 Site/Web Search
There are 30 online users browsing: 0 members and 30 visitors

November 2009
 Latest Discussions
forexadgg @ 12-11-06 04:09
Read: 2,264 Comments: 0
Vault9 @ 12-11-06 04:09
Read: 2,662 Comments: 0
Regilad @ 12-10-06 23:01
Read: 1,497 Comments: 0
Vault9 @ 12-10-06 23:01
Read: 1,667 Comments: 0
Vault9 @ 12-10-06 08:35
Read: 1,622 Comments: 0
Vault9 @ 12-10-06 05:55
Read: 1,546 Comments: 0
spywarklk @ 12-10-06 00:03
Read: 2,259 Comments: 0
Vault9 @ 12-9-06 11:44
Read: 1,564 Comments: 0
Vault9 @ 12-9-06 07:39
Read: 1,277 Comments: 0
spywarklk @ 12-8-06 21:19
Read: 1,279 Comments: 0
Vault9 @ 12-8-06 21:19
Read: 1,118 Comments: 0
masterm @ 12-8-06 12:40
Read: 2,423 Comments: 0
masterm @ 12-8-06 12:35
Read: 2,546 Comments: 0
masterm @ 12-8-06 12:27
Read: 2,336 Comments: 0
|
|
My CustomPC letter |
| Posted by RustPuppet - 08-19-06 23:58 - 6 comments |
 |
I had my letter published as 'Letter of the Month' in CustomPC for August: QUOTE(me) Summer always ruins my overclock.
No, that's not the title of a techie-cum-songwriter's Bohemian campfire song: it's a simple fact that when winter arrives we rub our hands together in glee (and not just to keep them warm) at the prospect of being able to squeeze a few more MHz out of our hardware. Then, when the seasons change, we gloomily realise that our record-breaking overclocked rig was not as stable as we had previously imagined.
My point here is both with stability and benchmarking in general. I picked up the launch issue of your mag back in April, and although I'm thrilled to finally have a local enthusiast publication that actually tests hardware for enthusiasts (by pushing components to their absolute limit as well as by reviewing high-end kit), a lengthy read through the reviews and the article on overclocking led me to question what stability really is, and what it means (or should mean) to the overclocking community.
How do you guys test to ensure stability? In fact, how should any of us test to make sure our hardware is rock-solid? For some it seems that a quick run of 3DMark will confirm an overclock, while others vehemently maintain that the mere mention of anything less than 8 hours of stress testing is blasphemy.
My other concern is the aforementioned 3DMark scores: after an extensive search I couldn't find a single site or forum that mentioned what the universally accepted settings for a valid benchmarking run should be. Now, most people would assume that this should be the default settings, but opinions seem to differ from place to place. How are we to trust Joe Soap's results when he was surreptitiously running his benchies at a resolution intended for a cellphone?
Granted, an AMD vs. Intel processor shootout may yield synthetic benchmarks due to different RAM speeds, motherboards, etc.; heck, a benchmarking result (or a verdict of complete stability) on two seemingly identical hardware configurations could be comparable right up to the point when we realise that we used two different thermal pastes, or forgot some other mundane difference. However, although cross-platform benchmarking is always going to differ and be contested between the various camps (since there are always going to be fundamental differences in architecture between manufacturers, and so forth), I still think it's no excuse for varying benchmark and stability-testing practises.
I must stress (cue drum roll) that I'm not questioning the quality or the authenticity of your reviews here; rather, I'm wondering why there is no simple standard we can all adhere to. I know you run a custom benchmarking suite to determine your scores, but does a completed run signify a stable rig?
If your mag one day achieves world domination then there will be no issues regarding the final say as to who's stable and who's still a tad wobbly; until then though, I'm left waiting with fingers crossed for summer to return to test where my rig stands.
Congrats on a great publication and keep up the great work! My prize (still in the post  ):  Woohoo! Seems overclocking really does pay off in the long run
|
Read 3,170 times - last comment by cyfermaster
|
Recommendations for a mobo please |
| Posted by T.I.M - 08-3-06 05:58 - 3 comments |
 |
Hi All Its high time i upgraded my system and as im a student i cant go state of the art  but i can almost get close. specs so far are AMD Athlon 64 3800+, XFX 7600GT XXX edition (PCI-X). the rest is pretty much bog standard but i do need your help on what mobo to go for. wanted an abit but frontosa has stopped bringing them into the country. so im thinking maby an ASUS or MSI, any other's i should look at? basic requirements are. PCI-X (dont need SLI), 4x SATA II(or more), 2x ide133. obviously it needs to be an AMD capable board but i also cant decide on NForce or VIA chipsets, i think NForce is the better but i dont know. I want a good board that is fast and reliable (i wont overclock) but doesnt cost the earth, +- R1300.00 any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks Guy
|
Read 3,608 times - last comment by Fishfly
|
AMD and ATI to Create Processing Powerhouse |
| Posted by Fishfly - 07-25-06 14:55 - 0 comments |
 |
QUOTE NEW YORK -- July 24, 2006 --AMD (NYSE: AMD) and ATI (TSX: ATY, NASDAQ: ATYT) today announced plans to join forces in a transaction valued at approximately $5.4 billion. The combination will create a processing powerhouse by bringing AMD’s technology leadership in microprocessors together with ATI’s strengths in graphics, chipsets and consumer electronics. The result: A new and more formidable company, determined to drive growth, innovation and choice for its customers, particularly in the commercial and mobile computing segments and in the rapidly-growing consumer electronics market. Combining technologies, people, and complementary strengths, AMD plans to deliver in 2007 customer-centric platforms for the benefit of customers who want to collaborate in the development of differentiated solutions.
AMD’s acquisition of ATI will position the new company to deliver innovations that fulfill the increasing demand for more integrated solutions in key market segments while also continuing to develop “best-of-breed” discrete products that empower customers to choose the combination of technologies that best serves their needs. In 2008 and beyond, AMD aims to move beyond current technological configurations to transform processing technologies, with silicon-specific platforms that integrate microprocessors and graphics processors to address the growing need for general-purpose, media-centric, data-centric and graphic-centric performance. Thus, the combined company intends to empower its customers to create their own unique products and solutions within an open-innovation ecosystem free from artificial barriers to customer success. SO THE BATTLE BEGINS! LINKlets see what future AMDATI brings to the tables!!!
|
Read 3,297 times - make a comment
|
Ultra High-End PSU Shoot Out |
| Posted by Fishfly - 07-25-06 14:39 - 0 comments |
 |
QUOTE With the introduction of power hungry video setups like Crossfire and SLI, having a PSU that does what it says on the tin is more important than ever. A number of magazines and websites have conducted scientific tests of power supplies in recent months, measuring their peak loads and cut-off points, as well as their efficiency. Whilst this is quite useful data, I don’t believe it is an accurate representation of how a real PC works.
Instead, we have borrowed one of the most demanding PC configurations known to man to test our PSUs in a real-world environment – the Chillblast Fusion X4 workstation. Into this beast we have quad-opteron 275 cores, a Tyan K8WE motherboard, and 16GB of memory. After this the spec gets really interesting, as we also have dual Quadro FX 4500 (the workstation variant of the 7800 GTX 512MB) video cards and a RAID 5 array of ten (yes, TEN) 10,000 rpm drives. According to my handy PSU calculator, at peak load this machine actually requires somewhere in the region of 550W, so any of today’s competitors not delivering their advertised output are going to be in trouble. LINK
|
Read 3,730 times - make a comment
|
Windows XP theme: Vista |
| Posted by Rob - 06-14-06 14:42 - 1 comments |
 |
I recently got this software online that makes your copy of windows XP look like vista. Since I have the vista beta 2 on a seperate HDD i can honestly say that the creator of this software did a pretty good job and got things close. you have to register to get it, but its definately worth the time. www.softwarewin.com/cat18_533.html i also found this handy dandy software that also looks like vista style, its adds along to the theme http://www.visualtasktips.com/--Rob
|
Read 13,497 times - last comment by cyfermaster
|
Athlon 64 FX-62 Dual-Core Socket AM2 Review |
| Posted by Fishfly - 06-13-06 06:01 - 0 comments |
 |
QUOTE Athlon 64 FX-62 is right now the most high-end CPU from AMD, incorporating dual-core technology, socket AM2 (i.e. DDR2 memory support), 2.8 GHz internal clock and 1 MB L2 memory cache for each core. We had the chance of reviewing this beast and compare it to other dual-core CPUs from AMD: Athlon 64 X2 5000+ (socket AM2, 2.6 GHz, 512 MB L2 memory cache), Athlon 64 X2 4600+ (socket 939, 2.4 GHz, 512 MB L2 memory cache) and Athlon FX-60 (socket 939, 2.6 GHz, 1 MB L2 memory cache). Let’s see how this new CPU performs. LINKpowerful but for the price it's still not justifiable!!!
|
Read 3,923 times - make a comment
|
Custom PC SA |
| Posted by CyberStorm - 06-6-06 08:31 - 6 comments |
 |
Custom PC South Africa, on of the UK's leading performance hardware & customisation magazines, was launched recently. April 2006 to be exact. I didnt see any advertising for the magazine anywhere nor did i know of its existence, that is, until I found it lying gracefully on a shelf at CNA Margate. Needless to say it fills a great void in the South African PC/Hardware magazine market providing technical well written articles for a rather niche market. If you're into overclocking, modding, gaming or hardware in general give Custom PC SA a try. It doesnt yet come with a coverdisc but it provides you with a hell of a lot more relevant information than either PCFormat or NAG. For R 25-00 the price isnt bad either...... Custom PC SA
|
Read 3,918 times - last comment by Fishfly
|
Dual-Layer DVD Burner Roundup |
| Posted by Fishfly - 06-6-06 02:58 - 0 comments |
 |
QUOTE With Toshiba's new HD-DVD player feeling like a late beta release with a scant list of available titles including such hits as Swordfish and Training Day, maybe you're not quite ready to jump on the bandwagon for your next-generation DVD format of choice just yet. HD-DVD and Blu-Ray burners are even more distant on the horizon, and that's not including the time it'll take for drive and media prices to come down from the stratosphere.
For now, your best bet for burning optical media to share and store movies, music, photos, and data is still our old friend, the garden-variety digital versatile disc. The new crop of burners are capable of writing dual-layer DVD+R discs at 8x for well under $100 and 10x for a bit more. With abundant choices in blank media (DVD+/-R, DVD+/-RW, DVD-RAM, CD-R, CD-RW, etc.), you'll have plenty of options for your specific Plextor surely never cease to amaze me regarding their technology and their stability!!! If only they didn't cost double the other writers price
|
Read 4,195 times - make a comment
|
|