PP and Dan, thanks for sharing some classical music. I enjoy it in small doses and know next to nothing about it.
My limited exposure to it growing up is all cartoon related - Fantasia, Peter and the Wolf, bugs bunny 'kill the rabbit'...I still have no idea of composers and think 'which cartoon did this music go to?' when I hear familiar classical music.
I received the rest of the parts last Wednesday night.
5.25" drive bay drawer. I tend to lose the small parts that go to my computer, thumb drives, bluetooth modules, etc... This way they are all together.
A bay adapter so I can mount the 2.5" SSD in the 3.5" bay. Unfortunately, the connectors for the drives built into the case did are to thick to connect to a 2.5" drive.
Front mounted multi-card reader. It also has two USB3 connectors in it.
This box was damaged when received. Fortunately, the cooler was intact.
On the right is the heatsink that comes with the 4770k processor. On the left is the one I'm using. IMO, if you are going to build your own system your usage of it is liable to be more then what the stock heatsink was designed to handle.
I removed a 1.5TB magnetic HDD from my old system and installed it in the new one. I had stopped using it as it's reporting a fair amount of errors and could fail at any time. That isn't really an issue with the new system as it is being used for redundant data storage only. Nothing operational is on it, and everything has copies on my network drive.
I took the wireless card out of my old system and am using it in the lone pci expansion slot available in the new one. It's an ABGN card, so not awesome. Not bad for my network though.
I also removed a 120mm fan from the old system and am using it in the new one. It was a relatively new addition to that system, and I didn't like the LED's that were in the old one. In addition, the old fan was the only thing in the whole system still using a 4 pin power connector. I needed to remove the connector for the 4 pin rail and replace it with the optional SATA power connector that came with the power supply. I wasn't going to be able to reach the 1.5TB drive I salvaged from the old system with the last SATA connector available on the other rail. I will also need to be able to attach the optional SATA power connector on the motherboard once I get an actual video card for the system. A fringe benefit is that I'm using a thermally controlled power connector on the main board for the front mounted fan now.
A nice feature of the new system is that I have a plug on the motherboard for USB 3 ports that remain hot when the system is turned off. So I have two front mounted USB 3 ports that I can use to charge things with the computer turned off.
After setting the system up the first time I was removing applications installed by default from the Fedora KDE spin I had installed and accidentally removed something I needed to get the session to load. That was especially annoying as no error was displayed, I simply wasn't able to log into the system after a reboot.
I'm not familiar with KDE, so it took me some time to realize what happened. I'm switching from Gnome to KDE as I'm tired of the Gnome 3 UI. I have found Gnome 3 to be very shiny, and absurdly inflexible.
I ended up just reinstalling the system. I didn't really lose anything thing though, as I had already backed everything up to the network drive when I was preparing for the switch to the new computer.
Another issue I had was an apparent glitch in the audio on the new system. I spent several hours trying to locate and correct whatever software issue was causing my audio to pop on a regular basis, only to discover that my headphones are damaged and that was the source of the problem. Yeah, now I feel stupid.