Nvidia tweak
As they each try to claim the title of world's fastest PC processor, the ongoing jockeying between Intel and AMD is creating a price war between the chip giants that should leave power PC users smiling. nvidia tweak Internet-accelerator. Intel's Pentium 4 2. 53 GHz and 2. 4 GHz CPUs, which I will be comparing in this review, were launched in May 2002. nvidia tweak Radeon-9000-tweak. With the 2. 53 GHz chip, Intel had squarely recaptured the performance crown, but AMD struck back with the release of its surprising Athlon XP 2600+ processor in August 2002. The chip is able to match Intel's "aging" 2. nvidia tweak Windows-speed-up. 53 GHz chip in a variety of applications, and even surpasses it in some. Intel, always on the lookout, was prepared for the challenge and countered with an even faster 2. 8 GHz Pentium 4 chip, helping it regain the speed king title for now. It's always welcomed news when Intel announces a new chip because it nearly always results in slashing the prices of its existing chips. With the added competition from AMD, Intel has been forced to make even deeper price cuts than usual. As of this writing you can buy a Pentium 4 2. 53 GHz chip for less than half of what it cost last May. More processor for less money. This is the kind of war in which the consumer can't lose. Jumping on the BandwidthThe biggest news about the Intel 2. 4 GHz and 2. 53 GHz chips is that they boast a 33% faster front side bus (FSB) than Intel's previous Pentium 4 chips. The FSB is the bus (or data highway) within a microprocessor that connects the CPU with main memory. By raising the FSB speed, Intel ensures that the CPU has sufficient memory bandwidth available to it as its clock speeds escalate even higher. While the FSB of previous Pentium 4 chips ran at a stingy 400MHz, the newer chips run at 533MHz boosting peak bandwidth between CPU and memory controller hub (MCH) from 3. 2 GB/sec to 4. 26 GB/sec. In other words, a much bigger pipe is now available for data to flow from memory to your CPU and to the rest of your PC. Will this 33% increase give you a similar speed increase with the programs you run? No. But because the latest Pentium 4 chips can process such enormous amounts of information, the goal is to make the pipe that feeds it as large as possible, so the CPU's power isn't wasted waiting around for more data. To facilitate the faster 533MHz FSB, Intel has also introduced two new chipsets - the 850E and the 845G. The 850E chipset is designed to operate with Rambus's PC800 RDRAM, while the 845G works with the more affordable PC2100 DDR-SDRAM memory. Memory LetdownThe problem with the new 850E chipset is that it's only validated to run the slower PC800 memory. PC800 is limited to 3. 2 GB/s of bandwidth and can't fill the 4. 26 GB pipeline that the chip's new 533MHz FSB offers. In order to maximize the full potential of the chip's faster FSB, you need to pair it with PC1066-rated RDRAM. The good news is that while Intel 850E motherboards officially don't yet support PC1066 memory, you can buy third-party 850E-based boards from companies like Asus who have tweaked the board's BIOS so it can recognize the faster memory.
Nvidia tweak
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