Wireless is the sound of silence ...
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Wireless is the sound of silence ...
A silent PC is the dream, but how about if you could tuck your noisey pc away and still enjoy complete silence ..? Only problem with this is all the wires!
"Demonstrations include the industry's first wireless DVI/HDMI equivalent; ultra-low latency wireless HD gaming between an Xbox 360 and a HDTV; wireless PC to HDTV Flat Panel connections;" link here
Add wireless USB2.0 into the equation and now you can put your PC in the understairs cuboard and have the Keyboard/Mouse/Monitor/DVD-RW on the desk only.
Solved
What do you guys think?
"Demonstrations include the industry's first wireless DVI/HDMI equivalent; ultra-low latency wireless HD gaming between an Xbox 360 and a HDTV; wireless PC to HDTV Flat Panel connections;" link here
Add wireless USB2.0 into the equation and now you can put your PC in the understairs cuboard and have the Keyboard/Mouse/Monitor/DVD-RW on the desk only.
Solved
What do you guys think?
The Belkin wireless USB hub was displayed accessing a USB HDD from a laptop from what I remember reading so I think it should be ok burning dvds if a little slower than an IDE drive.
The beauty is you will be able to make a box that houses the wireless DVI reciever, wireless USB hub, DVD-RW, wireless mouse/keyboard reciever, all in one tidy, small and silent enclosure that will screw under your desk leaving you with not only a silent but also very tidy almost wirefree setup!
Also with dual monitor on wireless you can have it linked to your TV also for the ultimate media center
It's the dream
The beauty is you will be able to make a box that houses the wireless DVI reciever, wireless USB hub, DVD-RW, wireless mouse/keyboard reciever, all in one tidy, small and silent enclosure that will screw under your desk leaving you with not only a silent but also very tidy almost wirefree setup!
Also with dual monitor on wireless you can have it linked to your TV also for the ultimate media center
It's the dream
A little edit to my previous post.
Using bluetooth for the mouse and keyboard would remove the need for any bulky recievers and if the wirless box for the monitor plugs directly into the back of it that would further reduce the clutter, you would beable to drop the usb hub and external DVD-RW in the desk draw and have only the monitor and wireless mouse and keyboard on the desk awesome
Using bluetooth for the mouse and keyboard would remove the need for any bulky recievers and if the wirless box for the monitor plugs directly into the back of it that would further reduce the clutter, you would beable to drop the usb hub and external DVD-RW in the desk draw and have only the monitor and wireless mouse and keyboard on the desk awesome
I've achieved much of this in my current machine - see Small & Flexible: Back-of-LCD variable power consumption. Granted, some might want a higher-powered CPU, but it has a small desk footprint and I'm going wireless with as many things as possible to eliminate clutter. Very quiet unless I overclock the CPU.fingers wrote:Using bluetooth for the mouse and keyboard would remove the need for any bulky recievers and if the wirless box for the monitor plugs directly into the back of it that would further reduce the clutter, you would beable to drop the usb hub and external DVD-RW in the desk draw and have only the monitor and wireless mouse and keyboard on the desk awesome
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- Location: Maine, USA
Removing the sound, and keeping the wires (quick solution)
Before I build my first quiet PC, or even knew it was possible, I came down with a disabling case of tinnitus. I needed a solution, fast, or I was going to lose my mind with the PC noise. Using some yankee ingenuity, I got extension cables for VGA, PS/2, USB, Audio, and Joystick. I cut a 2"x2" hole in the sheetrock of a wall of a neighboring walk-in closet. I stuck the noisy PC in there, ran the cables through wall up on to my desk, plugged the remaining hole space with damping material and voila, a quiet computing environment.
Yes, it was inconvenient run into the closet to put in CDs, but the quiet was well worth it. It's a quick and dirty solution to getting the noisemaker away from the human.
BTW, I think it's a joke that the *modern" game consoles: ps-2, xbox, xbox 360, make so much noise. It's a crime against the consumer.
Yes, it was inconvenient run into the closet to put in CDs, but the quiet was well worth it. It's a quick and dirty solution to getting the noisemaker away from the human.
BTW, I think it's a joke that the *modern" game consoles: ps-2, xbox, xbox 360, make so much noise. It's a crime against the consumer.
Re: Removing the sound, and keeping the wires (quick solutio
I have just found a wireless VGA adapter with keyboard and mouse pass through and Audio!! No USB though which is a shame ... a DVI/USB/Audio version is what is needed !! http://grandtec.com/wirelessVGA.htm
Even better ...
Link
The dongle plugs into your monitor/projector and uses Wireless 802.11 b/g to transmit the signal from any PC over a wireless network!
It's stated at $300USD which isn't to bad
Link
The dongle plugs into your monitor/projector and uses Wireless 802.11 b/g to transmit the signal from any PC over a wireless network!
It's stated at $300USD which isn't to bad
Re: Removing the sound, and keeping the wires (quick solutio
fingers wrote:
I have just found a wireless VGA adapter with keyboard and mouse pass through and Audio!! No USB though which is a shame ... a DVI/USB/Audio version is what is needed !! http://grandtec.com/wirelessVGA.htm
This sound of wireless is expensive.
Better than wireless might be using Cat5 cable for several reasons:
1)the devices to allow you to extend VGA, Audio, USB, DVI, FW, etc are already available
2)using CAT5 is cheaper than using wireless
3)wired signals are faster (meaning you can use higher resolutions) and more reliable than wireless.
The only downside is that you have to have one or two network cables running up to your desk, but overall i think its still a better solution
1)the devices to allow you to extend VGA, Audio, USB, DVI, FW, etc are already available
2)using CAT5 is cheaper than using wireless
3)wired signals are faster (meaning you can use higher resolutions) and more reliable than wireless.
The only downside is that you have to have one or two network cables running up to your desk, but overall i think its still a better solution