A few weeks ago, we saw a number of . . . errrr . . . rather pro-RDRAM articles. I had a few things to say about that, and a lot more to say in general. We are now seeing
Where did you hear that one? Here Do you believe anything? This could be nonsense, but there’s one little item that makes this plausible. AMD has been very quiet about copper-interconnect technology lately. That’s what Dresden is supposed to do.
Attached are three pics of my plastic water block. This was made from a 4″ PVC cap made for sewer clean-outs. They cost less than $2 at the local hardware store. It turns out that the hollow space inside the
I purchased a syringe each of Arctic Silver thermal grease at Cooling Store last week and have now had some time to evaluate it. It claims to be more efficient than other similar thermal compounds, while being cheaper and NOT
SUMMARY: The worst thing about this board is its name; aside from that, Iwill ranks right up there with the ASUS P3V4X and SOYO 6VCA. Iwill was kind enough to send a sample of their VD133 Pro motherboard; this is
I’ve waited a long time to write this 🙂 If you’ve been waiting to buy a Coppermine, your wait is just about over. We have enough information from those of you who bought and tested cB0 stepping Coppermines to conclude
I was amazed by my PIII 550E’s and my PIII 500E’s overclocking abilities in the past. I’ve managed to overclock the first at 825MHz and the second at 740 MHz, but I was surprised by the abilities of a PIII
SUMMARY: A very handy way to take the office home and vice-versa; also a super way to turn one box into a game machine, office machine, NT development platform and Linux learning machine. We get to test a fair amount
SUMMARY: Recycling heatsinks into a plastic-enclosed waterblock will perform as well as drilled copper blocks. Overclock-Watercool sent us a couple of blocks to test out; one copper block with a lot of channels and a conventional heatsink enclosed in a
SUMMARY: SOYO outpoints ASUS by a TKO – closely matched in many areas but the SOYO delivers more punches than ASUS. I have been looking at a number of VIA 133A boards (not all by any means) which have been