.
As far as the SSDs go, I've considered $1 per GB to be the "buy" point on a SATA II for the past half year. Now I'm adjusting it slightly to the "buy" point for SATA III, and it should be <$1 per GB formatted. So example, a SATA III 64 GB drive formats @ ~59 GB, therefore it should cost $59 or less delivered and inclusive of all taxes. I think that point will happen by September, barring a complete meltdown of the U.S./world economy.
Ideally, I'd like to grab an 80 or a 90 GB SSD at that price point, and I estimate my chances are close to 100% by October, or perhaps in the runup to Christmas. I've already seen a 90 GB drive go for $90 in the last month, and there just was that Shell Shocker for a
WD SSD for $200 for a 256 GB SATA II, so ....
* $49.99 - Western Digital Caviar Black WD7502AAEX 750GB SATA 6
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822136794
i see this at 70$ but DANG @ 70$ its still sweet imho, two of these would make up like 1TB formatted space for like 140$.
Actually, they format to 698 GB each, so 2x 750 GB drives are ~1.35 TB formatted, plus a few extra GB. I'm kicking myself a bit. When the deal showed up, I should have immediately grabbed two of these and scrubbed the SSD. But, I haz a SSD lust and was not thinking as clearly as I should have. Could have either done a RAID 0 for speed or used them as image/mirrors for each other for complete system redundancy. Oh well ...
EDIT[/b]: forgot to mention the 18 dB max. noise on this model. That's the kind'a quiet I'm talkin' about![/size] ]
you could always replace the fan with a quieter one, maybe bigger to fill up the loss in air flow.
Indeed, I am considering exactly that for the BALDER SD1283. I will order that sometime this week and go for the rebate, so it should come in at $24 (eventually). Once I play with it and see its performance & hear it under some overclock settings, I may very well spend $9 or $12 for a 140 mm ultra-silent fan and figure out how to mount it.
I've been bolting over-sized fans onto my cooling blocks for close to 20 years now, and I usually solder on a handful of copper wire &/or mesh in the process to increase the heatsink mass and surface area for radiating heat. First time I did that was on a Pentium 120 MHz that I overclocked to 150 MHz, and it ran 10°C cooler when I was done ... great little Dell motherboard hardware hack to pull that off.

- GIGABYTE GA-990FXA-UD5
i think the board is abit overkill, do you really need that many pci-e slots? theres the UD3s that are around 160$ and below.
Yah. I am looking at those also. The UD5 interested me because after adding one large GPU card in, I have copious expansion capacity left over. It has 2 PCIe 16x slots plus another @ 8x ... which would run anything conceivable (such as a video capture card and/or a top end sound card). This, even after I probably upgrade to dual GPUs in ~2 years.
I'd like the board to serve for four to five years as my primary system, then retire it as a secondary system for a few years after that. Nearly every computer I've owned has served a full ten years, and most of them about 12 before I finally junked them.
Anyway, if I do drop down to the UD3 (or equivalent), I'd also expect to drop my buy price down in to the ~$110-120 range; no way I'll fork out $140 plus for one of those. I'm fairly name-brand agnostic, so I'm watching MSI and ASUS and a couple others also. Fortunately, I can afford to wait it out for a few weeks and jump when a seriously good price comes up.
Even though I rely on newegg, I have continued to watch other sites and google items up regularly. It's just that, so far, newegg has been THE best price for 95%+ of everything. They'll keep getting my business so long as they keep doing that.
