Primary Computer (media center/home theater/theatre (HTPC), gaming, and workstation box): Intel i7 950 CPU, three 2 GB of Kingston HyperX T1 Series 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM 2000 (PC3 16000) Desktop Memory Model KHX2000C9AD3T1K3/6GX DDR3 RAM (6 GB total; 2.5 GB shown; will install a 64-bit OS later on to use it all) in 32-bit old, updated Windows XP Pro. SP3 (Internet Explorer [rarely used] v7 and DirectX 9.0c [June 2010]), EVGA X58 SLI (132-BL-E758; BIOS date 5/11/2010; v6.00 PG; release number IX58SZ64) motherboard, MSI R4870-T2D512 OC Radeon HD 4870 512 MB (using a very old ATI Catalyst driver v9.4 since newer drivers cause Windows XP's clock to slow down with DVI and rare, random hard lock ups when playing videos; VGA, with a DVI adapter through a KVM, and DVI directly to the same monitor [dual connections one at a time]; S-video+composite cables and adapter connected to Toshiba W-627 VCR to a January 1996 19.5" Sharp CRT TV (196-M60 model; 76 watts; NTSC)), an used mid-tower Antec P180 ATX case, five 120 mm case fans, a side dual cooler fan to cool PCI cards, two onboard RealTek Gigabit Ethernets (only use one) and onboard RealTek HD Audio, Corsair CMPSU-650TX 650 watts ATX12V/EPS12V SLI Ready CrossFire Ready 80 PLUS Certified Active PFC power supply, two Broadband Technologies Air2PC-ATSC-PCI HDTV tuner cards (DVB; revision 2; connected to a RCA ANT751R antenna), LG HL-DT-ST DVDRAM GH24NS50 burner drive, Sony NEC Optiarc DVD-RW AD-7220S SATA burner drive, two internal 7200 RPM Seagate SATA hard disk drives (HDDs) [ST3320620AS 320 GB and ST310005N1A1AS-RK 1 TB], an optical USB three buttons mouse, and Logitech Z-2300 speakers (2.1 setup and analog). Secondary Computer: Intel Core 2 Q8200 (quad-core; default clock speeds; Socket 775 LGA) with a Scythe Andy Master 120mm CPU cooler (SCASM-1000), Antec Sonata Proto mid tower ATX case with two case 80mm case fans, MSI P43 NEO3-F (MSI-7514) motherboard (latest BIOS), two 1 GB of Crucial RAM (Samsung DDR2 800 (PC2-6400; 400 MHz), EVGA NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT PCIE vidoe card (512 MB of VRAM), onboard RealTek RTL8168C(P)/8111C(P) PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet and RealTek audio, 600 watts SeaSonic S12 PSU, ASUS TV Tuner Card 880 NTSC (cx23880), Pioneer CD/DVD Burner Black SATA Model DVR-218LBK LabelFlash Support, 3.5" disk drive, Corsair Force Series F115 Solid-State Disk (SSD) (CSSD-F115GB2-BRKT-A), Seagate Barracuda 7200.7 (ST380011A; 7200 RPM; 80 GB) HDD for storage/backup/secondary, USB+memory card reader front panel, and an Intel InBusiness 10/100 (82559) NIC (not connected). Running 64-bit Debian (Linux; stable; kernel v3.2.35 bpo x86_64). -- Others hooked up to the primary machine, but not all the time: An external Seagate Barracuda 7200.8 (ST325082 3A; 250 GB HDD; 7200 RPM) in a Kingwin HDD Enclosure (MS-350U-S) via USB (connected when needed), Hewlett Packard Photosmart 8450 printer (USB; AC connected when needed), an external USR serial port 33600 Sportster Faxmodem (Model: 0413; Product Code: 000839-03; rarely powered on when needed), Microsoft Sidewinder Joystick (USB; rarely hooked up and used), and a Hawking Technology's Hi-Gain USB Wireless-G Adapter (Model: HWU54D; original version; rarely connected and used). Both desktop machines are connected to an old (Y2K) Belkin Omni Cube (2-port; PS/2 and VGA) KVM to share a 19" Samsung SyncMaster 931BF LCD TFT monitor (4:3 aspect ratio and 1280x1024 native screen resolution), a Dell 104-key PS/2 SK-8110 keyboard, and a three-buttons PS/2 optical Logitch mouse (only for Debian machine since USB+PS/2 adapter cause pauses and freezes for the Windows PC with no PS/2 mouse port. Both computers and monitor are connected to APC Back-UPS XS 1500 (model: BX1500G; 865 watts; its USB cable connected to secondary machine; 5/17/2012)'s battery outlets. -- Apple PowerBook G4 with 1 Ghz, 512 MB of RAM, SuperDrive, 60 GB HDD, USB 1.1, and Mac OS X 10.2.8 (all updates). Collecting dust due to lack of usages and very old age. -- Everything is not overclocked and some items are connected to a 8-ports Netgear FS108 switch (10/100) for LAN and Linksys WRT54GL v1.1 Wireless-G 54Mbps router connected to an Ambit/Ubee U10C018 cable modem for Time Warner Cable's High Speed Internet/Road Runner. Also, a Linksys Instant Wireless Network Access Point (802.11b; 2.4 Ghz; 11Mbs; v2.6; WAP11; not always on) for old wireless devices and notebooks/laptops which is very rare.