They used to be, specifically before Dell bought out their company. I used to buy their PC once in 2005 which it was Area 51 ALX. I bought them in their website, back when they used to do a boutique custom built, made in Miami with an alluminium brief case and leather attache and a bunch of cool stuff based on what were they offer on their PC customizable in their website so I am happy with what I was paying back then, same as how people glad with what they paid for the gaming rigs like Voodoo, and Falcon Northwest PC. It's definitely worked pretty great until now and I'm just gonna upgrade it. OG Alienware's Customer service was greater than what Dell did on Alienware stuff right now.
Im wondering if it was an SLI config to begin with. The 2nd GPU slot at the case is filled up with an exact same piece of shielding as the rest. But even if they did, they clearly did not take out the ram and gpu for the money. Its still 9gb of RAM and the GPU is worthless
Man Ive been watching you for quite a few months now, on and off, and I wanna say that I love your style of presenting the information. No clickbait, respect for the viewership and straightforward content, with no fillers. Keep it up my man, you are doing a really good job! Never, ever change your style. 10/10 would gladly support
@@PassportBrosBusinessClass Income is More Important Even if you don't have to enter employment information, the credit card application will require you to list your total annual income. You can include alimony, child support, or any other income you want to be considered for repaying your credit card balance. To calculate your total annual income: multiply weekly income by 52; multiply bi-monthly income by 24; multiply income you receive every other week by 26, and multiply monthly income by 12. Listing Someone Else’s Income If you’re an adult over age 21, you can use someone else’s income on your credit card application if you can reasonably expect to have access to that income to pay your bills. For example, if your spouse regularly transfers a certain amount of money to your account, you can use the amount that’s transferred as your income. Or, if you have shared an account with someone else and have access to all the funds, you can use the regular deposits as your income. However, if your spouse, partner, or parent does not transfer money to you and you do not have joint access to an account with them, you cannot use their income on your credit card application. Get a Credit Card With Someone Else Another option for getting a credit card without a job is to get a credit card with another person either as an authorized user or as a joint account holder. As an authorized user, you have the right to use the credit card, but without the legal responsibility to pay. Your income and credit history are not considered when you’re added as an authorized user. Being a joint account holder gives you both the rights and responsibilities of using the credit card. When you apply jointly, your income and credit history are considered alongside that of the other applicant. However, if the other applicant has enough income, you can be approved for the credit card even if you don’t have a job. Try a Secured Credit Card While secured credit card applications will often ask about your employment and income, you’re more likely to be approved for one of these credit cards because you’re making a security deposit as collateral. With the Capital One Secured MasterCard, for example, you can make a security deposit as low as $49 for a $200 credit limit, depending on your creditworthiness. The higher your security deposit, the higher your credit limit will be. The Discover it Secured is another good option for a secured credit card. This one pays rewards on your credit card purchases. Before you apply for a credit card without first having a job, carefully consider your ability to repay the credit card balance. If you’re approved for a credit card and you don’t have the means to repay your charges, you face credit troubles: late payments, charge-offs, and debt collections.
I used to own an 2010 Area 51 Alienware PC that weighted backcracking 40kg... but the internal design of the unit was the best I have ever seen, it had a server-like ease to upgrade things
Hey @ RandomGaminginHD I actually have one of those exact cards (GTS 240) in my collection of old junk graphics cards, pulled it out of an old Dell XPS system from around the same era. I'm in the UK and would be happy to send it your way if you'd be interested, would love to see a video of them running in SLI! Hit me up!
yep, basically, it's a rebranded 9800GT, which was itself an evolution of the 8800GT, and the GTS250 was a rebranded 9800GTX. Good job Nvidia, always recycling...
lol o have before a alienware m15x laptop tht had 260 and i7 920 and i sold it for $440 lol now i have a ryzen 3 build with rx 580 8gb that i build for $440 fucking pc prices go down so fast
Lady at my work brought in her Dell XPS and it had this graphics card in it. She was complaining about the screen going black. took that cover off and it was literally packed solid with dust lol. Cleaned it out and shes back to drafting on it no problem
Georgie the rabbit Whirlpool Enthusiast ref: whrl.pl/RePKNY posted 2017-Mar-6, 8:27 pm AEST 816DAZ writes... When I get them, I put them, in due date order, in an "In Tray" in our office. This is adorable. An in tray. Just divine. Glad it works for you, it sounds like a really lovely system and process.
damn man, its a real gem you got there - 3 channel ddr3 low latency memory, x58 MB, put decent cpu and modern GPU in it and it can still rock! holly crap.. MB alone goes for 170-230 USD on aliexpress.
@@ajmalhadi97 Perk 1: Zero Liability Most credit cards, including those from Chase, offer a zero liability policy for fraudulent credit card charges. According to the Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA), you can only be liable for up to $50 in fraudulent credit card charges anyway - certain issuers just take it a step further. How it works: According to the Federal Trade Commission, “Your liability for unauthorized use of your credit card tops out at $50. However, if you report the loss before your credit card is used, the FCBA says you are not responsible for any charges you didn’t authorize. If your credit card number is stolen, but not the card, you are not liable for unauthorized use.” How it works in real life: If someone steals your credit card or credit card number, or if you notice transactions on your account that you didn’t make, you simply need to call your card issuer and file a claim. In most cases, your bank will issue you a credit while they conduct an investigation. If you truly are a victim of fraud, this process should be rather painless. However, you may be required to submit documentation or sign an affidavit.
A cpu swop for xeon x5675/5670 overclock to the 4ghz or more with the liquid cooler and upgrade the graphics card to rx580 or 1060 and you've got a PC that can hold it's own in modern games and would make a good video too
You obviously haven't looked at many higher-end cases these days. Some already do exactly what you describe. Some are modular and can be configured all sorts of ways. And then of course vendors offer all sorts of aftermarket kits and parts for custom PC modding, if that's your thing.
I had one of these from 2007 to 2018 almost all original and it gamed to the end I ran Eve online well on it as well as steam games and Skyrim at lower settings later though . Loved that computer
I have an area 51 and aurora from this generation with the moving fins that i've brought up to date with modern systems inside it. Really easy to do with the auroras, but the 51's need a special wiring kit that a guy on ebay used to make.
Better to go with a w3680/90, they have an unlocked multiplier, the x5670 is getting close to worthless now I've got a dual x5690 system along with a dual x5670 system
You have to make sure the board supports it first. I like into it, given that I have the same processor. My board doesn't support the xeons (Asus ROG Gene II). Still, it's not the big of an upgrade, so probably not worth it.
Yooo back before I got into PC building I use to want an alienware so bad. You should find a cheap used Area 51 that has that active cooling setup on the top where the fins open and close as the system get hotter/colder, that thing really blew my mind as a kid. Now after building several PC's I realize it's a total gimmick, but it'd be interesting to see how that mechanism has held up over time.
I'd have bought it in a heartbeat. Those old Alienware boxes were cool. Yeah, it's heavy enough to anchor a mega-freighter during a storm in the Channel, but my old Rampage 3 Extreme in a Haf-X case rig wasn't any better. But they did have that goofy-cool styling. You paid out the nose for it new, but they were darn cool.
I bought one of these back in 2011 for work. I opened it up recently and was amazed (like the video) to find that there was virtually zero dust in it. I have put some new SSd's in it and all it needs now is a up to date video card and it would still fly. On the back of buying this AW PC for work, in 2013 I bought a 18 inch laptop for home (780m SLI, 32gb ram, i7-4900QM) as my main gaming/work PC (adobe stuff). A few days ago I took out the original v-nand C drive and 5400rpm 1tb secondary drive and replaced both with new 1tb samsung 860 EVO drives. Its still an absolute beast. I have had zero issues with it - none of the drives I replaced failed, I just thought "it was time" and "just in case". Despite the initial cost, the build quality is peerless and I have never had a PC last as long or age as well as my AW laptop.
Is it possible to get a credit card with no income? I tried to apply for the coles mastercard which has no annual fees, but they refused to approve my application because i am a student and have no official income. I currently use a debit card and i have sufficient funds in my bank account, i was just hoping to take advantage of the rewards a credit card can offer. Are all credit cards going to just auto-decline if you dont have a minimum income?
I remember back in our LAN days, if someone rolled up with an Alienware he was the king (and his dad probably rich AF). That where the days, when you were a "high-performance enthusiast" because your GPU had a fan on it, and having to remove the sidepanel so your system doesn't overheat was really just a flex.
I still have and use my old Alienware aurora r3 i7 2600, I upgraded the ram, a new GPU, and a couple ssd. I’m still using it for gaming. Great computer.
Been using PCs since I was a toddler as my dad forced me into learning the ropes. Now I build PCs and always tried to get gaming rigs from my childhood to show my kids the difference between what I grew up with and them.
Damn, I used to have an Aurora R3 with a i7 2600k and a 6850. Great machine for the time. The Chassis was the coolest part of the machine. The memories ...
If I'm not mistaken, like the Dell XPS cases, you could swap out the OEM board and replace it with a ATX form factor board to modernize it if you wanted -- but that would ruin the nostalgic charm of it! Also, starting at 5:23, that is a HUGE fan/heatsink for that northbridge chipset! :O
I had an Alienware m15x laptop from around that era... was a screeming beast of a machine. Then one day I fired it up and it red screened me, took it to be repaired and it had basically paper weighted itself and fried almost every single piece of hardware in it
It’s crazy how fast technology evolves. Like we could never predict what’s going to happen just 5 years from now and that’s not even that far from now. It’s just crazy
I saw this PC in a PC-Shop around 8 years ago in Berlin, me as a 10 yo was super hooked that it had a watercooler and i had no clue how thats even supposed to work. You know, water and electronics, not a good idea. It was my dream PC at that time. Well, i was never able to afford it. Glad to see this 8 years later again!
I atually helped someone rebuild this exact model once. The hardest part of it was solving the connections between the power switch and the mother board since it had been gutted and then had the parts given back in a seperate box. With everything disconnected I had to try and figgure out how the case manager circuit board interfaced with everything else. It comes with a case safety and lighting manager along with a case fan manager which was all unplugged and it refused to switch on until I plugged certain fans and components into the case manager. Was a beast machine though and with a nice ram and GFX upgrade it ran more modern games with fairly little effort.
Oh man, This brings back memories when I had my old Alienware ALX, but the motherboard blew up. lol. I wish I would of kept the case though, and made a Sleeper unit out of it. :3
@Malachai Carter i'm now hv a 2005 pc, with athlon X2, 4GB RAM & some sort of ATi graphic card. Still using it for browsing & watch RUclips & movie. It's on windows 8, i tried giving it a windows 10 but the installation simply won't start. Probably gonna use it until support for win8 ends.
@Malachai Carter My Thinkpad T400 from 2008 is still perfectly usable for many modern tasks, mostly because it has 8GB of RAM and an SSD. Leaving Windows 7 on it helps it a lot, as Windows 10 would just destroy the Core2 Duo in it with all of its bloatware and spyware. If I put Linux on it, its lifespan would only increase. I also have a Thinkpad T61 from 2007 that has a weaker Core2 Duo and 2GB of RAM, but it can still be used for basic tasks because I put an SSD and Linux on it. If modern software developers weren't so profoundly incompetent, we wouldn't need increasingly powerful hardware to do the same basic tasks from over a decade ago with the same performance.
I have an Alienware I got not even two years ago. I was ripping computers apart since the mid-80s, I'm very happy to just buy a prebuilt on. Heck, my old PC (a Dell XPS) from about 9 years ago is still kicking. I got that one high-end, so it's an i7 920. Not great for gaming anymore (it could, just not well), but still a solid workhorse. Whoa! I take it back. I just checked and got that XPS back in April of 2009, so it's pushing 11 years old. I did upgrade some components (SSD, graphics, RAM), but it's still a solid machine.
I had the same GPU in the first OEM pc i had as a 13 years old child. It came inside a dell XPS and it also featured an intel quad q9300. Man... that brings back memories
Waldherz FeuerClan Why you cry 1080p, cheap TV guy in 2010? 2007 expansive monitor u used back in the days? nice? Why does he keeps crying 2k alienware.....?????????DELL for gaming, unable to understand why they bought that logo????
I actually have one of these!! It isn't the exact same model, it's a higher end one, but it has the same case, except on top it has "active cooling" vents that open and close as the computer needs them. I got it for 50 bucks from a friend's brother, who found it outside a dorm room af his college, destined for the scrap heap. It works perfectly, and I use it to power my Oculus Rift, I did change out the GPU with my old 1070. Its specs are an i7 975Extreme Edition (water cooled), 16gb ram (upgraded, was originally 12gb), EVGA FTW 1070 (originally 2x GTS 240's), and it still has its original RAID 0 setup, made of 2 500gb drives. I love it, and it helps keep some space free on my main rig for non-VR games.
Nice, update bios, Get a Xeon X or W 6core with an oc if u can (the top models of xeons have unlocked multi) and stick in a 1070 or something like that and see how it stands up to your zen. Cheers.
Also TWO 295s in SLI! A 2-GPU card in a dual configuration B^). Since the OEM memory was messed with, I doubt the Geforce GTS 240 was the original card since even back then that card was a pile of shit.
The i7 920 was a great CPU I ran one for 8 years and just kept upgrading the video cards, The build originally had 6GB RAM and later on 12GB (3x4GB triple channel config), eventually added an SSD for the OS, I had the CPU overclocked to 3.5Ghz with Hyperthreading enabled since day 1 which gave it a noticeable boost in FPS especially when it was paired with the last card I used in the system (AMD R9 290X) But might be worth noting these 1st gen i7's consumed a fair amount of power especially when overclocked, the motherboard was a Gigabyte GA-EX58-UD3R (rev. 1.6) and the system was always rock stable and never needed any repairs so kudos to Gigabyte as well.
I recently upgraded my brother's ALX, funnily enough i left the GPU in after a clean (a HD 7950). It had two 500GB HDD's raid0'd with Win7 so i added an SSD with Win10, upgraded the CPU from an i7 3820 to a 4820k (supports PCIe 3) and swapped out the 8GB 1600MHz RAM for 16GB 1600MHzx DDR3. Plays everything he wants (total war titles mainly) and second hand everything cost about £100. I enjoyed cleaning 10 years worth of dust out and it does look nice albeit different and it weighed a freakin ton!
i like you. i like that you look just like a regular guy and you dont tempt to play otherwise. Thank you for every Video you upload. i love every single one!!
I have one of these, but it's an Area 51 ALX. I bought it in pieces at the time and put it together, piece by piece. Has an i7-980 6-core processor and GTX 970 in it with 16GB DDR3 RAM. The Cooler died in it though andd I had to replace it with an H100. Still works perfectly fine.
9GB of DDR3 was fairly common back on the X58/LGA1366 platform in pre-built machines. HP also sold machines that way - I had one with 3x2GB and 3x1GB sticks paired with a i7-920 and a GTX 260. Due to the Tri-channel memory controller (6 DIMMs), that was considered fine back then.
Just put a GTX 1080 ti in it . Here in the U.S. $ 150 .00 or so . Great budget GPU that would run most games fairly well . The CPU isn't the bottleneck in most gaming applications . Tip that you probably already know : set the Nvidia Physics setting to GPU instead of auto or CPU .
I just bought one for 65 freakin dollars. Awesome deal. So much potential for things to do with it. I can keep the mobo, add 48GB RAM, and an x4690 6 core CPU, add SSD and Video card. I can replace all the guts, with a Ryzen system, I have a R7 3600X lying around, and get a 360 AIO cooler for a "Quasi Sleeper" system. I have a GTX 1080 lying around. Certainly a nice toy!🤩🤩🤩🥰🥰🥰
@@coreylong2353 Yeah, considering most TV and Movies in the past years have been around 30 fps, which is considered smooth enough for viewing, anything above 20 should be atleast playable.
Definitely, personally I’m only running 60 and when I used 120 I saw a massive difference. But at the same time I’ve recently played through red dead on the very lowest end ps4 and I was honestly fine with the 20-30, after an adjustment period ofc
My dad bought this exact computer new back in the day. Despite the fact that he wasn't a gamer by any means. Years later, he gave it to me so I wouldn't have to game on my Macbook Pro anymore. I replaced the 5870 with an RX-480 and it was my gaming workhorse until I built my own machine later on. Still have the RX480 in my current build, but the Alienware is sitting unused in a buddy's room now.
Hold on... Alienware was bought out by Dell; Then things went down hill. Back in the day... I was competition for the top of the range Alienware systems. They would be beaten with my budget systems. But budget was still a good mid/top system. The GT ultima glx was 60% less in price and had 40% better performance. The style was around the same, just slightly smaller.. I've only chucked the case of the last surviving one If only I could attach a picture you would see how similar they are. That system had mods carried out but the alx is actually older that you think. The problem your seeing was that the performance mod on these system was not only in better hardware (cherry picking) and the over clocking but also in the slimming of the software (OS) this combination was the way Alienware managed to be top of the most wanted. A lot of well paid advertising and "benching" which formed a lot of their advertising by covert means and then the following occured. They really were struggling when Dell took over and it was some years before things got up and going. Hardcore programmer's and followers never really got over the "it's just a over priced dell" thing; as you may know Dell borrowed a lot of Alienware to bring out its own "performance" systems and laptops. Many of my GT Ultima systems still are around today, though they would be modified by now or sold and dismantled. But many of the system were custom built for purpose and still run as originally designed and built. Some Costing over £7000 it wasn't going to be a use for a year or two and then buy a new one.. that's car money!! But as you have said, the price and ease to build your own is now a lot better and the margins so small I got out of the game a long time ago. I would say that these days I'm out of touch and days at the top of international benching are way gone... To much work for little rewards. But I'm liking the new stuff thats out and I've done some upgrading and have been on the hunt for a new styles system, I won't be taking much with me from my now dated system as over the years there is now a 20-30% performance difference. Yes not a lot, but enough. Nice find..
@@kuro9410_ilust yea and the pc in the video is a perfect example of shitware. I mean 2000 bucks for a good processor with a gts 240 hahaha my 5830 with i5 750 build cost me literally half the price and beat this shitware 10/0 in games
@@Joullele9 back then Alienware had the top spec, that system has been modded. I think it's base would be around 10-15 yesrs old. In about 2007 any savvy person would know how they weren't great, but marketing went on and on and on. Then Dell got there XPS systems which were the same at half the price.
I still have this (two in fact) and still game on it today. I have 12gb of ram and an AMD RX 580. Handles plenty of modern games just fine, and many games at highest graphics settings
I had a machine like this at a previous job. It was heavy as hell with a weaker CPU compared to modern ones, but with a fresh graphics card and SSD it was able to meet the minimum spec for VR and run everything just fine. Impressive, actually. Just don't put your back out trying to carry it!
You can look up the original configuration on the Dell Support site using the code on the back. Only came with one GTS 240 and, as crazy as it sounds, 9GB of memory was stock, as was the EVO.
Imo the power supply will need to be modified a little in order to acommodate a more modern GPU. Sure, it can drive the necessary juice, but upon inspecting a few of these newer PSUs which come with the 8 pin PCI-e power plugs, I found out that the extra two pins are connected to ground. So if you want to use an older PSU, you'll need to switch the GND cables on the PCI-e with a bigger gauge ones and connect the extra two pins to them (they go to the same place inside the PSU, so as long as you have the adequate cable gauge you can drive the voltage with no issues). This will help with the longevity of both the GPU and the cable.
I remember when I thought Alienware was the top tier of gaming PCs, then I learned to build.
They used to be, specifically before Dell bought out their company. I used to buy their PC once in 2005 which it was Area 51 ALX. I bought them in their website, back when they used to do a boutique custom built, made in Miami with an alluminium brief case and leather attache and a bunch of cool stuff based on what were they offer on their PC customizable in their website so I am happy with what I was paying back then, same as how people glad with what they paid for the gaming rigs like Voodoo, and Falcon Northwest PC. It's definitely worked pretty great until now and I'm just gonna upgrade it. OG Alienware's Customer service was greater than what Dell did on Alienware stuff right now.
America I mean if you don’t want to build a pc and you want warranty just buy a Alienware lol it’s like 200-300 usd overpriced
Facts
Same
I also bought an asus rog gt51ca and then I learned to build and I build a nice pc my self
This is literally a train from Half-Life 2
Combine keeps selling their Nova Prospekt equipment
wayyyy too true
stop citizen
Holy shit. All the flashbacks I just had from og half-life and counter strike
@Craig Tucker >nylon
These old alien ware reviews are my favorite
Noice
Ay
i think that also
Wanna buy my immaculate Alienware M15X? Check out e-bay UK. Only £150 finishes on sunday ;)
Spex Wise where’s the link
The guy took the RAM, the GPU but he left the 500gb ssd
ssd chould have been bad
That's why non tech savy people buy from Alienware
He may have just been using this old girl as a file server or something.
He forgot
Im wondering if it was an SLI config to begin with. The 2nd GPU slot at the case is filled up with an exact same piece of shielding as the rest. But even if they did, they clearly did not take out the ram and gpu for the money. Its still 9gb of RAM and the GPU is worthless
Man Ive been watching you for quite a few months now, on and off, and I wanna say that I love your style of presenting the information. No clickbait, respect for the viewership and straightforward content, with no fillers. Keep it up my man, you are doing a really good job! Never, ever change your style. 10/10 would gladly support
*When you realized an old card can run Crysis. While, your card cant*
GTX 1060 is enough to run Crysis but not with all settings turned VERY HIGH.
Objects can only be turned to HIGH.
Crysis don't design to run on newer card.... It don't look that good anyhow... so why would you?
Crysis struggling on 1060? Crysis 1 worked 60+ fps on hd 5830 with i5 750. Clearly not meant for newer cards.
@@PassportBrosBusinessClass Income is More Important
Even if you don't have to enter employment information, the credit card application will require you to list your total annual income. You can include alimony, child support, or any other income you want to be considered for repaying your credit card balance. To calculate your total annual income: multiply weekly income by 52; multiply bi-monthly income by 24; multiply income you receive every other week by 26, and multiply monthly income by 12.
Listing Someone Else’s Income
If you’re an adult over age 21, you can use someone else’s income on your credit card application if you can reasonably expect to have access to that income to pay your bills. For example, if your spouse regularly transfers a certain amount of money to your account, you can use the amount that’s transferred as your income. Or, if you have shared an account with someone else and have access to all the funds, you can use the regular deposits as your income. However, if your spouse, partner, or parent does not transfer money to you and you do not have joint access to an account with them, you cannot use their income on your credit card application.
Get a Credit Card With Someone Else
Another option for getting a credit card without a job is to get a credit card with another person either as an authorized user or as a joint account holder. As an authorized user, you have the right to use the credit card, but without the legal responsibility to pay. Your income and credit history are not considered when you’re added as an authorized user.
Being a joint account holder gives you both the rights and responsibilities of using the credit card. When you apply jointly, your income and credit history are considered alongside that of the other applicant. However, if the other applicant has enough income, you can be approved for the credit card even if you don’t have a job.
Try a Secured Credit Card
While secured credit card applications will often ask about your employment and income, you’re more likely to be approved for one of these credit cards because you’re making a security deposit as collateral. With the Capital One Secured MasterCard, for example, you can make a security deposit as low as $49 for a $200 credit limit, depending on your creditworthiness. The higher your security deposit, the higher your credit limit will be. The Discover it Secured is another good option for a secured credit card.
This one pays rewards on your credit card purchases.
Before you apply for a credit card without first having a job, carefully consider your ability to repay the credit card balance. If you’re approved for a credit card and you don’t have the means to repay your charges, you face credit troubles: late payments, charge-offs, and debt collections.
@@tasteful7364 He's already dead inside...
I used to own an 2010 Area 51 Alienware PC that weighted backcracking 40kg... but the internal design of the unit was the best I have ever seen, it had a server-like ease to upgrade things
Was that the one with the six drive bays behind the motherboard and motorized top vents on the aluminum case? I would've kept that case forever.
"weighing in the same as a large dog or overweight child" that actually made me choke on my soup
Hey @
RandomGaminginHD I actually have one of those exact cards (GTS 240) in my collection of old junk graphics cards, pulled it out of an old Dell XPS system from around the same era.
I'm in the UK and would be happy to send it your way if you'd be interested, would love to see a video of them running in SLI! Hit me up!
Potato
Up
Would definitely like to see this!
Message him on Instagram so he'll be able to see this
Yes yes
Man. That pc is looking good, even after 10 years. Wow
That gts 240 is actually a rebranded 9800gt.
you mean 8800GT?
really I've had one of these ASUS 9800GT 1GB. Unfortunatelly it broked after the warenty had expired. sorry for my eng
@@hanspeter2210 Yes but no. The memory and clocks are higher on the 240. Also, it has opengl 3.0 support not 2.1
yep, basically, it's a rebranded 9800GT, which was itself an evolution of the 8800GT, and the GTS250 was a rebranded 9800GTX. Good job Nvidia, always recycling...
@@TheRealWALLABI hd 7970, r9 290, r9 390
Edit: 280x and 380x, not x90
Imagine spending $2000 just to end up with a GTS 240
Great review!
Brah, He Got It For *150* Pounds
@@Saleem_Bhai Brah, did u even watch the video? It used to be 2000 dollars* when it got released.
Would thing at least a gtx 280 or better yet a 295 lol
Pretty sure the GTS 240 is NOT the OEM card.
lol o have before a alienware m15x laptop tht had 260 and i7 920 and i sold it for $440 lol now i have a ryzen 3 build with rx 580 8gb that i build for $440 fucking pc prices go down so fast
That was a jackpot, if you are lucky you can find just an x58 motherboard and that ssd for what you paid
First gen i7s are still great today when overclocked, yeah that was a steal
X58 boards are expensive
Thats my point
@@mitchell3876 I need a cheap system for editing. I'm looking at older i7's
Does anyone know where he bought it from?
Lady at my work brought in her Dell XPS and it had this graphics card in it. She was complaining about the screen going black. took that cover off and it was literally packed solid with dust lol. Cleaned it out and shes back to drafting on it no problem
Love your vids lad, keep it going!!!
Georgie the rabbit
Whirlpool Enthusiast
ref: whrl.pl/RePKNY
posted 2017-Mar-6, 8:27 pm AEST
816DAZ writes...
When I get them, I put them, in due date order, in an "In Tray" in our office.
This is adorable. An in tray. Just divine. Glad it works for you, it sounds like a really lovely system and process.
damn man, its a real gem you got there - 3 channel ddr3 low latency memory, x58 MB, put decent cpu and modern GPU in it and it can still rock!
holly crap.. MB alone goes for 170-230 USD on aliexpress.
What an intro......
Music?
@@connorhillam8146 i think I've heard it from ni no kuni 2 game I guess
@@ajmalhadi97 Perk 1: Zero Liability
Most credit cards, including those from Chase, offer a zero liability policy for fraudulent credit card charges. According to the Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA), you can only be liable for up to $50 in fraudulent credit card charges anyway - certain issuers just take it a step further.
How it works: According to the Federal Trade Commission, “Your liability for unauthorized use of your credit card tops out at $50. However, if you report the loss before your credit card is used, the FCBA says you are not responsible for any charges you didn’t authorize. If your credit card number is stolen, but not the card, you are not liable for unauthorized use.”
How it works in real life: If someone steals your credit card or credit card number, or if you notice transactions on your account that you didn’t make, you simply need to call your card issuer and file a claim. In most cases, your bank will issue you a credit while they conduct an investigation. If you truly are a victim of fraud, this process should be rather painless. However, you may be required to submit documentation or sign an affidavit.
@@stevethea5250 u high
When you pressed that button at 0:38 I was like "YOOOOOO! A feature more useless than RGB?!"
DAAAAMN BRO IT IS!!
DAAAAAMNNNNM
I saw that and said "I want that." Now to find one.
A cpu swop for xeon x5675/5670 overclock to the 4ghz or more with the liquid cooler and upgrade the graphics card to rx580 or 1060 and you've got a PC that can hold it's own in modern games and would make a good video too
You don´t even need a liquid cooler... Got my 5670 running on air at 4,2Ghz for years now. Temps are at 67 max with aida64 and 55-60 while gaming.
@@datreja9573 yeah I know but just the best way to make the most of what he had there
Will the case ventilation impact air cooling significantly?
@@FightCollective I have the same Dell ms-7591 motherboard. It's an unlocked mobo with a built in overclocking utility.
Those Xeons are really nice CPU's. I've had a Xeon X5670 4.4GHz since 2016.
5:07 sounds like my grandmas 1960's hoover
It would be dope if someone made a case like that that opens on the front for airflow instead of optical drives and that lambo side panel.
You obviously haven't looked at many higher-end cases these days. Some already do exactly what you describe. Some are modular and can be configured all sorts of ways.
And then of course vendors offer all sorts of aftermarket kits and parts for custom PC modding, if that's your thing.
I had one of these from 2007 to 2018 almost all original and it gamed to the end I ran Eve online well on it as well as steam games and Skyrim at lower settings later though . Loved that computer
And you them in Alienware website ?? Which we can customized them before we paid for it ??
okay, but can it run coolmathgames at a full 60 fps with no stutter and no fps drop
It will have some PROBLEMS
Lmao!###
@@ivanbiota99 underrated! Lmao
It’s gonna have to be hard
It will but you have to turn the settings low.
I have an area 51 and aurora from this generation with the moving fins that i've brought up to date with modern systems inside it. Really easy to do with the auroras, but the 51's need a special wiring kit that a guy on ebay used to make.
A fantastic upgrade to this pc would be a Xeon X56xx, 6/12 processor that takes easy GTX 1070 / RX 590
I agree, xeon x5670 is very cheap, is a good option
I'd probably just upgrade the gpu first, the i7 920, as shown, is still very capable.
VellsGaming the x5675 has always been the best value
Better to go with a w3680/90, they have an unlocked multiplier, the x5670 is getting close to worthless now
I've got a dual x5690 system along with a dual x5670 system
You have to make sure the board supports it first. I like into it, given that I have the same processor. My board doesn't support the xeons (Asus ROG Gene II). Still, it's not the big of an upgrade, so probably not worth it.
Yooo back before I got into PC building I use to want an alienware so bad. You should find a cheap used Area 51 that has that active cooling setup on the top where the fins open and close as the system get hotter/colder, that thing really blew my mind as a kid. Now after building several PC's I realize it's a total gimmick, but it'd be interesting to see how that mechanism has held up over time.
I don't think there are many cheap ones to be had,if any.
I had a Core 2 Quad Aurora, it weighed 50pls!
Make a review
Lol
Was it the generation before this one??? I had both auroras.
You know you are getting old when Black Ops is considered a "classic".
Great video man.
I'd have bought it in a heartbeat. Those old Alienware boxes were cool. Yeah, it's heavy enough to anchor a mega-freighter during a storm in the Channel, but my old Rampage 3 Extreme in a Haf-X case rig wasn't any better. But they did have that goofy-cool styling. You paid out the nose for it new, but they were darn cool.
I would literally just bought it for the case alone, even if I had to gut the thing and replace it with new parts.
I bought one of these back in 2011 for work. I opened it up recently and was amazed (like the video) to find that there was virtually zero dust in it. I have put some new SSd's in it and all it needs now is a up to date video card and it would still fly. On the back of buying this AW PC for work, in 2013 I bought a 18 inch laptop for home (780m SLI, 32gb ram, i7-4900QM) as my main gaming/work PC (adobe stuff). A few days ago I took out the original v-nand C drive and 5400rpm 1tb secondary drive and replaced both with new 1tb samsung 860 EVO drives. Its still an absolute beast. I have had zero issues with it - none of the drives I replaced failed, I just thought "it was time" and "just in case". Despite the initial cost, the build quality is peerless and I have never had a PC last as long or age as well as my AW laptop.
Always loved the design of the Alienware pc cases, i view them as collectibles.
New ones are just a Dell office PC with plastic around it
Dont know if its your camera but damn that alienware case looked nice and clean from the outside and inside. That black color
Is it possible to get a credit card with no income?
I tried to apply for the coles mastercard which has no annual fees, but they refused to approve my application because i am a student and have no official income. I currently use a debit card and i have sufficient funds in my bank account, i was just hoping to take advantage of the rewards a credit card can offer.
Are all credit cards going to just auto-decline if you dont have a minimum income?
@@stevethea5250 not even slightly related to the vid
That's the main selling of Alienware system really, they always make a good lookin case.
It actually sparkles ✨ in good light, they mixed the paint with glitter, lots of blues and purples
@@third-ratedude4234 facebook.com/D12MUSIC/videos/2914943958588465/
With a GPU upgrade the alienware will game once again I've got a i7 930 in a older system and it still plays everything I want
I remember back in our LAN days, if someone rolled up with an Alienware he was the king (and his dad probably rich AF). That where the days, when you were a "high-performance enthusiast" because your GPU had a fan on it, and having to remove the sidepanel so your system doesn't overheat was really just a flex.
This design 10 years ago
Cool enough
The editing has vastly improved well done mate and keep it up I’ve been watching for 2 years and I’ve enjoyed the past 2 years
Thank you :)
Got it! We should all go out an buy brand new Alienware computers!
:P
I still have and use my old Alienware aurora r3 i7 2600, I upgraded the ram, a new GPU, and a couple ssd. I’m still using it for gaming. Great computer.
Mine is still running today! A 2600k is running it. I finally built my first computer last year, but I still use the Alienware.
You rebuilt your PC with that Alienware cases ??
YT Anonymity no. I said I finally built a computer, but I still use the Alienware. It is still running as originally built.
Been using PCs since I was a toddler as my dad forced me into learning the ropes. Now I build PCs and always tried to get gaming rigs from my childhood to show my kids the difference between what I grew up with and them.
$150 for this is awesome dirt cheap.
X58 mobo is worth more
@@Adam130694 not always
Why are your videos so satisfying to Watch?
Man my current PC is still older than that
Damn, I used to have an Aurora R3 with a i7 2600k and a 6850. Great machine for the time. The Chassis was the coolest part of the machine. The memories ...
If I'm not mistaken, like the Dell XPS cases, you could swap out the OEM board and replace it with a ATX form factor board to modernize it if you wanted -- but that would ruin the nostalgic charm of it! Also, starting at 5:23, that is a HUGE fan/heatsink for that northbridge chipset! :O
I had an Alienware m15x laptop from around that era... was a screeming beast of a machine. Then one day I fired it up and it red screened me, took it to be repaired and it had basically paper weighted itself and fried almost every single piece of hardware in it
I still use mine, paid $40 at a yard sale. 22gb ddr3 gtx 750ti runs great
22gb ddr3 wtf? unmatched sticks?
Oh wow! I had this almost exact PC with an ATi Radeon 5870, i7 920 (OC'd to 3.2) and 12 GBs of RAM. Thanks for the blast from the past.
"what really matters is on the inside" aww
It’s crazy how fast technology evolves. Like we could never predict what’s going to happen just 5 years from now and that’s not even that far from now. It’s just crazy
2000$
Huh, I'm first after 6 months
Well, second i guess
I mean second
@@realchronal If you count from zero yes
I saw this PC in a PC-Shop around 8 years ago in Berlin, me as a 10 yo was super hooked that it had a watercooler and i had no clue how thats even supposed to work. You know, water and electronics, not a good idea. It was my dream PC at that time. Well, i was never able to afford it. Glad to see this 8 years later again!
I actually have one of these lol. Mine had the fancy moving vents on top.
My 2014 X51 looks like it came out yesterday, they did a great job at designing their cases
Slap a xeon 5675 in there with a rx570/580 and for an additional 120€ you have a PC for years to come!
I atually helped someone rebuild this exact model once. The hardest part of it was solving the connections between the power switch and the mother board since it had been gutted and then had the parts given back in a seperate box. With everything disconnected I had to try and figgure out how the case manager circuit board interfaced with everything else. It comes with a case safety and lighting manager along with a case fan manager which was all unplugged and it refused to switch on until I plugged certain fans and components into the case manager. Was a beast machine though and with a nice ram and GFX upgrade it ran more modern games with fairly little effort.
Oh man, This brings back memories when I had my old Alienware ALX, but the motherboard blew up. lol. I wish I would of kept the case though, and made a Sleeper unit out of it. :3
The case is the coolest part why would you get rid of that
I love my Aurora R9. That machine packs a punch with a monitor at 240mhz refresh rate.
this 2010 pc is a perfectly usable PC in 2020. Imagine using 1998 pcs in 2008 or 1988 pc in 1998
Yep Moore's law is now dead
@Malachai Carter i'm now hv a 2005 pc, with athlon X2, 4GB RAM & some sort of ATi graphic card. Still using it for browsing & watch RUclips & movie. It's on windows 8, i tried giving it a windows 10 but the installation simply won't start. Probably gonna use it until support for win8 ends.
@Malachai Carter My Thinkpad T400 from 2008 is still perfectly usable for many modern tasks, mostly because it has 8GB of RAM and an SSD. Leaving Windows 7 on it helps it a lot, as Windows 10 would just destroy the Core2 Duo in it with all of its bloatware and spyware. If I put Linux on it, its lifespan would only increase. I also have a Thinkpad T61 from 2007 that has a weaker Core2 Duo and 2GB of RAM, but it can still be used for basic tasks because I put an SSD and Linux on it. If modern software developers weren't so profoundly incompetent, we wouldn't need increasingly powerful hardware to do the same basic tasks from over a decade ago with the same performance.
I have an Alienware I got not even two years ago. I was ripping computers apart since the mid-80s, I'm very happy to just buy a prebuilt on. Heck, my old PC (a Dell XPS) from about 9 years ago is still kicking. I got that one high-end, so it's an i7 920. Not great for gaming anymore (it could, just not well), but still a solid workhorse. Whoa! I take it back. I just checked and got that XPS back in April of 2009, so it's pushing 11 years old. I did upgrade some components (SSD, graphics, RAM), but it's still a solid machine.
Can you upgrade it to a Xeon 6 core, more ram and a decent graphics card? Would be interesting to see it being a powerhouse again
I had the same GPU in the first OEM pc i had as a 13 years old child. It came inside a dell XPS and it also featured an intel quad q9300. Man... that brings back memories
1080p at launch? Nice
Waldherz FeuerClan
Why you cry 1080p, cheap TV guy in 2010? 2007 expansive monitor u used back in the days?
nice?
Why does he keeps crying 2k alienware.....?????????DELL for gaming, unable to understand why they bought that logo????
@@lucasrem What?
@@Waldherz He's an idiot, pay no attention to that fool.
@@lucasrem Could you like... shut the fuck up?
@@DerrickRG Finnish?
I still have my old xps somewhere, q6600, 4gb ram and an 8800gtx. Such a beast back in it's day. Might have to get it out and show her some love.
On Call of duty, i turned my anti aliasing off and it removed the cap for me. I did this on COD:MW (2007)
I actually have one of these!! It isn't the exact same model, it's a higher end one, but it has the same case, except on top it has "active cooling" vents that open and close as the computer needs them. I got it for 50 bucks from a friend's brother, who found it outside a dorm room af his college, destined for the scrap heap. It works perfectly, and I use it to power my Oculus Rift, I did change out the GPU with my old 1070. Its specs are an i7 975Extreme Edition (water cooled), 16gb ram (upgraded, was originally 12gb), EVGA FTW 1070 (originally 2x GTS 240's), and it still has its original RAID 0 setup, made of 2 500gb drives. I love it, and it helps keep some space free on my main rig for non-VR games.
That's a nice living room set, mate.
bro i like how youtube recommended my own pc nice.
Nice, update bios, Get a Xeon X or W 6core with an oc if u can (the top models of xeons have unlocked multi) and stick in a 1070 or something like that and see how it stands up to your zen. Cheers.
Only the w series are unlocked, the x series (dual socket) aren't
The 920 that he has is unlocked multi as well 😊
My old Xeon W3550 in my Thinkcentre has a bit better performance than this i7 with the same cores, threads, and TDP.
I still have my Alienware Area 51 ALX. I did upgrade the video and power system (and power cables). Still running it as my secondary system.
You mean the Area 51 ALX R1 which it have 6 HDD slot inside its right panel cover ??? Or Area 51 ALX Predator which was made around 2004-2006 ??
It is listed as the Area 51 ALX But yes it is from the 2009 and the successor to the Predator.
ALX Model Had Motorized Vents and more lights on the sides.
Also TWO 295s in SLI! A 2-GPU card in a dual configuration B^).
Since the OEM memory was messed with, I doubt the Geforce GTS 240 was the original card since even back then that card was a pile of shit.
The i7 920 was a great CPU I ran one for 8 years and just kept upgrading the video cards, The build originally had 6GB RAM and later on 12GB (3x4GB triple channel config), eventually added an SSD for the OS, I had the CPU overclocked to 3.5Ghz with Hyperthreading enabled since day 1 which gave it a noticeable boost in FPS especially when it was paired with the last card I used in the system (AMD R9 290X) But might be worth noting these 1st gen i7's consumed a fair amount of power especially when overclocked, the motherboard was a Gigabyte GA-EX58-UD3R (rev. 1.6) and the system was always rock stable and never needed any repairs so kudos to Gigabyte as well.
I wonder how it would perform with a few upgrades, Xeon paired with a RX 470/570 or Nvidia equivalent?
Yeah Intel CPUs hate amd GPUs. They are run like shit compared to the nVidia equivalent
I recently upgraded my brother's ALX, funnily enough i left the GPU in after a clean (a HD 7950). It had two 500GB HDD's raid0'd with Win7 so i added an SSD with Win10, upgraded the CPU from an i7 3820 to a 4820k (supports PCIe 3) and swapped out the 8GB 1600MHz RAM for 16GB 1600MHzx DDR3.
Plays everything he wants (total war titles mainly) and second hand everything cost about £100. I enjoyed cleaning 10 years worth of dust out and it does look nice albeit different and it weighed a freakin ton!
Oh 360p-ness is just pure quality
@@drewh4911 Cuz u r late
i like you. i like that you look just like a regular guy and you dont tempt to play otherwise. Thank you for every Video you upload. i love every single one!!
curious to see what this can do with a rx 470 4gb gpu or 570, and if that board is overclockable.
i bet its easy overclockable like my old alienware m17x laptop.
I have one of these, but it's an Area 51 ALX. I bought it in pieces at the time and put it together, piece by piece. Has an i7-980 6-core processor and GTX 970 in it with 16GB DDR3 RAM. The Cooler died in it though andd I had to replace it with an H100. Still works perfectly fine.
Highend gaming computers. The only thing with a higher depreciation value than Luxury cars.
I gave my Auraura to my brother a couple of years ago, the machine is a beauty and I'd love to put my current build in that chassis
5:15 Cheng chong your opinion is wrong
Rgb adds infinitely more performance to your system
Exactly , my PC runs Witcher 3 at 450 fps without gpu , all hail to rgb
I still have a working one. Updated graphics card and ram but still chugs along well.
Good buy. Buy a x5675 on Ali 6C/12T CPU and a used RX 580 and your good to go,that ram though!
9GB of DDR3 was fairly common back on the X58/LGA1366 platform in pre-built machines. HP also sold machines that way - I had one with 3x2GB and 3x1GB sticks paired with a i7-920 and a GTX 260. Due to the Tri-channel memory controller (6 DIMMs), that was considered fine back then.
*Steve* is tryina hard to reach 300k subs
*i expected you in here*
@@fritz__ *hello you both*
Everytime I see cases like this, I am glad fractal design exists
I like how everytime he has a video with an i7-920, you can always count on the "slap a xeon" in there comments
Lol.....he knows about the xeons
doesn't fucking seem like it
@@Craziestbanana yes, that he's literally made a video on the x5650 proves your point...no wait
@@bluescluessuperagent w3680? you can't overlock a x5650 in a oem x58 board, you can with a w3680, he hasn't explored that.
@@Craziestbanana that's at least original lol.
Just put a GTX 1080 ti in it . Here in the U.S. $ 150 .00 or so . Great budget GPU that would run most games fairly well . The CPU isn't the bottleneck in most gaming applications . Tip that you probably already know : set the Nvidia Physics setting to GPU instead of auto or CPU .
That intro though.
I just bought one for 65 freakin dollars. Awesome deal. So much potential for things to do with it. I can keep the mobo, add 48GB RAM, and an x4690 6 core CPU, add SSD and Video card. I can replace all the guts, with a Ryzen system, I have a R7 3600X lying around, and get a 360 AIO cooler for a "Quasi Sleeper" system. I have a GTX 1080 lying around. Certainly a nice toy!🤩🤩🤩🥰🥰🥰
>crysis plodding along just fine
>dips in to the mid 20's
Okaaaaaaayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy
Dirty Dog this is a budget channel 25-30 is technically playable and that’s all budget users need
@@coreylong2353 Yeah, considering most TV and Movies in the past years have been around 30 fps, which is considered smooth enough for viewing, anything above 20 should be atleast playable.
Definitely, personally I’m only running 60 and when I used 120 I saw a massive difference. But at the same time I’ve recently played through red dead on the very lowest end ps4 and I was honestly fine with the 20-30, after an adjustment period ofc
My dad bought this exact computer new back in the day. Despite the fact that he wasn't a gamer by any means. Years later, he gave it to me so I wouldn't have to game on my Macbook Pro anymore. I replaced the 5870 with an RX-480 and it was my gaming workhorse until I built my own machine later on. Still have the RX480 in my current build, but the Alienware is sitting unused in a buddy's room now.
Hold on...
Alienware was bought out by Dell;
Then things went down hill.
Back in the day... I was competition for the top of the range Alienware systems. They would be beaten with my budget systems. But budget was still a good mid/top system.
The GT ultima glx was 60% less in price and had 40% better performance. The style was around the same, just slightly smaller.. I've only chucked the case of the last surviving one If only I could attach a picture you would see how similar they are.
That system had mods carried out but the alx is actually older that you think.
The problem your seeing was that the performance mod on these system was not only in better hardware (cherry picking) and the over clocking but also in the slimming of the software (OS) this combination was the way Alienware managed to be top of the most wanted. A lot of well paid advertising and "benching" which formed a lot of their advertising by covert means and then the following occured.
They really were struggling when Dell took over and it was some years before things got up and going. Hardcore programmer's and followers never really got over the "it's just a over priced dell" thing; as you may know Dell borrowed a lot of Alienware to bring out its own "performance" systems and laptops.
Many of my GT Ultima systems still are around today, though they would be modified by now or sold and dismantled. But many of the system were custom built for purpose and still run as originally designed and built.
Some Costing over £7000 it wasn't going to be a use for a year or two and then buy a new one.. that's car money!!
But as you have said, the price and ease to build your own is now a lot better and the margins so small I got out of the game a long time ago.
I would say that these days I'm out of touch and days at the top of international benching are way gone...
To much work for little rewards.
But I'm liking the new stuff thats out and I've done some upgrading and have been on the hunt for a new styles system, I won't be taking much with me from my now dated system as over the years there is now a 20-30% performance difference. Yes not a lot, but enough.
Nice find..
todays alienware's specs for the money is pretty good tho unlike back in 12-13 where it was shit for the price
@@kuro9410_ilust yea and the pc in the video is a perfect example of shitware. I mean 2000 bucks for a good processor with a gts 240 hahaha my 5830 with i5 750 build cost me literally half the price and beat this shitware 10/0 in games
How many pints you drink before you typed that?
@@Joullele9 back then Alienware had the top spec, that system has been modded.
I think it's base would be around 10-15 yesrs old.
In about 2007 any savvy person would know how they weren't great, but marketing went on and on and on. Then Dell got there XPS systems which were the same at half the price.
@@A_Man_In_His_Van sorry I'm disabled, attempted a correction for you.
I don't drink.
I still have this (two in fact) and still game on it today. I have 12gb of ram and an AMD RX 580. Handles plenty of modern games just fine, and many games at highest graphics settings
damn this was my dream when I was like 10 lol
I had a machine like this at a previous job. It was heavy as hell with a weaker CPU compared to modern ones, but with a fresh graphics card and SSD it was able to meet the minimum spec for VR and run everything just fine. Impressive, actually. Just don't put your back out trying to carry it!
"I found this one last week for around 150 pounds" - so it cost about the same as it weighs, then
You can look up the original configuration on the Dell Support site using the code on the back. Only came with one GTS 240 and, as crazy as it sounds, 9GB of memory was stock, as was the EVO.
No one:
RUclips recommendations: Wanna see what’s inside a ten year old PC?
Imo the power supply will need to be modified a little in order to acommodate a more modern GPU. Sure, it can drive the necessary juice, but upon inspecting a few of these newer PSUs which come with the 8 pin PCI-e power plugs, I found out that the extra two pins are connected to ground. So if you want to use an older PSU, you'll need to switch the GND cables on the PCI-e with a bigger gauge ones and connect the extra two pins to them (they go to the same place inside the PSU, so as long as you have the adequate cable gauge you can drive the voltage with no issues). This will help with the longevity of both the GPU and the cable.