I'm facing a similar situation: as-is X299, turns out it goes through the whole boot sequence (in the 7-segment readout) just fine but still doesn't show image. And I'm figuring out it has an IPMI that I can't find the access to, and a VGA port that I don't have the header for.
@@bluewombat Lumpy catshaft, 1 litter displacement. He strokes all of his meowtors. It’s really sharp. It rips! It does leak, but that’s pretty common on these.
Oh, the hidden functionality. I remember how we bought a phone for my dad many a year ago. The data sheet said that it didn't have a micro sd slot, but when I opened it to install the mini-SIM card -- there it was, a micro sd slot. It worked and the phone detected it and could use it.
I have an old action replay DSi, without an SD slot. After it bricked itself years ago, I eventually found a cable at Goodwill, and summarily unbricked it. I also found out about the version with a micro SD slot online. I cracked mine open and, sure enough, the pads were there. I cut up a laptop motherboard to harvest its full-size SD slot, soldered it on with some miserable kynar wire, flashed the SD version's firmware, and presto! It works perfectly.
I worked at Intel when that generation of board was being developed. I don't recall ever working directly with this model, but definitely with some of its siblings. Intel reused the basic "block" for many boards, which is why you'll often see reference to multiple different boards as being the same. Because they often are. Either physically identical circuit board with a different chipset (H77 instead of Q77 maybe,) or different on-board features (only one NIC, no mPCIe, "full height" mITX, mATX, etc. In fact, on many of Intel's later "full ATX" motherboards, you can _clearly_ see that it's just a Micro ATX board with some extra PCB with a couple extra PCI/PCIe slots. Some even have literal "perforations" that allow you to physically snap off the "extra past mATX" bit!) I still have a pre-production DQ67SW board with an engineering sample Core i7-2600S in a low-profile chassis as a "spare gaming machine". (with Radeon R5 240 that I should probably upgrade, IIRC.)
@@CathodeRayDudeHi Gravis and to OP, many apologies to spam your comment but for laziness and dumb app reasons this is how I’ll tell Gravis that the RL220 mediasite variant has a very very good Datapath capture card with full RGB digital capture up to 4K30/1080p60, no chroma subsampling nonsense as with Avermedia. And some of the earlier 2RU and suitcase style mediasites have analog/DVI Datapath cards, also awesome quality 1200p60 and above (160hz? something high) and both can be had for less than the going price for the capture cards alone. Again excuse me barging in thank you
I was at Gigabyte during this time period and worked on boards a lot like this one. We were a collaborator on the design of these little ones, and I also have a funny engineering sample guy living back home. Mine is mATX and got what should be an i7 3770, but instead just shows "GENUINE INTEL PROCESSOR" and has no iGPU, so I guess 3770F. Funnily enough I ended up working at Intel a few years after and now do chip fabrication R&D, so the circuits just got a lot smaller between then and now. That little ES board and a 750ti I found in the trash are my couch PC now.
@@DigitalJedi The great Intel tradition of dumpster diving. I got a first-generation i7 Extreme with dual Radeon 4870X2s and dual Velociraptor hard drives because it had gotten roughed up in shipping. All the components worked fine, though!
@@AnonymousFreakYT It doesn't stop even internally either. There is one of probably very few socketable Meteor Lake-S chips on my desk. It's very useless as no chipset will ever support it, but man is it funny to flip over a CPU and there's just pads for extra pins.
46:06 vMix MultiCorder which is a built-in feature actually does recording multiple sources to separate files really well, it even creates an .xml file that you can import into Premiere and it creates a synchonized sequence automatically that makes multicam editing very easy, we use it at work almost daily and I can't even imagine how many hours of copying files from multiple SD cards and synchronizing footage it has saved me. I wish OBS could do it too.
this is why I've told myself, anytime someone brings me a dead system, pull the board out first, slap it on a desk, and test it there, so many times I've had issues with the chassis or a short, and no one thought to just pull everything out and start with the basics. I've saved so many systems with this one simple trick. I expected this outcome, lol, as soon as you said it was dead "watch, if he pulls the board it'll work for the lulz"
Absolutely. One of the ram slots wasn't working on an old motherboard I had. Turns out there was a loose motherboard screw shorting out that slot. Removed the screw, ram slot worked. Nice!
Yep, I had the same thing. That name sounded familiar. And I placed a reaction about it a minute ago... And then saw this reaction placed 5 minutes ago. 😁
And Vegas and ACiD music too. I had a totes legit copy of Sound Forge 4.0 back in the day. :) And Sony proceeded to sell all that software onto Magix, who quickly made them irrelevant. I mean, they were arguably relevant under Sony's reign too, but yeah. Edited the first few years of my own channel on Vegas before I moved to Resolve.
I worked in educational technology and media production in the aughts through 2013 and deployed several Mediasite boxes in smart classrooms for recording lectures and presentations. This was before Zoom and the like were practical, and so you needed a system to quickly capture computer display output and combine with standard video without any setup on the presenter’s computer. It was a reliable and scalable solution at the time.
It probably still is seeing how crapple keeps being incompatible with everything you plug. Or if you're brave enough to do any sort of presentation on linux.
This dug up a long-forgotten memory. When I went to medical school starting in the year 2010, they had a setup of these in all the lecture halls. Not only would media site allow you to stream a live lecture, it also allowed you to play back a recorded lecture at a faster speed. It was reliable and available minutes after the lecture finished. They had the system in place for a number of years before I even started. Certain lecturers would not allow their lectures to be recorded because they wanted in person attendance.
TU Delft had this system too when I was there (pretty sure they still do!) It must have been this exact system, as the website to play back lectures was based on this ‘MediaSite’ software, and re-visiting it now, it does contain links to SonicFoundry’s website (which has an out-of-date certificate, hilariously). I remember the operators had this kind of portable rig on wheels with everything they needed (including camera). They’d just wheel it into the lecture hall of whatever lecture they’d be recording and hook it up. I think there was also one lecture hall with an experimental permanent setup. A nice thing was that they always had two video feeds: one for the camera, and another for the lecturer’s computer screen (i.e. slides). The player played both simultaneously, and you could also speed up playback (very handy for boring lectures…) It worked remarkably well.
It is always fascinating to me to find little guys like this out in the wild because the only time you do is when they are not working. There are a number of buses in my area that are supposed to tell you the next stop(visually and audibly) that are just stuck in a boot loop, and who can forget the next checkout indicator at a pharmacy that was just stuck on the grub bootloader for probably a decade.
When I was young my father was working for NCR on a team that was working with fully contained point of sale kiosks. While POS isn’t the most exciting stuff in the world to me, he was working in software for movie rental kiosks and more than once we got to see and play around with the demo units in his office YEARS before Redbox or similar was common. I have no clue what kind of hardware was inside one of those kiosks but I’m sure it was an off the shelf unit NCR already was using and with the decline of movie kiosks I wouldn’t be shocked if some of the machines running the software my dad wrote got out into the wild. I couldn’t help but have some aimless hope you’d show us the NCR machine and it comes up with logos and software from the machines I remember seeing at my dad’s office 20 years ago.
+1, it’s perfect “SFF” is awful to say and to hear. Every other label is some string of words you’d find on a flyer from the most boring stand at a boring tradeshow. “Little guys” brings on an urge to think up unnecessary computing tasks just for the fun of getting to deploy computers everywhere.
Fun fact: if you ever have an ear worm stuck, just replace it by thinking of the Intel jingle. It is long enough to push past the 1-2 second we perceive as "now", yet not long enough or suitable to loop. It will break any looping sound.
The dead silence after that jingle I think is what does it. For me at 39 years old it comes with the rising hiss associated with broadcast audio companding and VHS noise.
"there is a whole cottage industry that makes things that's only purpose is to do video streams for people who don't know how to set up video software" I can for, uh, job reasons confirm this is absolutely true and this stays true from the low level like churches and universities and stuff all the way up to the highest most expensive levels for hollywood movie production. Every movie you've ever seen by the mouse company has gone through a box not much different from this one. I'm shocked that that is windows! Gear in this kind of space is one of the places where linux seems more common than windows for this kind of appliance thing.
ah yes, INVADED BY DARK SPIRIT, my favourite thing to do with little guys edit: okay i thought this was going to be some kind of cursed software error BUT IT WAS THE BEST LITTLE GUY WE COULD HAVE EVER SEEN
These videos going absolutely wild are the best parts man. You have genuinely stumbled on computer/AV nerd crack. It doesn't matter how half-cocked your commentary gets because you're honest about it and it's exactly what any of us would do when faced with the same situations: Google what is intriguing and massively overlook everything else, get distracted by a more interesting project and fuck everything up until some natural end. The thing is, it's not actually the content of the video. You make excellent videos. Your editing and voiceover are getting so good that you're keeping these exciting. You know what we find exciting and informative and focus on that. It's amazing. Like, I wouldn't be mad if this was your whole channel. I would be sad at the loss of the great videos on mouse balls and stupid removable media that go on for 5 hours, but this is excellent.
That's why mediasite looked so familiar to me. My school uses this for class recording. It records a camera pointed at the front of the classroom as well as the professor's screen. Once class is over, the video is automatically added to canvas. Kind of creepy on days when there's no class but it still records an empty classroom.
Sometimes I'll be watching someone else's video and someone will say "two of them..." and I will find myself mildly disappointed when the kittens don't appear... 🤣🤣
HP swapped to a thinner plug, we found that out by surprise at the refurbishing operation i worked at, because our universal laptop power supplies didn't have adapters for those. Luckily i realized that we also got the docks for the machines in the shipment (the docks used the old power supply plug), so we could prop the docks up on the deletion/testing stations and get them processed without having to get out a hundred of the power supplies also and having to figure out ways to hook them up. Never got even a pat on the back for that...
All the reset-cmos pin does is short the power supply to the SRAM to ground. If you don't unplug the battery, it still supplies power to the SRAM, you're just discharging the battery very quickly. It WOULD work if you left it shorted for 20-30 minutes. The chassis on that "crappy" ITX machine is that large because it's a standard form factor piece for beefier ITX boards. that dead space on top is perfect for a FlexATX PSU, which would open up the possibility of 200-300W builds. The only thing is' missing is the spot-welded bracket, a cutout on the rear, and some screw holes. With the double-width low-profile expansion slot, it makes for a nice little set-top box to hook up to a TV.
I have worked on varied embedded systems for automatic cashiers, coin counters, video surveillance, etc. That NCR is a pretty cool cat. I worked on them in restaurants and they run the POS for the whole restaurant / bar. They are pretty sweet and are bullet proof. I see these guys stacked up on a managers desk covered with paperwork from ten years ago along with the cable modem, network switch, etc. Most of the time they send them back to the Mothership , so I never get to keep them when they are replaced every five to ten years.
My college used devices similar to these. They would automatically record during class and then they would appear on the class’s page in our grading/assignment platform. It was basically only set up for the largest of classes (400+) prior to Covid. During the times when the classes went in person optional in Spring 2021 and beyond it was a lot more common for smaller classes to have this set up. You could both watch live and also see a recording afterwards. Very handy in case you couldn’t remember something that was said out loud but wasn’t on the slides. They were controlled with a roughly iPad sized device that allowed it to decide which cameras to show, and which computer screens. The screen also decided how the professor’s computer was displayed in the larger rooms. (Ex: one big screen, or emulate having two smaller projectors side by side each with a copy of the screen) The ones we had could record multiple video streams at once, and in the playback you had options of how to display them and which one you wanted to see the largest. (Whiteboard, computer screen, etc)
I love the NCR N3000. Look at that subtle lime-green coloring. The tasteful thickness of it. Oh my god, it even has dual heat pipes! Definitely one of the most handsome little guys I've seen.
This is practically becoming a regular Monday thing, and it's so good to have around on a Monday. I don't expect it, but I keep receiving it. I'll take as much as you've got.
The 19v Dell connector is not a centre positive connector. It actually has 3 conductors. The tiny centre pin is a control pin. The negative is the outside of the barrel, and the positive is the inside of the barrel.
The "Thin Mini ITX" is an older standard created by Intel (I think) that in addition to being notably thin (and came with both a regular and a low profile I/O shield) it had its CPU socket specifically located off further toward the PCIE slot side of the board which facilitated special cooling solutions that ran heat pipes past that PCIE slot edge of the board to a heat sink that was oriented to allow front to back air flow in the very thin cases to cool the CPU. These boards had external power supply jacks like the one on the board you have which allowed for the use of external power bricks. Those odd connectors along the front edge of the board were, in fact, a few different types of display panel connectors. One of them was an oddball internal display port connector. These were employed when the boards were used inside electronic signage or kiosk products that had the display panel and the motherboard integrated into the same chassis. That motherboard also has a redundant internal power supply header back in the same corner as the external connector so an internal power supply could be used. These kinds of motherboards were generally set up to use lower TDP versions of desktop CPUs. They are the ones that have a "T" at the end of their model number, as, for example, the Core i5-3470T which has a 35 watt TDP. Interesting products, but not especially commonplace in the PCs most of us have lying around.
46:00 What you're describing is called "Iso recording" or isolated/isolation recording. It's very common and done in video production all the time. Wirecast can do iso recordings of all your inputs if set up correctly. I used to do this for work many moons ago.
"It took three computers to fix one" Reminds me of Techmoan's CED saga where he had to buy three CED's to try to fix them (and because the players were cheap apparently).
2 of them were used to fix the second one and technically all but the first one are fully functional, they just have to share the stylus, the first one was entirely broken because it was stored in the same pond as the discs, the second was brand new but was never fully assembled because the plug had been incorrectly wired and the third was only needed to get a stylus and a clean lid for the second one
That Atom motherboard came with the heatsink. There was no option to go without it because Atom is an embedded SoC, so conventional ITX thermal solutions don't mount properly. I remember seeing that exact one in Fry's circa 2009-2010 (Rip)
Sonic Foundry sounded very familiar to me. Years ago I used audio editing software called Sound Forge. And indeed, that was from Sonic Foundry as well.
that Tunic sticker... the meaning of it just clicked last episode. im now deep into the lore of the game and itll be always sweet seeing it again ^^ everyone go play that game aaaaaaaa
43:52 I think those unpopulated round pads are for through-hole LEDs ( CR reference, flat on circle), which would make sense. Looks like it has pads for SMD RGB LEDs
Yeah, that seems clear enough, and it was my first guess when I looked at the board, but the designation threw me off. I've never seen "CR" on a PCB before in my life, and I can't find any examples of it denoting an LED, just people who sound as confused as I am finding it next to normal diodes. There's some suggestion that it's the archaic term, "crystal rectifier." I can imagine that showing up on a board decades ago, but it seems wild that it showed up on something made in the 2010s.
15:05 I have a case similar to that... not that exact version, but... in mine, it actually takes some mini-ITX power supply that fills the void you have at the top in that orientation. This case looks (to me) like they've just taken the standard case, and just not cut the holes for the power supply.
that NCR 3000 was built to be the "server" side of a on-premise client/server POS system or similar. passively cooled, redundant drives, stick it on a shelf in the closet next to the rest of the required tech stuff (isp modem, cheapest 8 port switch possible, voip box, etc) and completely ignore it til someone from corporate IT shows up to mess with it.
Oh... That goober ITX system's case... I tried helping someone who had a pallet of them. She got them new for $10 each, and they were apparently sold for $19 in Shenzhen, and we're supposed to sell for $40 in the US market. She ended up sending all of them to a scrapper because absolutely nobody would buy them at $10 plus shipping.
It's interesting that they've chosen to tie earth-ground and negative together on the NCR model. It would mean that in the case of a broken power supply with the polarity reversed, the entire chassis would become live, quite the electrocution risk.
Well in that case you'd also have 110v hitting the DC ground so the PSU wouldn't survive long enough to get plugged in I think. But yeah, it seems odd.
@@CathodeRayDude Well a reversed polarity normally shouldn't mean anything, but if the laptop power supply was plugged in to an incorrectly wired outlet and suddenly experienced some failure due to shoddy manufacturing (unrelated to the outlet), you'd hear a pop and wonder why the computer wasn't working, grab it and... maybe get a bit of a shock. Probably unlikely but having things earth grounded tend to be for pretty rare and freak occurences.
Well, it's the earth ground, not the AC neutral, that's tied to (-)DC, so inherently it being a switching PSU at all would isolate the DC from AC lines regardless of the AC hot side.
@@baaelectronics "Well actually" ... ANY power supply has to be galvanically isolated, not just switching. There's still going to be a transformer between mains and output, so the output will be floating with respect to mains (ergo polarity is irrelevant), and unless double-insulated, the chassis ground is almost certainly going to be tied to mains earth.
To clarify on my previous comment (because I just got to the NCR part of the video), the supply brick has a 3-prong plug. If it didn't tie DC negative to earth, there would be literally no point in having a 3-prong plug at all. So, in this case, _of course_ it passes through earth ground. The 2-prong plug bricks are double-insulated, meaning there is no way (barring truly catastrophic failure that should not occur due to fusing, etc.) for mains to reach the DC output side. THOSE will not have earth on the DC negative. Everything on the secondary side is floating WRT mains. Although, if you plug that brick into a device that interfaces with anything else (a monitor, an audio amplifier, etc.), it will probably end up grounded through that interconnect anyway. And that ^ is the reason for the Zero-ohm resistor. If you want a safety earth, but have an issue with ground loops (due mostly to bad electrical wiring or connections to other poorly-designed devices), you can replace that 0R with something else -- like a capacitor, to shunt RF noise to ground but isolate DC, or a higher-value R to provide a weak (DC) path to ground, etc. It's always cheaper to change a production line to use a different component than to redesign and replace the whole PCB, so it's a safety net that lets you alter the grounding technique as needed in the future.
*drops computer, camera shakes and I can feel it through my screen* CRD: "…Yeah maybe that didn’t do it for ya." Man's sarcasm is on point today LOL! Keep up the good work.
The header on that control board at ~43:50 is the easy part if the board design makes a jot of sense - 6 pins, PIC18F part number on the micro, means it's the programming interface for the micro, set out so as to accept a PICKit2 or 3 to allow program and debug. The 4-pin header just between the USB connection and the micro is probably a tap point on the USB lines.
Ex NCR software dev. The NCR device is a server for back of house restaurant usage. Generally it runs Aloha point of sale backend components and cloud connection components. They run windows and use a custom image by NCR. These are very commonly found in the back offices of establishments like Krispy Kreme for example.
@@Toonrick12 indeed. If you are in the office look up on shelves. You can also find the KVM under the monitor and follow it. Krispy Kremes usually have two servers, an NCR and a plain desktop style server for their loyalty system.
@@Toonrick12indeed. If you happen to be in the back office of a Krispy Kreme you can usually find them mounted up on a shelf. There will be a single internal switch for the Aloha network connected. You may also have a KVM switch below the monitor to switch between the little guy and a stock PC / server used for KK loyalty internally... depends on the franchisee.
I loved every second of the jank. I miss my Philips DVD recorder with integrated hard drive, because I BET that thing was a little guy disguised as an AV equipment.
That NCR would actually make a cool little home theater PC, since it has HDMI output. My current one runs on a similar 3rd Gen i5. Add some external USB drives for your media and a wireless keyboard, then you'd be all set.
@@cdigames As CRD pointed out, the passive cooling in that is likely MASSIVELY overbuilt. And with a coat of paint, it would blend right in with many amplifiers.
@@mattelder1971 It was more of a jab at the fact that concurrent with this series, CRD has been showcasing the works of Niveus, whose whole thing was passively cooled home theater PCs
Sonic Foundry were the creators of Sound Forge (audio editor) and Vegas Pro (video editor, now owned by Sony). They pivoted into the distance learning space after selling off their wares. I lived and worked in Madison WI for a number of years. It's a small enough town that you eventually know everyone and anyone working in technology and doing software development. I probably wouldn't have heard about them otherwise.
Fun fact about that power plug used by the NCR guy: all (or at least most) of NCR’s point of sale controllers of a similar form factor use that plug. They are used in all of Walmart’s self-checkout devices. They likely used that plug to keep in line with their own standard.
i picked up my very own Little Guy thanks to you: a Dell OptiPlex 7040 Micro. it was cartoonishly cheap on eBay for the specs, and I'm currently undertaking an ill-advised attempt to Hackintosh it. Fun times.
Thin ITX is still a thing. Most modern AIO PCs use custom boards though. Because of course they do. Imagine your PC being thicker than 2cm? I don't have that much room!
Thanks for doing this video, I could listen to you chatting about this stuff all day. The green machine is really great looking, nice to see a properly bit of kit.
It's a digital streaming codec. We used those in big auditoriums so people on Facebook could watch the town hall. We also used them for an auto auction to make it an online auto auction with live bidding. They were quite simple. Avaya did this and a few other VTC bridging companies did as well. I belive the touch panel was called the AMX Modero.
I have to say that little guys is one of my favorite series, like just seing you find them neat is like the coolest part of the videos :3 It makes me happy seeing you happy
I have been obsessed with little guys in the past 15 years and I'm loving this series. This one is another banger! I really like the NCR very well thought through and with accessible dual drives! Can't definitely see any on uk ebay. :(
Thin Mini ITX has standardized CPU socket placement and height along with standardized component heights, so that manufacturers can design cases with integrated heatsinks.
10:29 Depending on when this particular box was built, I wonder if they were using new old stock Sigma Designs chips. That company liquidiated back in 2018 and hadn't been doing much for a couple years before then. Would certainly have helped them lower costs.
DC plugs not having a screw on connector in consumer hardware is a feature, not a bug the idea is if you trip over the cord it'll just unplug instead of dragging whatever hardware it's connected to crashing down onto the floor
That funky looking copper heatsink/fan on the Mediasite is actually a pretty expensive and heavy duty cooler for 1U server systems. I use it myself in several servers that require very low profile coolers as I need the space for a 10GB network card hovering close to the cooler. The damn thing sounds like a jet engine when at full speed.
That green box would make a absolute killer pfsense router. Heck I need to find me one. I'm running a small form factor Dell optiplex with 3770 i7 in it for my pfsense and it's a beast. Does everything I could dream of from a router. Hosting fail over Wan and not one not two. But three different local networks. Servers desktops and iot things with isolation.
AVerMedia actually has a line of gamer oriented capture cards, and they seem to run a bit cheaper than Elgato. Mine's not installed right now(hulking GPU blocking literally all of the other PCIe slots), but looking at the software, I think it also does the multi-capture.
inverter frequency is nice to change, on a lot of laptops is at ~60-200hz which is quite often far too low. and just as well the average OEM (who does nothing essentially) leaves it at the stock for no reason. change it to 500hz, even on laptops you can do this through software, your eyes will thank you.
These thin mini itx boards are cool. I had a couple and yes, did install an i7 4770 into one. With the huge HP laptop brick (140W?) it worked a treat. Had a second one with an i5 4590T that I ran as a daily hackintosh for a few years. It worked amazingly well, everything worked. Dual screen HDMI output too. Aaaand, I got a thin mini ITX case from aliexpress which was tiny - literally the size of the motherboard with special thin mini ITX backplate which is half atx as you mentioned. The HDD even had a bracket to sit over the top of the motherboard. Super cool.
I totally get it on the drive thing, the reason typically is security compliance policies. I work for an ITAR compliant company for instance and by law we need to cerity drives are destroyed when leaving the company even if I know it doesn't have any important intellectual property. Makes me sad though.
Needing 3 computers to fix one that isn't actually broken is a Certified Cathode Ray Dude Moment™.
Correct Spud
Hey at least it isn't a "I found a near mint 5K iMac in the trash" type of video.
I'm facing a similar situation: as-is X299, turns out it goes through the whole boot sequence (in the 7-segment readout) just fine but still doesn't show image. And I'm figuring out it has an IPMI that I can't find the access to, and a VGA port that I don't have the header for.
Quite the healthy engine on Soba, I must say.
Who cammed that cat? 🤣💀
@@bluewombat Lumpy catshaft, 1 litter displacement. He strokes all of his meowtors. It’s really sharp. It rips! It does leak, but that’s pretty common on these.
@@_..-.._..-.._ 🤣💀
It brightens my day when one of Gravis' cats interrupts a video. My favorite little guys.
So fluffy, so beautiful ❤
I love creator pets, they're always a delight when they make a surprise appearance in videos or streams.
The minor-key rework of the "Lets ask the Internet" theme for the appearance of Soba is absolutely great!
Yes, I am a music nerd.
Oh, so THAT'S what the tune is. Clever.
Oh, the hidden functionality. I remember how we bought a phone for my dad many a year ago. The data sheet said that it didn't have a micro sd slot, but when I opened it to install the mini-SIM card -- there it was, a micro sd slot. It worked and the phone detected it and could use it.
This is not the slot you're looking for!
What phone?
@@kintustis their dad's
@@Fay7666 lol but what model?
I have an old action replay DSi, without an SD slot. After it bricked itself years ago, I eventually found a cable at Goodwill, and summarily unbricked it. I also found out about the version with a micro SD slot online. I cracked mine open and, sure enough, the pads were there. I cut up a laptop motherboard to harvest its full-size SD slot, soldered it on with some miserable kynar wire, flashed the SD version's firmware, and presto! It works perfectly.
I worked at Intel when that generation of board was being developed. I don't recall ever working directly with this model, but definitely with some of its siblings. Intel reused the basic "block" for many boards, which is why you'll often see reference to multiple different boards as being the same. Because they often are. Either physically identical circuit board with a different chipset (H77 instead of Q77 maybe,) or different on-board features (only one NIC, no mPCIe, "full height" mITX, mATX, etc. In fact, on many of Intel's later "full ATX" motherboards, you can _clearly_ see that it's just a Micro ATX board with some extra PCB with a couple extra PCI/PCIe slots. Some even have literal "perforations" that allow you to physically snap off the "extra past mATX" bit!) I still have a pre-production DQ67SW board with an engineering sample Core i7-2600S in a low-profile chassis as a "spare gaming machine". (with Radeon R5 240 that I should probably upgrade, IIRC.)
This is fascinating, thank you!
@@CathodeRayDudeHi Gravis and to OP, many apologies to spam your comment but for laziness and dumb app reasons this is how I’ll tell Gravis that the RL220 mediasite variant has a very very good Datapath capture card with full RGB digital capture up to 4K30/1080p60, no chroma subsampling nonsense as with Avermedia. And some of the earlier 2RU and suitcase style mediasites have analog/DVI Datapath cards, also awesome quality 1200p60 and above (160hz? something high) and both can be had for less than the going price for the capture cards alone. Again excuse me barging in thank you
I was at Gigabyte during this time period and worked on boards a lot like this one. We were a collaborator on the design of these little ones, and I also have a funny engineering sample guy living back home. Mine is mATX and got what should be an i7 3770, but instead just shows "GENUINE INTEL PROCESSOR" and has no iGPU, so I guess 3770F. Funnily enough I ended up working at Intel a few years after and now do chip fabrication R&D, so the circuits just got a lot smaller between then and now. That little ES board and a 750ti I found in the trash are my couch PC now.
@@DigitalJedi The great Intel tradition of dumpster diving. I got a first-generation i7 Extreme with dual Radeon 4870X2s and dual Velociraptor hard drives because it had gotten roughed up in shipping. All the components worked fine, though!
@@AnonymousFreakYT It doesn't stop even internally either. There is one of probably very few socketable Meteor Lake-S chips on my desk. It's very useless as no chipset will ever support it, but man is it funny to flip over a CPU and there's just pads for extra pins.
"Soba you are not ESD safe"
Sickest own of the century. Absolutely ROASTED. Way outta pocket.
*_East Side Dave_* McDonald?
46:06 vMix MultiCorder which is a built-in feature actually does recording multiple sources to separate files really well, it even creates an .xml file that you can import into Premiere and it creates a synchonized sequence automatically that makes multicam editing very easy, we use it at work almost daily and I can't even imagine how many hours of copying files from multiple SD cards and synchronizing footage it has saved me. I wish OBS could do it too.
Wow, thank you for the recommendation, I'll have to look into that.
this is why I've told myself, anytime someone brings me a dead system, pull the board out first, slap it on a desk, and test it there, so many times I've had issues with the chassis or a short, and no one thought to just pull everything out and start with the basics. I've saved so many systems with this one simple trick. I expected this outcome, lol, as soon as you said it was dead "watch, if he pulls the board it'll work for the lulz"
Absolutely. One of the ram slots wasn't working on an old motherboard I had. Turns out there was a loose motherboard screw shorting out that slot. Removed the screw, ram slot worked. Nice!
That green anodized aluminum is a bold choice and I certainly like it.
Hey! Sonic Foundry rings a bell: Soundforge was created by them, before Sony purchased it.
Knew I'd seen that name before. Thanks!
Yep, I had the same thing. That name sounded familiar. And I placed a reaction about it a minute ago... And then saw this reaction placed 5 minutes ago. 😁
Yup, surprised to see that name still! I thought Sony purchased all their assets but it seems they still exist doing… stuff?
Vegas video too!
And Vegas and ACiD music too. I had a totes legit copy of Sound Forge 4.0 back in the day. :) And Sony proceeded to sell all that software onto Magix, who quickly made them irrelevant. I mean, they were arguably relevant under Sony's reign too, but yeah. Edited the first few years of my own channel on Vegas before I moved to Resolve.
I worked in educational technology and media production in the aughts through 2013 and deployed several Mediasite boxes in smart classrooms for recording lectures and presentations. This was before Zoom and the like were practical, and so you needed a system to quickly capture computer display output and combine with standard video without any setup on the presenter’s computer. It was a reliable and scalable solution at the time.
It probably still is seeing how crapple keeps being incompatible with everything you plug. Or if you're brave enough to do any sort of presentation on linux.
This dug up a long-forgotten memory. When I went to medical school starting in the year 2010, they had a setup of these in all the lecture halls. Not only would media site allow you to stream a live lecture, it also allowed you to play back a recorded lecture at a faster speed. It was reliable and available minutes after the lecture finished. They had the system in place for a number of years before I even started. Certain lecturers would not allow their lectures to be recorded because they wanted in person attendance.
TU Delft had this system too when I was there (pretty sure they still do!) It must have been this exact system, as the website to play back lectures was based on this ‘MediaSite’ software, and re-visiting it now, it does contain links to SonicFoundry’s website (which has an out-of-date certificate, hilariously).
I remember the operators had this kind of portable rig on wheels with everything they needed (including camera). They’d just wheel it into the lecture hall of whatever lecture they’d be recording and hook it up. I think there was also one lecture hall with an experimental permanent setup.
A nice thing was that they always had two video feeds: one for the camera, and another for the lecturer’s computer screen (i.e. slides). The player played both simultaneously, and you could also speed up playback (very handy for boring lectures…) It worked remarkably well.
It is always fascinating to me to find little guys like this out in the wild because the only time you do is when they are not working. There are a number of buses in my area that are supposed to tell you the next stop(visually and audibly) that are just stuck in a boot loop, and who can forget the next checkout indicator at a pharmacy that was just stuck on the grub bootloader for probably a decade.
When I was young my father was working for NCR on a team that was working with fully contained point of sale kiosks. While POS isn’t the most exciting stuff in the world to me, he was working in software for movie rental kiosks and more than once we got to see and play around with the demo units in his office YEARS before Redbox or similar was common.
I have no clue what kind of hardware was inside one of those kiosks but I’m sure it was an off the shelf unit NCR already was using and with the decline of movie kiosks I wouldn’t be shocked if some of the machines running the software my dad wrote got out into the wild. I couldn’t help but have some aimless hope you’d show us the NCR machine and it comes up with logos and software from the machines I remember seeing at my dad’s office 20 years ago.
‘Little guys’ officially in my vintage computer lexicon now… just labeled a tote full of them.
+1, it’s perfect
“SFF” is awful to say and to hear. Every other label is some string of words you’d find on a flyer from the most boring stand at a boring tradeshow.
“Little guys” brings on an urge to think up unnecessary computing tasks just for the fun of getting to deploy computers everywhere.
But I have a SFF that is CERTIFIABLY not a lil guy
Fun fact: if you ever have an ear worm stuck, just replace it by thinking of the Intel jingle. It is long enough to push past the 1-2 second we perceive as "now", yet not long enough or suitable to loop. It will break any looping sound.
Unless you work at Intel. In which case, that sound is permanently engraved into your brain. Please help.
The dead silence after that jingle I think is what does it. For me at 39 years old it comes with the rising hiss associated with broadcast audio companding and VHS noise.
My brain just cross-connected the Intel and Nokia jingles and it's helllllllll
great, now the intel sound is my earworm
Soba may not be ESD-safe but she is OSHA certified
"there is a whole cottage industry that makes things that's only purpose is to do video streams for people who don't know how to set up video software"
I can for, uh, job reasons confirm this is absolutely true and this stays true from the low level like churches and universities and stuff all the way up to the highest most expensive levels for hollywood movie production. Every movie you've ever seen by the mouse company has gone through a box not much different from this one.
I'm shocked that that is windows! Gear in this kind of space is one of the places where linux seems more common than windows for this kind of appliance thing.
Setting up the software is the easy part. Training the users is the hard part, provided they are even willing to learn in the first place.
ah yes, INVADED BY DARK SPIRIT, my favourite thing to do with little guys
edit: okay i thought this was going to be some kind of cursed software error BUT IT WAS THE BEST LITTLE GUY WE COULD HAVE EVER SEEN
highly fluffy creature
Poofy ahh cat
funny realization that NCR seemingly could easily make a better silent HTPC than Niveus Media
Better looking too. I love that lime green heat sink.
I like geeking out with you, nobody else really does videos like these and little industrial computers are definitely good geeking out material.
These videos going absolutely wild are the best parts man. You have genuinely stumbled on computer/AV nerd crack. It doesn't matter how half-cocked your commentary gets because you're honest about it and it's exactly what any of us would do when faced with the same situations: Google what is intriguing and massively overlook everything else, get distracted by a more interesting project and fuck everything up until some natural end.
The thing is, it's not actually the content of the video. You make excellent videos. Your editing and voiceover are getting so good that you're keeping these exciting. You know what we find exciting and informative and focus on that. It's amazing.
Like, I wouldn't be mad if this was your whole channel. I would be sad at the loss of the great videos on mouse balls and stupid removable media that go on for 5 hours, but this is excellent.
soba's invasion music both scared me and made me go awe
That's why mediasite looked so familiar to me. My school uses this for class recording. It records a camera pointed at the front of the classroom as well as the professor's screen. Once class is over, the video is automatically added to canvas. Kind of creepy on days when there's no class but it still records an empty classroom.
Sometimes I'll be watching someone else's video and someone will say "two of them..." and I will find myself mildly disappointed when the kittens don't appear... 🤣🤣
HP swapped to a thinner plug, we found that out by surprise at the refurbishing operation i worked at, because our universal laptop power supplies didn't have adapters for those. Luckily i realized that we also got the docks for the machines in the shipment (the docks used the old power supply plug), so we could prop the docks up on the deletion/testing stations and get them processed without having to get out a hundred of the power supplies also and having to figure out ways to hook them up. Never got even a pat on the back for that...
Thank you for your service to corporate laptop erasure, Bubger Kirg.
All the reset-cmos pin does is short the power supply to the SRAM to ground. If you don't unplug the battery, it still supplies power to the SRAM, you're just discharging the battery very quickly.
It WOULD work if you left it shorted for 20-30 minutes.
The chassis on that "crappy" ITX machine is that large because it's a standard form factor piece for beefier ITX boards.
that dead space on top is perfect for a FlexATX PSU, which would open up the possibility of 200-300W builds. The only thing is' missing is the spot-welded bracket, a cutout on the rear, and some screw holes. With the double-width low-profile expansion slot, it makes for a nice little set-top box to hook up to a TV.
oh heck yeah! NCR machines, I used to work with these a bunch in the albertsons and what not around the west coast. this was a great episode
Great vid all-around, but the Soba purring footage was the best part.
I have worked on varied embedded systems for automatic cashiers, coin counters, video surveillance, etc. That NCR is a pretty cool cat. I worked on them in restaurants and they run the POS for the whole restaurant / bar. They are pretty sweet and are bullet proof. I see these guys stacked up on a managers desk covered with paperwork from ten years ago along with the cable modem, network switch, etc. Most of the time they send them back to the Mothership , so I never get to keep them when they are replaced every five to ten years.
They get sent back to ExpressPoint in Texas to get reworked & get put back into service.
My college used devices similar to these. They would automatically record during class and then they would appear on the class’s page in our grading/assignment platform. It was basically only set up for the largest of classes (400+) prior to Covid. During the times when the classes went in person optional in Spring 2021 and beyond it was a lot more common for smaller classes to have this set up. You could both watch live and also see a recording afterwards. Very handy in case you couldn’t remember something that was said out loud but wasn’t on the slides.
They were controlled with a roughly iPad sized device that allowed it to decide which cameras to show, and which computer screens. The screen also decided how the professor’s computer was displayed in the larger rooms. (Ex: one big screen, or emulate having two smaller projectors side by side each with a copy of the screen)
The ones we had could record multiple video streams at once, and in the playback you had options of how to display them and which one you wanted to see the largest. (Whiteboard, computer screen, etc)
missed opportunity to make the title incredibly confusing with Little Guys 3: Part 5 (Three), really good video as usual :)
I love the NCR N3000. Look at that subtle lime-green coloring. The tasteful thickness of it. Oh my god, it even has dual heat pipes! Definitely one of the most handsome little guys I've seen.
I love the subtle American Psycho reference.
This is practically becoming a regular Monday thing, and it's so good to have around on a Monday. I don't expect it, but I keep receiving it. I'll take as much as you've got.
The 19v Dell connector is not a centre positive connector. It actually has 3 conductors. The tiny centre pin is a control pin. The negative is the outside of the barrel, and the positive is the inside of the barrel.
Ohhhhh really? I've never knew that and always thought that's such a slimsy connector
15:43 I just loved that heat sink, I wanted to believe in it because it was aesthetically appealing
The "Thin Mini ITX" is an older standard created by Intel (I think) that in addition to being notably thin (and came with both a regular and a low profile I/O shield) it had its CPU socket specifically located off further toward the PCIE slot side of the board which facilitated special cooling solutions that ran heat pipes past that PCIE slot edge of the board to a heat sink that was oriented to allow front to back air flow in the very thin cases to cool the CPU. These boards had external power supply jacks like the one on the board you have which allowed for the use of external power bricks.
Those odd connectors along the front edge of the board were, in fact, a few different types of display panel connectors. One of them was an oddball internal display port connector. These were employed when the boards were used inside electronic signage or kiosk products that had the display panel and the motherboard integrated into the same chassis.
That motherboard also has a redundant internal power supply header back in the same corner as the external connector so an internal power supply could be used.
These kinds of motherboards were generally set up to use lower TDP versions of desktop CPUs. They are the ones that have a "T" at the end of their model number, as, for example, the Core i5-3470T which has a 35 watt TDP.
Interesting products, but not especially commonplace in the PCs most of us have lying around.
The Soba visit was perfect.
Sonic Foundry also made the Acid loop sequencer. It was pretty great back in the day.
46:00 What you're describing is called "Iso recording" or isolated/isolation recording. It's very common and done in video production all the time. Wirecast can do iso recordings of all your inputs if set up correctly. I used to do this for work many moons ago.
My kitty must have heard your kitty's purr....she came running onto my lap! (Beautiful cat!)
"It took three computers to fix one"
Reminds me of Techmoan's CED saga where he had to buy three CED's to try to fix them (and because the players were cheap apparently).
2 of them were used to fix the second one and technically all but the first one are fully functional, they just have to share the stylus, the first one was entirely broken because it was stored in the same pond as the discs, the second was brand new but was never fully assembled because the plug had been incorrectly wired and the third was only needed to get a stylus and a clean lid for the second one
23:23 those offset SATA ports are for SATA-DOMs, which usually are a bite wider than the socket - you'll figure the rest out.
That Atom motherboard came with the heatsink. There was no option to go without it because Atom is an embedded SoC, so conventional ITX thermal solutions don't mount properly. I remember seeing that exact one in Fry's circa 2009-2010 (Rip)
I've been loving your "Little Guy" series. It was a joy listening to you get excited about your finds.
Sonic Foundry sounded very familiar to me. Years ago I used audio editing software called Sound Forge. And indeed, that was from Sonic Foundry as well.
Those capture cards are really cool and I have a hyper specific project idea for them.
Hyper specific projects are the best projects. Good luck👍
that Tunic sticker... the meaning of it just clicked last episode. im now deep into the lore of the game and itll be always sweet seeing it again ^^
everyone go play that game aaaaaaaa
10p%ed it, love the game!!
43:52 I think those unpopulated round pads are for through-hole LEDs ( CR reference, flat on circle), which would make sense. Looks like it has pads for SMD RGB LEDs
Yeah, that seems clear enough, and it was my first guess when I looked at the board, but the designation threw me off. I've never seen "CR" on a PCB before in my life, and I can't find any examples of it denoting an LED, just people who sound as confused as I am finding it next to normal diodes. There's some suggestion that it's the archaic term, "crystal rectifier." I can imagine that showing up on a board decades ago, but it seems wild that it showed up on something made in the 2010s.
15:05 I have a case similar to that... not that exact version, but... in mine, it actually takes some mini-ITX power supply that fills the void you have at the top in that orientation.
This case looks (to me) like they've just taken the standard case, and just not cut the holes for the power supply.
Great video, loved the surprise fix and Soba appearance
LOL, I used to work at the repair depot that fixed up these N3000 units. Not a bad little computer!
that NCR 3000 was built to be the "server" side of a on-premise client/server POS system or similar. passively cooled, redundant drives, stick it on a shelf in the closet next to the rest of the required tech stuff (isp modem, cheapest 8 port switch possible, voip box, etc) and completely ignore it til someone from corporate IT shows up to mess with it.
Oh... That goober ITX system's case... I tried helping someone who had a pallet of them. She got them new for $10 each, and they were apparently sold for $19 in Shenzhen, and we're supposed to sell for $40 in the US market. She ended up sending all of them to a scrapper because absolutely nobody would buy them at $10 plus shipping.
love how the "highlight" marker in sponsorblock is set to the moment Soba walks in
It's interesting that they've chosen to tie earth-ground and negative together on the NCR model. It would mean that in the case of a broken power supply with the polarity reversed, the entire chassis would become live, quite the electrocution risk.
Well in that case you'd also have 110v hitting the DC ground so the PSU wouldn't survive long enough to get plugged in I think. But yeah, it seems odd.
@@CathodeRayDude Well a reversed polarity normally shouldn't mean anything, but if the laptop power supply was plugged in to an incorrectly wired outlet and suddenly experienced some failure due to shoddy manufacturing (unrelated to the outlet), you'd hear a pop and wonder why the computer wasn't working, grab it and... maybe get a bit of a shock.
Probably unlikely but having things earth grounded tend to be for pretty rare and freak occurences.
Well, it's the earth ground, not the AC neutral, that's tied to (-)DC, so inherently it being a switching PSU at all would isolate the DC from AC lines regardless of the AC hot side.
@@baaelectronics "Well actually" ... ANY power supply has to be galvanically isolated, not just switching. There's still going to be a transformer between mains and output, so the output will be floating with respect to mains (ergo polarity is irrelevant), and unless double-insulated, the chassis ground is almost certainly going to be tied to mains earth.
To clarify on my previous comment (because I just got to the NCR part of the video), the supply brick has a 3-prong plug. If it didn't tie DC negative to earth, there would be literally no point in having a 3-prong plug at all. So, in this case, _of course_ it passes through earth ground.
The 2-prong plug bricks are double-insulated, meaning there is no way (barring truly catastrophic failure that should not occur due to fusing, etc.) for mains to reach the DC output side. THOSE will not have earth on the DC negative. Everything on the secondary side is floating WRT mains. Although, if you plug that brick into a device that interfaces with anything else (a monitor, an audio amplifier, etc.), it will probably end up grounded through that interconnect anyway.
And that ^ is the reason for the Zero-ohm resistor. If you want a safety earth, but have an issue with ground loops (due mostly to bad electrical wiring or connections to other poorly-designed devices), you can replace that 0R with something else -- like a capacitor, to shunt RF noise to ground but isolate DC, or a higher-value R to provide a weak (DC) path to ground, etc. It's always cheaper to change a production line to use a different component than to redesign and replace the whole PCB, so it's a safety net that lets you alter the grounding technique as needed in the future.
OK! Lecture capture appliances. You're in my world now!
Thanks for including the Soba segment in the video. Excellent cuteness.
*drops computer, camera shakes and I can feel it through my screen*
CRD: "…Yeah maybe that didn’t do it for ya."
Man's sarcasm is on point today LOL! Keep up the good work.
Five out of Five Stars for the Molex to Wago Hack.
Been there, done that. ;)
Shoot .. that mini diagram is to cute ;)
More cat inspections necessary!!
The header on that control board at ~43:50 is the easy part if the board design makes a jot of sense - 6 pins, PIC18F part number on the micro, means it's the programming interface for the micro, set out so as to accept a PICKit2 or 3 to allow program and debug. The 4-pin header just between the USB connection and the micro is probably a tap point on the USB lines.
Ex NCR software dev. The NCR device is a server for back of house restaurant usage. Generally it runs Aloha point of sale backend components and cloud connection components. They run windows and use a custom image by NCR. These are very commonly found in the back offices of establishments like Krispy Kreme for example.
Back at Krispy Kreme you say?
@@Toonrick12 indeed. If you are in the office look up on shelves. You can also find the KVM under the monitor and follow it. Krispy Kremes usually have two servers, an NCR and a plain desktop style server for their loyalty system.
@@Toonrick12indeed. If you happen to be in the back office of a Krispy Kreme you can usually find them mounted up on a shelf. There will be a single internal switch for the Aloha network connected. You may also have a KVM switch below the monitor to switch between the little guy and a stock PC / server used for KK loyalty internally... depends on the franchisee.
I'm disappointed in you two. Very disappointed.
@@Toonrick12 noooo, why?
I loved every second of the jank. I miss my Philips DVD recorder with integrated hard drive, because I BET that thing was a little guy disguised as an AV equipment.
Gotta love that you went through that much trouble just to demo the machine for one minute
The moral of this entire series is that the journey is the destination
@@CathodeRayDude And what a ride!
41:13 I relate so hard to being 13 abstraction layers deep in troubleshooting only to find that kind of solution.
That NCR would actually make a cool little home theater PC, since it has HDMI output. My current one runs on a similar 3rd Gen i5. Add some external USB drives for your media and a wireless keyboard, then you'd be all set.
A fully passively cooled home theater PC? I dunno.. seems far fetched.
@@cdigames As CRD pointed out, the passive cooling in that is likely MASSIVELY overbuilt. And with a coat of paint, it would blend right in with many amplifiers.
@@mattelder1971 It was more of a jab at the fact that concurrent with this series, CRD has been showcasing the works of Niveus, whose whole thing was passively cooled home theater PCs
The fact that it has an option to make the intel noise at startup really shows you that they really wanted to be an iMac
IIRC my full ATX desktop board from them has the same option.
Sonic Foundry were the creators of Sound Forge (audio editor) and Vegas Pro (video editor, now owned by Sony). They pivoted into the distance learning space after selling off their wares. I lived and worked in Madison WI for a number of years. It's a small enough town that you eventually know everyone and anyone working in technology and doing software development. I probably wouldn't have heard about them otherwise.
Fun fact about that power plug used by the NCR guy: all (or at least most) of NCR’s point of sale controllers of a similar form factor use that plug. They are used in all of Walmart’s self-checkout devices. They likely used that plug to keep in line with their own standard.
i picked up my very own Little Guy thanks to you: a Dell OptiPlex 7040 Micro. it was cartoonishly cheap on eBay for the specs, and I'm currently undertaking an ill-advised attempt to Hackintosh it. Fun times.
Thin ITX is still a thing.
Most modern AIO PCs use custom boards though. Because of course they do. Imagine your PC being thicker than 2cm? I don't have that much room!
Thanks for doing this video, I could listen to you chatting about this stuff all day.
The green machine is really great looking, nice to see a properly bit of kit.
Man you are really knocking it out with this series. Nothing like it on RUclips that I know of.
It's a digital streaming codec. We used those in big auditoriums so people on Facebook could watch the town hall. We also used them for an auto auction to make it an online auto auction with live bidding. They were quite simple. Avaya did this and a few other VTC bridging companies did as well. I belive the touch panel was called the AMX Modero.
I have to say that little guys is one of my favorite series, like just seing you find them neat is like the coolest part of the videos :3 It makes me happy seeing you happy
That NCR system looks like it would make a really good firewall device.
Another entertaining geeking out session with CRD! Thoroughly enjoyed watching, thank you!
These were used extensively at my Alma mater (University of Bristol) for recording lectures and making them available online (via Blackboard IIRC)
i love it when you call us "nerds", its softening up my ego for sure
I for one can't wait for the long awaited sequal to this series: Big Guys
Having grown up in Dayton, Ohio, I got hit with so much nostalgia when I saw NCR in the title of this video.
Hey Gravis, I hope you doing great. Content is absolutely on point and I literally watch through them. Wish you a great week.
I have been obsessed with little guys in the past 15 years and I'm loving this series. This one is another banger!
I really like the NCR very well thought through and with accessible dual drives! Can't definitely see any on uk ebay. :(
Thin Mini ITX has standardized CPU socket placement and height along with standardized component heights, so that manufacturers can design cases with integrated heatsinks.
They were also intended for use in AIO computer monitors
Definitely going to add one of those NCRs to the shopping list. That heatsink would be awesome for an in vehicle solution.
Nothing like a new Little Guy to relax to after a good day of learning (:
10:29 Depending on when this particular box was built, I wonder if they were using new old stock Sigma Designs chips. That company liquidiated back in 2018 and hadn't been doing much for a couple years before then. Would certainly have helped them lower costs.
17:40 This type of plug is colloquially called "clover leaf" in Poland.
and the UK, almost as much as mickey mouse.
Date codes on the ICs of the AVerMedia card are from mid 2015, so a bit older than you thought.
DC plugs not having a screw on connector in consumer hardware is a feature, not a bug
the idea is if you trip over the cord it'll just unplug instead of dragging whatever hardware it's connected to crashing down onto the floor
that PCIe Mini capture card is the true little guy
That funky looking copper heatsink/fan on the Mediasite is actually a pretty expensive and heavy duty cooler for 1U server systems.
I use it myself in several servers that require very low profile coolers as I need the space for a 10GB network card hovering close to the cooler.
The damn thing sounds like a jet engine when at full speed.
That green box would make a absolute killer pfsense router. Heck I need to find me one. I'm running a small form factor Dell optiplex with 3770 i7 in it for my pfsense and it's a beast. Does everything I could dream of from a router. Hosting fail over Wan and not one not two. But three different local networks. Servers desktops and iot things with isolation.
This brings some vague livestream memories up from the depths of the memory archives.
making garlic toast and my jaw dropped at those capture cards. additionally, they’re ADORABLE.
44:23 - 44:57 - I was enjoying the video; but this is what told my brain to 'like' the video.
AVerMedia actually has a line of gamer oriented capture cards, and they seem to run a bit cheaper than Elgato. Mine's not installed right now(hulking GPU blocking literally all of the other PCIe slots), but looking at the software, I think it also does the multi-capture.
inverter frequency is nice to change, on a lot of laptops is at ~60-200hz which is quite often far too low. and just as well the average OEM (who does nothing essentially) leaves it at the stock for no reason.
change it to 500hz, even on laptops you can do this through software, your eyes will thank you.
These thin mini itx boards are cool. I had a couple and yes, did install an i7 4770 into one. With the huge HP laptop brick (140W?) it worked a treat.
Had a second one with an i5 4590T that I ran as a daily hackintosh for a few years. It worked amazingly well, everything worked. Dual screen HDMI output too. Aaaand, I got a thin mini ITX case from aliexpress which was tiny - literally the size of the motherboard with special thin mini ITX backplate which is half atx as you mentioned. The HDD even had a bracket to sit over the top of the motherboard. Super cool.
I totally get it on the drive thing, the reason typically is security compliance policies. I work for an ITAR compliant company for instance and by law we need to cerity drives are destroyed when leaving the company even if I know it doesn't have any important intellectual property. Makes me sad though.