treat em like an nmr machine. cool it with liquid helium... imagine the speeds you'd get with 3 kelvins
Ya, I could only imagine. I think the CPU could handle such a thing, not too sure about a motherboard being cooled to absolute zero/
treat em like an nmr machine. cool it with liquid helium... imagine the speeds you'd get with 3 kelvins
How about an itemised cost?
plus,
fans - one, two, more - surely that system must run tres warm and hot. . . .
OK now i do. It wasnt sposed to be above 65-70, and i never saw it go above 55 so i didnt need to be worried. Although it did say normal running temps are about 20-30 below the maximums so i'm in a good state now. maybe i can overclock it a bit?
hardly worth bothering really. seems to work fine nowthanks for the advice though. Maybe i'll do it one day just to see if i can
how do i know what my CPU multiplier is?
edit: let me guess, it's in BIOS?
for example, type "CPUZ" highlight it with the mouse cursor then click the insert link button and paste your link in. Done.
Hey Durka, I like your setup. That 8800 must be kick ass fast in games.
Have you considered a Raid 0 setup?
I do alot of video and image editing and let me tell you the difference is night and day. Video rendering is extremely disk intensive and I've found that a single disk setup really sucks ass even with dual core (I have a OC'd X2 3800+ @2.4ghz). My OS (XP) is raided whereas my data are on a separate drive and my archives are on a network drive. I think in total all of my hard drives total about 1 TB
I don't worry about the increased data loss probability with Raid 0 because the only thing that I will lose is the OS. But then again, with a single disk setup, if you lose that, you lose everything.
As for the mother of all utilities, try SIW... http://www.gtopala.com/
Raptors are fast for access times, but what really counts is sustained transfer rates. My raid setup performs about 32% faster than tested 150gb rapters on the web... so there must have been something wrong with your raid setup. Also raid performance depends highly on the chipset and drivers so that could be the problem too.
Here's an article I read recently:
http://www.tomshardware.com/2007/03/12/cheap_raid_ravages_wd_raptor/index.html