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i've upgraded mine in the last 2 weeks.. works perfectly.

AMD 4400+ x2 dual-core @ 2.2Ghz

2GB DDR400 PC3200 Ram Dual Channel

Asus 128MB 6600GT PCI-E video card

MSI K8N Neo4 Platinum SLI s939

thermaltake tsunami case

noisetalker power supply

Windows XP SP2 Professional

CPU: AMD 64 FX57

Motherboard: DFI nF4 Ultra-D Lanparty

Video: ATi X850XT PE

SoundCard: SB Audigy 2 ZS

Memory: 2g DDR 400 T1-2.0-3-2-5 "Patriot Extreme Performance"

Hard Drive: 2)WD 74g Raptor HD running RAID 0

DVD/CD: Plextor 716A SATA DVD-RW

Monitor: ViewSonic VX924 LCD 19' Digital 4ms

Logitec 510 Mouseand Keyboard

AMD Athlon 64 3200+ Venice core

Asus A8N-E motherboard (revision 2 for what its worth!)

1024Mb generic memory

200Gb SATA Seagate Barracuda

Samsung DVD +- RW

Thermaltake Soprano

Thermaltake Purepower 430W

Viewsonic VX912 19" LCD

Altec Lansing 251 5.1 surround sound speakers

Creative Soundblaster Live! 24 bit

Gigabyte GeForce 6600GT

This time next week:

AMD Sempron 2800+

512mb TwinMOS DDR400

ASUS K8N mobo

GeForce2MX AGP (yeah, I know it's pants)

120Gb Seagate HDD

Cyberdrive CDRW

Future upgrades:

Gigabyte GeForce FX5500 128mb AGP

LG 4167 DVD+/-RW/RAM (my DVD recorder uses DVD-RAM disks)

Some 2.1 speakers (creative or Altec Lansing)

It's low spec and low cost which is perfect for my low usage. :)

copy/paste from my sig :)

- AMD Athlon 64 x2 4400+

- MSI K8 Diamond

- Corsair TWINX2048-3200PRO

- MSI Nvidia GeForce 6600 (x2) SLi

- SoundBlaster Live! 24-bit (integrated)

- LG 16x

- Maxtor DiamondMax 10 6L250S0 250GB SATA 7200RPM Hard Drive w/16MB Buffer

- 17" LG L1730S LCD @ 1280*1024 75Hz

- Logitech MX518 Gaming-Grade Mouse

- Altec Lansing XA3021

Intel Pentium 4 3.0 GHz (Model 630) "EM64T" 2MB L2

Intel D925XECVLK2

1 GB 522 Bus DDR2 (512x2 Kingston Memory)

ATX with 450W Supply

1.44 Floppy Sony

Aopen 52x CD Rom (on PATA to SATA Module)

LG COMBO 16x48x24x48 (on PATA to SATA Module)

Creative 16 DVD Rom (on PATA to SATA Module)

Sony DVD 710A (PATA)

120 GB Seagate HDD SATA (Intel Advance Host Controller Enable)

Creative DXr3 MPEG2 Card

Creative Sound Blaster 2 ZS Platinum Pro

Creative T7700 7.1 Speakers

Bluetooth USB

InfraRed USB

17 in 1 Card Reader USB

HP 1015 LaserJet Printer

HP 3500C Scanner

Microsoft Sidewinder GamePad

17' LG Flatron with USB Hub

:devil:

Heres mine:

mypc5rd.th.jpg

Motherboard: DFI LanParty UT 250gb

CPU: AMD Athlon 64 3200+ (2ghz @ 2370) ClawHammer 800MHz FSB/1M L2 Cache

RAM: GeIL Ultra 1GB DDR 500 (PC 4000)

Video: Gigabyte Geforce 6600gt (500/1000 @ 712/1130)

Sound: SB Live 5.1

HardDrive: WD 160 gig w/16mb cache

DVD: Plextor PX708A burner

Power Supply: Antec TruePower 2.0 550W

Case: Thermaltake Tsunami

Mouse: Logitech mx518

Keyboard: ORtek SKB-2500 Slim pro

OS: Unbuntu-64 LiNUX

-Thermaltake Tsunami Dream Case

-Enermax Noisetaker 600W Powersupply

-Abit AN8 SLi Fatal1ty Motherboard

-AMD 4800+

-2GB (4?512) OCZ Gold DDR500 Dual Channel Unregistered Unbuffered RAM

-2x BFG 7800GTX SLi

-2x Western Digital 250GB 7200RPM 16MB Cache HDDs (0.5 TB 32MB Cache Raid 0)

-NEC 16x DVD-DL RW

-Linkskey 12in1 Memory Reader

-Sony 1.44MB Floppy

pics on my blog http://www.jakecast.com/blog

Jake-

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    • 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.
    • So how did you solve the problem? Disabling Secure Boot isn’t a solution.
    • Another devilish issue surrounding these certificates is what can happen with old, unsuspecting PCs that nevertheless have Secure Boot enabled. In my case, it was a Dell with a 3rd-gen Core chip (so about 13 years old). As of the last few weeks, it was suddenly BSOD'g within about 5 minutes of booting. Turns out it was because of MS's "Secure-Boot-Update" scheduled task, which is scheduled to run 5 minutes after login. It's explained in gory detail here (this is not my post, but it was where I found the answer), but the short version is that this legacy system would need fairly elaborate, manual certificate intervention since MS's automatic cert update method cannot work. How to do that is linked late in the thread. https://www.bleepingcomputer.c...od-caused-by-scheduled-task Secure Boot wasn't at all important for this particular PC, so I disabled it to be done with the problem.
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