Another great place to shop for Tower Duo products is Amazon. They have more than just books!
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Fagor Splendid 6-Quart Pressure Cooker
List Price: $89.99
Sale Price: $49.99
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Pressure cooking uses pressurized steam to cook healthy meals with beans, grains, meat, poultry, and seafood in much less time than many other cooking methods require. This Splendid pressure cooker holds a maximum capacity of 6 quarts of Italian chicken soup or beans with sausage and works on all heat sources...
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Apple Mac Mini MC816LL/A Desktop (NEWEST VERSION)
List Price: $799.00
Sale Price: $762.99
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Mac mini is even more of a powerhouse, thanks to a new dual-core Intel Core i5 processor, discrete AMD Radeon HD graphics, and ultrafast Thunderbolt technology. It also comes with OS X Lion, the world's most advanced desktop operating system...
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Dell 745 Optiplex Tower Computer, Featuring Intel's Powerful & Efficient 3.4GHz Dual Core CPU Processor, Amazing 800MHz Bus Speed & 4MB Cache,160GB Ultra Fast 7200 RPM SATA hard drive, CDRW/DVDRW SATA Ultra Speed Drive, Windows7 and Vista Capable, 3GB DDR2 Dual Interlaced High Performance Memory, Play and Record CD's, Watch DVD Movies, Providing Power for Today or Future Needs, Wireless Capable (Adapter Sold Separately), Xp Professional SP3
List Price: $1,199.00
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Later Model Dell 745 Optiplex with the Powerful Intel 3.4GHz Dual Core running at 3.4GHz x 2 Cores! Powerful PC capable of running Windows Vista and Windows 7 Easily. The OptiPlex platform is designed for business and individuals that are focused on affordable pricing coupled with top-level performance...
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Dell Optiplex 745 Desktop Computer, Fast and Powerful Intel 3.0GHz Dual Core Processor, 2GB DDR2 Interlaced High Performance Memory, 160GB Super Fast 7200RPM SATA Hard Drive, DVD/CDRW, Record CD's and Watch DVD Movies, Intregrated Lan/Audio, Onboard Video, Wireless Capable (Adapter Sold Separately), Windows XP Installed with COA, Windows 7 Capable
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This Ultra Fast and Powerful Dell 745 Optiplex Desktop Computer is a later generation Optiplex series. The Optiplex platform is designed for business and individuals that are focused on affordable pricing coupled with top-level performance...
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Here are some more information for Tower Duo:

The San Antonio Spurs: Making San Antonio Proud, Part 2
The San Antonio Spurs have rewarded an assortment of players for their service on the team by retiring their number into the rafters, which is an attractive accomplishment for any basketball player. Out of former Spurs players, Johnny Moore, who played in the 80s, had his # 00 retired. Moore played the position of guard and was known for overcoming Valley fever, which at the time was thought to have the capability to put an end to his career. Luckily, Moore was able to make a full recovery and wound up playing 520 games with San Antonio.
Guard James Silas (#13) may seem like an unlucky number, but for this Spurs player, it turned out to be quit lucky when his jersey was retired. Nicknamed "Captain Late" and "The Snake," he was thought as being his basketball best when games were late into play.
Sean Elliott, a forward for San Antonio played from 1989 to 1993, as well as from 1994 to 2001 had his #32 jersey sent high into the rafters of the AT&T Center in 2005. While he accomplished many achievements during his time on the team, he might be best known for the role he played in 1999, when the Spurs gained the NBA championship title. In Game 2, he walked a thin line down the sideline and set off a three-pointer to inch the Spurs to a win the Portland Trail Blazers during the Western Conference Finals.
David Robinson (#50) has always been known as one-half of the Twin Towers duo. The center played for the Spurs from 1989 to 2003 and also had his number retired. He is often referred to as one of the best centers to ever play in professional basketball. Playing from 1974 to 1985, George Gervin also earned the respect to have his #44 join the ranks of retired numbers associated with the San Antonio organization. To date, there have only been five who have been able to accomplish such a feat.
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What kind of power supply for p5n-e sli and intel core 2 duo E8400 is needed?
Right now my current specs are: Young Year 18" ATX Tower case w/ *400W power supply*, *Asus p5nd2-sli mobo*, *Intel Pentium 4 630 @3.0GHZ*, 2gb RAM, Evga GeForce 7600GS 256mb, Seagate Barracuda 160gb 7200rpm. I wan to upgrade the mobo to Asus P5N-E SLI, and the processor to a Intel Core 2 Duo E8400. I was thinking of the quad core but i decided that it was too much, and im sort of on a budget. I do a bit of photoshoping and video editing, so far its been okay, but my dad needs a faster computer for work so i'm giving him some of my parts and then he's just giving me some extra cash if i need it when i get my new parts. at the moment my biggest concern is the power supply. i really dont want to change it if i dont have to so i want to ask anyone who knows, what their opinion is and if they have had any experience with any of these products or even both. And what kind of gaming should i expect with these parts and the ones i have? im playing crysis at 1280x1024 everything low avg 9 fps
The limiting factor is the GPU. Your new mother board is capable of handling the best cards on the market today. The 7600GS is not going to do the job on high end games like Crysis and being an AGP card won't work with P5N-E SLI main board.
So now you need to shop for a video card and memory to go with the new mobo and CPU. Nvivia 8800 line of cards are nice and would be a big boost in performance for playing games. I would also get 2GB of RAM (2 x 1GB). The computer case, hard drive and maybe a CD/DVD from the old system will work fine.
Your question was do I need to replace the power supply? IMO yes you should, the 400 watt you have is older and just under the 425 watt min requirements for the parts listed above assuming a bottom of the line 8800. I would get a good 500+ Watt PSU for the planed PC. The motherboard will do SLI so you have the option of adding another video card down the road to get some big time FPS in games. If this is an option you want to plan for now you should get 600 Watt or better so you won't be looking at another PSU upgrade if you so SLI.
Hope that helps. Good luck.
If the Broken Britain thesis was true no one would bother about a burning East End bin
Haven’t 14-year-old boys always roamed around setting things on fire? I don’t buy Broken Britain. I was walking home last week, about sevenish, and there was smoke drifting across the road where no smoke ought to have been. A woman on a bike was already investigating.
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