Recommended Posts

My x64 replacement parts just shipped out, so pretty soon I'll have:

Athlon 64 3000+ (replacing XP-M 2500+ @2300 MHz)

ASUS A8V Deluxe (replacing A7N8X-X)

2x512 MB DDR 400

Geforce 6600 GT AGP

120 GB Maxtor

Soundblaster Audigy

DVD?RW

It's Socket 939, so I plan on upgrading to a dual core CPU whenever they are plentifull. I wish I could upgrade my laptop to x64 though =(

Here is mine. no pics since I don't have a digicam yet:

AMD Athlon 64 FX 55 2.6 Ghz

Zalman 7000BCu

Asus A8N-SLI Deluxe 1008 bios

2GB Corsair 1024-3200XL 400MHz 1.5-2-2-5

Powercolor Radeon X800XL

Zippy Emacs HP2-6500P 500W PSU

2 x 74GB Western Digital Raptors Raid 0 (TCQ on)

Maxtor Diamond Max Plus 9 IDE 120GB

Soundblaster Audigy

LG DVDRW 4160B

Coolermaster CMStacker case

A64 3400+ (s754)

1GB Corsair 2-2-2-5

Creative Audigy 2 ZS Platinum Pro

Creative T7900 7.1's

Radeon 9800 Pro AIW

Maxtor Diamondmax 10 250GB 16mb Cache

NEC ND3540 16x Dual Layer DVD?RW

Dell 2005fpw 20.1"

All in a great little SFF, the Biostar iDEQ 210P:DD

My beast of a multimedia machine \o/

Just ordered me a new notebook with the following:

Microsoft Windows XP Professional with SP2 

AMD Athlon 64 4000+ (2.4GHz/1MB l2 Cache) 

15.4" WXGA BrightView Widescreen (1280x800) 

128MB ATI RADEON XPRESS 200M w/Hypermemory 

2.0GB DDR SDRAM (2x1024MB) 

80 GB 5400 RPM Hard Drive 

DVD+/-RW/R & CD-RW Combo w/Double Layer Support 

54g Integ. Broadcom 802.11b/g WLAN & Bluetooth 

2x 12 Cell Lithium Ion Battery

I'm probably going to install Windows XP Professional x64 and Ubuntu 5.04 x64.

585887546[/snapback]

It finally came in :woot: I'm installing Windows XP Professional x64 right now and then I'll install SUSE Linux x64 and afterwards I'm going to post some pictures of this new baby :D

Sold this one about a month ago

AMD 64 3500+ winnie

Dfi SLI-D

2 x 512 pc3200 ocz vx

enermax noisetaker 600w psu

80gb seagate sata

msi 6800gto

dell 20.1" 2005fpw tft

just finished building this beast, finished benchmarking and totally stable, just need to get a better psu and i can feed my bfg and get it to ultra speeds :D

amd 64 3000+ venice @ 2835mhz 1.45v

asetek 120.2 watercooling, hydor l30 1200 l/ph, asetek waterchill block

2 x 512 G Skill ZX PC3200 @ 210 mhz 2-3-3-6

msi neo2 platinum

400w colors psu

80 gb western digi sata

160gb western digi sata

19" ctx ultra screen crt

post-98305-1116981675.jpg

post-98305-1116981730_thumb.jpg

As of right now I am still running my ol'

AMD XP 2000

768MB PC3200

Gigabyte Mobo

nVidia geforce 4 ti 4200

80g Maxtor

But here in a month or so I will finally have enough cash money to purchase my new build..

AMD 64 3700 San Diego Socket 939

1024MB (512x2) PC3200 Corsair XMS (2-2-2-5)

Asus A8N-SLI Deluxe

Lian-Li PC-65 USB B2

Western Digital 300g SATA

eVGA Geforce 6800GT 256MB PCI-Express (getting my second card later)

Those are the core parts. I will be getting a new PSU and DVD burner and all that good stuff too. I am soo excited :woot: This thing will fly.

Edited by chevyordeath
Just ordered me a new notebook with the following:

Microsoft Windows XP Professional with SP2 

AMD Athlon 64 4000+ (2.4GHz/1MB l2 Cache) 

15.4" WXGA BrightView Widescreen (1280x800) 

128MB ATI RADEON XPRESS 200M w/Hypermemory 

2.0GB DDR SDRAM (2x1024MB) 

80 GB 5400 RPM Hard Drive 

DVD+/-RW/R & CD-RW Combo w/Double Layer Support 

54g Integ. Broadcom 802.11b/g WLAN & Bluetooth 

2x 12 Cell Lithium Ion Battery

I'm probably going to install Windows XP Professional x64 and Ubuntu 5.04 x64.

585887546[/snapback]

Good luck getting more than an hour from your battery out of that beast. :rolleyes:

Actually, laptops with Athlon 64s tend to have surprisingly good battery life. His probably manages around 2 or 2.5 hours.

585975774[/snapback]

Sometimes more.. A fiend of mine has a 3700+ and it lasts 3.5.. :D I wanna get one but I don't remember the damn brand.

All the info's in my sig, enjoy. I have only one problem and that's drivers for my keyboard and mouse, no big deal though, just can't use the extra buttons on them. And maybe the fact that I'm running one 1GB stick (single channel) instead of maybe 2 512MB sticks in dual channel... I've been using the stick I had from my other PC, maybe I'll grab some good dual channel and shove this 1 GB stick back in the old PC once I have the money to do so.

BTW, I've been here for almost 4 years now and still haven't reached 1000 posts... I guess I'm not too talkative...

But I'm always watching... :alien:

Edited by jimbo11883
But I'm always watching...  :alien:

585975796[/snapback]

Grats on being here for a long time. Great community here.. But speaking of aliens.. I think I saw some pretty scary **** in the sky tonight... I'm not going into details :unsure: .. lol. That is crazy that I just happend to see your post, and no more then 20 minutes ago I seen some weird stuff man.. I don't even want to talk about.. Sorry to break the subject. :alien:

Just ordered me a new notebook with the following:

Microsoft Windows XP Professional with SP2 

AMD Athlon 64 4000+ (2.4GHz/1MB l2 Cache) 

15.4" WXGA BrightView Widescreen (1280x800) 

128MB ATI RADEON XPRESS 200M w/Hypermemory 

2.0GB DDR SDRAM (2x1024MB) 

80 GB 5400 RPM Hard Drive 

DVD+/-RW/R & CD-RW Combo w/Double Layer Support 

54g Integ. Broadcom 802.11b/g WLAN & Bluetooth 

2x 12 Cell Lithium Ion Battery

I'm probably going to install Windows XP Professional x64 and Ubuntu 5.04 x64.

585887546[/snapback]

A real powerhouse..... but I have to ask. You went top shelf on just about everything, but went with the low resolution screen??? I would have gone with 1 gig mem and upgraded to an Uber screen. Regardless, congrats and hope you enjoy it :yes:

A real powerhouse..... but I have to ask. You went top shelf on just about everything, but went with the low resolution screen??? I would have gone with 1 gig mem and upgraded to an Uber screen. Regardless, congrats and hope you enjoy it  :yes:

585979719[/snapback]

Well, I agree the monitor seems small when you're looking that screen resolution, but if when I get a chance to take some pictures, you'll see that the screen is actually pretty big (widescreen) ... at any rate, it is one of the best AMD notebooks I could find.

XP Professional with Service Pack 2

AMD Athlon 64 FX-55

ABIT AV8 - VIA K8T800 Pro

1GB Corsair XMS Extra Low Latency DDR PC-3200 SDRAM at 400MHz - 2 x 512MB

ATI RADEON X800 XT Platinum Edition 256MB

Serial ATA RAID 0 - 148GB (74GB x 2) Western Digital Raptor 10,000 RPM w/16MB Cache

Kinda an old topic but not much activity here...well, here is my current system.

Processor: Intel Pentium 4 630 (3.0Ghz / 2MB L2 Cache / x86-64)

Memory: 1.5GB PC-3200 DDR2 (256x2 PC-3200 / 512x2 PC-4200)

Video: ATi Radeon X300 128MB (Next on the Upgrade List)

HD: 40GB Serial ATA 7200RPM

I think this is the first Pentium 4 6xx series listed here.

It's a great machine, faster than hell and more stable than a rock, I'm very pleased with it.

Processor: AMD64 3200+ (939)

Motherboard: ASUS A8N-SLI Deluxe

Memory: 768MB PC3200 (512MB x 1; 256MB x 1)

Graphics: ATi Radeon X800XL 256MB (VIVO)

HD: 120GB 7200RPM (Seagate); 120GB 7200RPM (Western Digital)

OS: Windows XP SP2

It's a good system, though the CPU is a bottleneck (the memory isn't great either). Both the graphics and the CPU are overclocked for gaming (Guild Wars and CS:S).

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • My father still uses a programme written in dbase3. Still manages to work with a little help from dosbox. 
    • Microsoft hides these secret Windows 11 performance boost settings available on every PC by Sayan Sen Windows enthusiasts often look for ways to extract as much performance out of their systems as possible, and it's often the case that they try and do so while trying to minimize the heat and power consumption. This is especially relevant in the case of mobile Windows PCs since laptops and notebooks tend to get hot and management of that heat and power is harder in such a form factor. As such users often turn to techniques like under-volting which can be used to squeeze out the maximum capabilities of a chip while also maintaining lowered power levels. There are official apps from AMD and Intel with the likes of Ryzen Master and XTU (Extreme Tuning Utility). While these are quite handy, most enthusiasts probably prefer to dig into the BIOS and play around with settings there like Curve Optimizer on Ryzen, which lets users set various frequency-voltage scaling values. These are essentially called P-States. If you are not familiar with them, Processor Power Management is done through Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) P-states and C-states. While P-states or performance pwoer states handle CPU voltage-frequency scaling, C-states deal with CPU sleep states so that some of the CPU functions, which are not necessary at that moment, can be disabled. The P-states and C-states work together to make the processor run more efficiently. It helps the OS and apps determine which cores can be parked and which should be boosted. Of course not every user is an enthusiast or knows the technicalities and integrities of how things like overclocking or undervolting work. Thankfully for them Windows itself offers something pretty cool, though it is hidden by default on all systems. By default, Windows only has two P-States, "Minimum Processor State" and "Maximum Processor State." However, this can be changed with a Registry trick to expand the options under a secret "Processor performance boost mode" dropdown. This essentially enables the HWP or hardware P-States available on a device, and these are not controlled just by the OS itself as the underlying hardware gets involved too. In total there are five Processor Performance Boost Mode profiles that control how Windows requests and allows CPU turbo/boost behavior under the different power policies. They are: Disabled: In this mode, processor boosting is effectively turned off. The CPU will avoid entering turbo or boost frequencies and instead operate closer to its base frequency ceiling. This can significantly reduce power consumption and heat output, but at the cost of reduced burst performance and responsiveness in short workloads. Enabled: This is the standard behavior where boost functionality is allowed under normal conditions. The processor can opportunistically increase frequency when workload demands it, balancing performance gains with power and thermal constraints as managed by the system. Aggressive: Aggressive mode favors performance more heavily, allowing the CPU to enter higher boost states more readily and sustain them longer. This should in theory improve responsiveness under bursty or heavy workloads but increases power draw and thermal output compared to the default enabled behavior. Efficient Enabled: This mode still allows boosting, but with a stronger bias toward energy efficiency. The system attempts to use boost more selectively, avoiding unnecessary frequency spikes when the performance gain is marginal. Efficient Aggressive: This is a hybrid approach where boost is still performance-responsive, but the system continuously weighs efficiency more heavily than in Aggressive mode. It aims to deliver noticeable performance improvements while reducing wasted power in less demanding scenarios. Here's how to enable the Processor performance boost mode: Open Registry Editor: Press Win+R, type regedit, and click OK. Go to: HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Power\PowerSettings\54533251-82be-4824-96c1-47b60b740d00\be337238-0d82-4146-a960-4f3749d470c7 (where HKLM stands for HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE_) Modify the value of Attributes from 1 to 2 (you can find modify option by right-clicking) After that, exit Registry, you should now be able to see the new "Processor performance boost mode" dropdown menu: As you can see there are now five new P-States or CPPC states or power profile available that help define the boost mode processor setting on your PC. Wrapping it up here's a quick run-down of the settings as defined by Microsoft itself. Setting Description Disabled The corresponding P-state-based behaviour is disabled. Collaborative Processor Performance Control (CPPC) behaviour is disabled. Enabled The corresponding P-state-based behaviour is enabled. CPPC behaviour is Efficient Enabled. Aggressive The corresponding P-state-based behaviour is enabled. CPPC behaviour is Aggressive. Efficient Enabled The corresponding P-state-based behaviour is Efficient. CPPC behaviour is Efficient Enabled. Efficient Aggressive The corresponding P-state-based behaviour is Efficient. CPPC behaviour is Aggressive. Aggressive At Guaranteed Windows calculates the desired extra performance above the guaranteed performance level, and asks the processor to deliver that specific performance level. Efficient Aggressive At Guaranteed Windows always asks the processor to deliver the highest possible performance above the guaranteed performance level. In the next part we shall be comparing these settings to explore how much of a benefit or regression they can provide in terms of performance and power efficiency. If you decide to change the values on your system and are experiencing problems like crashes or an overheating PC, make sure to revert the steps back to the original state.
    • I think he means you haven't reviewed previous UFC games. Of course it doesn't matter... Every time you just report on something that involves the President even if just simply what happened you guys usually get accused of being anti-Trump. We live in fun times.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      Leroy Jethro Gibbs earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Conversation Starter
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Month Later
      AndreaB earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      agatameier earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      agatameier earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      518
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      198
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      147
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      93
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      77
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!