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While not computer hardware per-se, I've used a [[CanonEOS300D]] for time-lapse photography projects. |
Contents
Keyboards
I have a keyboard collection. Some of the pieces:
- Sun Type 6 USB
- Happy Hacking Keyboard Lite USB 2
- Happy Hacking Keyboard Professional 2
- Topre Realforce 87U, 55g-even weighted
- ABS M1 Mechanical
Computers
Laptops
horus: Lenovo ThinkPad X61t
Custom components:
- Intel X25-M G2 160 GB Solid State Disk
- 4 GiB RAM
set: IBM ThinkPad T42p
Custom components:
- 1.5 GiB RAM
gundar: Sony VAIO Z505LSK
Workstations
apophis
Hardware:
- Dual-core, 1.6 GHz CPU (Intel Atom 330 CPU)
NVIDIA ION-based mainboard (ZOTAC ION
- 4 GiB RAM
- 250 GB disk space (2x Seagate 250 GB disks) in Linux software RAID10
sun-ra
Hardware:
- 2x AMD Opteron 285 (2.6 GHz)
- 8 GiB RAM
- 1.3 TB hard disk space
- Western Digital Raptor 10,000 RPM 150 GB disk
- 5x Samsung HD103UJ 1 TB disks, Linux software RAID5
- nVidia/ASUS 9800 GTX+ Dual DVI graphics card
- 2x Dell 2405 FP 24" LCDs
And other things I can't remember.
Servers
anubis
machina
Hardware components:
- Intel Core 2 Quad 9400S (Low-power), 2.66 GHz CPU
- 8 GiB RAM
Physical disk configuration in tower, from top to bottom:
- Hitachi 250 GB
- WD 250 GB
- Hitachi 250 GB
- WD 200 GB
- Hitachi 250 GB
- WD 200 GB
- WD 320 GB
- WD 320 GB
- Seagate 750 GB
- Seagate 750 GB
sobk
caligula
nero
Misc
The DellTrueMobile1150 was one of the best 802.11b wireless cards available for Linux, and was particularly popular with the network penetration testing community.
The first LCD monitor I ever purchased was a SiliconGraphics1600SW. I keep it because, besides being an excellent display, it's a symbol of the pinnacle of dot-com era excessiveness.
While not computer hardware per-se, I've used a CanonEOS300D for time-lapse photography projects.