I've done the "Detect Optimal Frequency" a number of times on my PNY Geforce 6800. The Resulting frequencies ALWAYS follow this equation exactly: Memory Speed = GPU Speed x 2 + 50. I am using the 66.93 drivers.
Do others get the same results? Here are the test results I've gotten so far...
I would like Anand to fly around the world backwards until the rotation of the earth reverses. Time will then go backwards for three months. Then post the nForce2 review in July 2002 on the same day as the 'paper launch.' Then this post will dissapear because I will have already read the review.
Does anyone know if this combo works? AMD says yes:
http://www.amd.com/us-en/Processors/ProductInformation/0,,30_182_869_4348^4378|120_3_XP,00.html
MSI says 2100+ is the max:
http://www.msi.com.tw/program/support/bios/bos/spt_bos_detail.php?UID=10&NAME=MS-6373
Anyone actually tried an Athlon...
Its been 4 weeks now. It is starting to look like a repeat of the original nForce release. It was announced in June, and I couldn't get one until November. I havn't heard a peep about the nForce2 since everyone was dupped into giving it all the free publicity when it was 'announced.'
Here is a picture of the slide from the presentation. [edit. ok, I'm a noob and can't fix my own link. Thanks for fixing it below.]
Just fast forward the presentation to about 27:30 and listen from there for a couple minutes. Thats where they announce the product.
The nVidia representative said, and this is right in front of the new AMD President that spoke before him, that there would be a new product announced shortly that would use the nForce2's 333mhz CPU FSB. The video gives a few other pieces of neat information, but this was the juiciest.
Craig
http://www.nvidia.com/view.asp?IO=nforce2_launch_replay
The video is about an hour long. In it, nVidia announces that the nForce2 not only supports 266, 333, 400mhz memory, but also 266 and 333mhz CPU FSB. They then go on to say that there will be a product announced shortly that will support...
One of the articles said the nForce2's FSB and memory bus ran asyncronously. If we are able to bump the fsb for an unlocked Athlon to 200Mhz (400DDR), the Athlon would be able to use about 3.1GB of that bandwidth. If the nForce2 can get high fsb overclocks, it will own.
Abstract:
This paper was written in an effort to demonstrate the applicability of professional microwave engineering techniques to consumer wireless networks using unregulated spectrum by documenting the design and implementation of a 7-kilometer 802.11b bridge. The wireless revolution is in...
I have a similar set up. MSI nForce with an Athlon 1900+ in a SX600 series case. I am using an Alpha PAL8045 with an 80mm Panaflow L1a running at 7v. My CPU gets to 60C under load. It used to get to 63C before I installed the blow hole.
Craig
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