User:Kallpy

'''Hello. My name is Kiranapat Phanjawattanapat. My nick name is Toey. I was born on 16th January 1992 so I am now 19 years old. I have one older brother and he is 20 years old. In my house there is a big dog that is called Champ, he is very cute and very naughty. I was in New Zealand for high school for three years and that was a very good experience that I have ever had. When someone asks what my favourite colour is, I would say that I don't know because I actually like all of them if they look pretty on anything that they are attached with, on clothes, on shoes etc. However, when I buy clothes, bags, and shoes, I would rather go for something that has black colour as a background or may be all black. I found black colour is very mysterious and elegant with anything especially with something that is gold. I am living in a dorm in Salaya. I used to stay home for 3 terms since I entered Mahidol University International College but then when it comes to the exam period, it is very exhausted to wake up early in the morning to review a little bit more before the exam time and drive for half and hour to the university. I live in Bangkhae, Bangkok which takes around 40 to one hour to drive to uni if it is a busy time of the day.''' = My Picture =

= Biggest, fastest PC: Origin Genesis 2011 = Origin Genesis: Liquid-Cooled Behemoth Masters Benchmarks and Budgets

The all-new Genesis packs Intel's second-generation Core i7-2600K CPU -- overclocked to a staggering 5GHz, and kept stable with liquid cooling. Origin has further outfitted the machine with 16GB of RAM, and just over 2.1TB of storage -- which includes a pair of 128GB solid-state drives in RAID 0. It earned a score of 223 on our WorldBench 6 benchmark suite, making this overclocked goliath the fastest machine we've seen to date.

Gaming performance was equally impressive, thanks to the three Nvidia GTX 580 GPUs arranged in SLI. In S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Call of Pripyat, it reached an average of 101 frames per second. And in the graphically intensive Just Cause 2, we saw an average of 47 frames per second.

Like its predecessor, the latest Genesis is housed in the Corsair 800D chassis. In fact, apart from the updated hardware, it is largely identical. The case is large and spacious, offering hot-swappable hard-drive bays on the front, as well as room inside for more 5.25-inch drives. It's also largely tool-free, with side walls that pop off at the push of a button. The graphics cards are held in place by thumbscrews, but the rest of the bays are accessible by way of sliding plastic latches.

My favorite new chassis feature? The remote-controlled lighting. You can pick your preferred color or simply cycle through them, bathing the interior of the machine with psychedelic rave lights. Sure, it serves no functional purpose. But sometimes bragging rights are their own reward.

Despite the cavernous chassis, there's actually little room for tinkering. Like its predecessor, the Genesis is liquid-cooled. A network of tubes across the CPU and the GPUs make the case's internals cramped, and the 5.25-inch bays are largely blocked by the reservoir. The Genesis packs a multiformat card reader, a Blu-Ray burner, and audio controls up front, but you aren't going to be able to fit much else in there. The motherboard's PCI slots are similarly blocked by the liquid-cooled GPUs.

Connectivity options abound. Hidden behind a panel on the face of the machine are four USB ports and one FireWire port, along with the headphone and microphone jacks. The aforementioned multiformat card reader offers a fifth USB port.

On the rear, you'll find a Serial PS/2 keyboard and mouse combo port, dual gigabit ethernet ports, a pair of eSATA ports, 7.1 analog and optical audio ports, a Bluetooth receiver, and a whipping eight USB 3.0 ports, making this one of the first machines we've reviewed that's focused on next-gen connectivity. The graphics cards offer a total of six DVI ports, and three Mini-HDMI ports.

Processor

Processor Class: Intel Core i7

Processor Model: 2600K

Processor Speed: 5 GHz

Number of Cores: 4

Cache Size 	8192 KB

Number of installed processors 	1

Graphics

Graphics Type: Discrete

Discreet Graphics Chipset: Nvidia GeForce

Discreet Graphics Chipset Model Number: GTX 580

Number of video cards included: 3

Installed Video Memory per Card: 1536 MB

Memory

Installed memory: 16384 MB

Memory technology: DDR3

Storage

Hard Drive Type: Hard Disk Drive, Solid-State Drive

Total Hard-drive capacity: 2256 GB

RAID Type: RAID 0

Other Storage: CompactFlash, Memory Stick, SD/MMC Card, SmartMedia

Interface Connection

Interface connection: Bluetooth, HDMI, Video - 24 pin DVI-D, eSATA

Number of Back USB 3 Ports: 8

Number of Front Firewire Ports: 1

Number of Front USB 2 Ports: 5

Case

Chassis style: Tower (Full)

Power Supply

Power Supply Wattage: 1500 watts

'''Software '''

Operating system: Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium

= The best phone operating system: Apple iPhone OS =

What it is: iPhone OS is a pocket-size version of the Mac's OS X, shrunk down and redesigned to power the iPhone 3G.

How it works: As you zip your way around the iPhone 3G's multitouch interface with your fingertips, hardware and software blur into one pleasing experience. With other OSs, it's all too easy to get lost in menus or forget how to accomplish simple tasks; iPhone apps, however, are remarkably sleek and consistent. The OS's most infamous omission is cut-and-paste capability--but to tell the truth, I haven't missed it yet.

How it looks: Terrific. Everything from the sophisticated typography to the smooth animation effects contributes to the richest, most attractive environment ever put on a handheld device.

Built-in applications: What's good is great--especially the Safari browser, which makes navigating around sites that were never designed to be viewed on a phone remarkably simple. And the OS's music and video programs truly are of iPod caliber. But as a productivity tool, the iPhone lacks depth: You can't search e-mail, and you get no apps for editing documents or managing a to-do list.

Third-party stuff: Just months after Apple opened up the iPhone to other developers, thousands of programs are available, and downloading them directly via the App Store is a cakewalk. The best ones, such as Facebook and the Evernote note-taker, are outstanding. But the limitations that Apple puts on third-party apps--they can't run in the background or access data other than their own--place major obstacles in the way of everything from instant messengers to office suites. And Apple, the sole distributor of iPhone software, has declined to make available some useful applications that developers have submitted.