MaximumPC 2005 06

(Dariusz) #1

Release


Notes


Contents 0 6.

REGULARS


8 In/Out
You write, we respond

14 Quick Start
Big news, small articles

18 Head2Head
This month: Mini flash MP3 players

22 WatchDog
Maximum PC takes a bite out of bad gear

57 How To...
This month: Protect your digital data from
evil thieves

62 Ask the Doctor
All your PC problems, so lved

66 In the Lab
A behind-the-scenes look at product testing

96 Rig of the Month
It’s amazing what a person can do
with a PC!

REVIEWS


GAMING


78 Brothers in Arms : Road to Hill 30

79 NASCAR SimRacing

79 Track IR Pro game controller

80 Silent Hunter III

80 Empire Earth II

JUNE 200 5 MA XIMUMPC 5


T


he first home I networked was my own. I
bought what the realtor called a “fixer-upper,”
and like any hardware hacker steeped in the
DIY work ethic, I did most of the remodeling myself.
In addition to refinishing the floors, installing new
carpet, and adding a bathroom, I spent an afternoon
running Cat5 Ethernet to each room. It was an easy
job, and the mess was minor compared with the
crown-molding mess, the insulation mess, and the
“I think I just drilled into a water line” mess. But as I
discovered this month while working on our stream-
ing media cover story, installing network wiring in a
perfectly finished home is a whole ‘nother story.
Natalie, our brave art director, was kind enough
to volunteer her 110-year-old San Francisco
Victorian for the networking portion of the fea-
ture. The job seemed pretty straightforward: Drill
through the floor into the basement, and run Cat
to each room. Easy enough, right?
Drilling through the floor of your own home
isn’t for the faint of heart. Doing the same in a
friend’s home—especially a beautifully preserved
Victorian—is downright terrifying. When Mike
Brown drilled the first pilot hole in the baseboard
trim, Natalie seemed a tad nervous, but I was first-
day-of-junior-high-school scared.
I had no idea how dense Victorian floors are. After
about 20 minutes of drilling, I realized that Natalie’s
floor was significantly thicker than the flimsy ply-
wood sheeting in my first home. After 40 minutes,
the hole was actually smoking. At 50 minutes, the
drill bit broke, and I knew we were screwed. (Natalie
was the one with the jacked-up floor, but I was the
one catching the frightened looks.)
The broken end of the bit was wedged more than
a foot into the hole, well beyond reach. I had decid-
ed to hire a professional to repair the hole, when I
noticed a tiny metal tip poking out of the basement
ceiling. The hole was perfect! Five minutes of work
freed the bit, and we were back in business. We fin-
ished wiring Natalie’s network, and were on our way.
The moral of this tawdry tale? Every how-to
article you’ll ever read in Maximum PC is bound
to present some unforeseen problems. Even the
most innocent-sounding project can blow up in
your face. But just remember, everything’s fix-
able—with enough replacement parts, licensed
contractor visits, insurance settlement checks,
conflict-resolution therapists....

—WILL SMITH

68 Desktop PC: Polywell Poly 939N4-SLI

69 Desktop PC: iBuy Power Gamer-X

70 2.1 speakers: Tascam VL-S

70 Double-layer DVD burner:
Samsung Writemaster

72 Small formfactor PCs: FIC Piston;
Aopen EY 855-II XC Cube

74 RAID drive cage: Accordance ARAID 2000

74 PC enclosure: Cooler Master Praetorian 730

75 Wi- Fi routers: Links ys WRT54GX;
US Robotics USR 5461

77 Surround-sound emulator:
Xitel SoundAround

77 Gaming mouse: Logitech MX 518

Enraging Your Art Director


ccordance ARAID 2000

Cooler Master Praetorian 730

2

57

62

6

96

REVIEWREVIEWSS


Putting mini
music players to
the test.
p. 18

Adapting to
the new 24-pin
ATX PSU.
p. 63

Upping the
ante
on Wi-Fi
speeds.
p. 16

[email protected]

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