia GTX280... but that is just me...
But do think about getting a liquid cooling system... because I assure you wont regret it... it is well worth money investing in... since you already have this good of a computer... It will have it running a lot cooler then even with all the fans you have now.. and plus in future if you decide to overclock your videocard/CPU/RAM you will still have the temperature controlled with the liquid cooling cuz it wont get that hot...
Other then that Enjoy your MACHINE.,..
Mandeep | Aug 12, 2008
Looks awesome. XP probably won't read all your RAM if it's 32 bit but forward compatability is good.
the_surrealestate_agent | Aug 12, 2008
Weird setup. One hand has all the bells and whistles (and the overkill with the quad, since very few programs even will use dual procs, and by the time they do there will be 32nm procs available at 8Ghz speed); and on the other it's second generation, like the 320GB *8*MB cache HD.
So on the frontend it's blazing fast with SLI x3 even for video, but slows to a crawl where the work really is done, on the hard drive.
On a high end system, the HD should either be RAID-0 (for the fastest speed); RAID-5 (for redundancy); RAID-5/0 (for redundancy and more speed); RAID-10 (for complex setups, speed and redundancy). Single drives are out, as they limit I/O thoroughput. Games and more still have to be served from the hard drive, and if it can't keep up (or gets congested because of a smaller I/O pipe) the system is going to lag -- yep, even with high end rigs lagging is possible when the hardware isn't in sync (you'll see it in games with v-sync off in fast computers, for example).
Have you done some benchmarking? Futuremark has some very good tools to test the whole system bottlenecks (it still too graphics friendly); HDTech has a good HD performance tester, to measure the thoroughput, plus charts to rank your rig to averages and "the best".
So get 2 or 3 drives with 16MB caches at least (unless you prefer Raptors; or SCSI 15k, which is still the fastest non-exotic drive available [short of fiber, which is horribly expensive]). Then RAID them to your flavor. Personally, I prefer a hardware RAID controller, but software RAID can do in a pinch.