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oskarha

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Posts posted by oskarha

  1. On 4/5/2021 at 7:54 PM, Luis Filipe da Silva said:

    Eu tenho um xeon e 5420 adaptado para 775. eu consigo fazer esse processo?

     

    On 4/5/2021 at 10:52 PM, FakeKGB said:

    Translation (roughly):

    I have a xeon 5420 adapted for 775. can i do this process?

    You will have to do the 1333MHz to 1600MHz BSEL mod  (the one in my original post will not work). There should be information on the mod, even for 771 CPUs adapted to 775 if you spend some time googling.

  2. 4 hours ago, CircleTech said:

    Why are we comparing the price of a mobo, CPU, and RAM to the price of just a CPU? Who is to assume the buyer has an old LGA 775 rig laying around? If anything, we should be comparing CPU to CPU. You can find i5-2400 CPUs on ebay all day for $25.

    This guide is for a specific machine, the Dell Vostro 220(s). So I would say its safe to assume that if someone is following this guide they probably already have a machine and want to upgrade the CPU (so what you say in case A applies here). Otherwise I agree.

  3. On 4/9/2020 at 10:09 PM, tele_fission said:

    Link is dead :(

    Works for me?

    9 hours ago, CircleTech said:

    Can't believe you are trying anyway.

     

    LGA 775 is such a dead socket these days. It doesn't even have vintage value yet like the Pentium 4 Socket 478 PCs. Give up, move on. LGA 1155 is the new LGA 775, if that's what you're into. Sandy bridge boards are cheap and widely available. It's time to put out LGA 775 and move to greater pastures.

    Alright, so tell me where do you reliably get an LGA 1155 board, a decent Sandy Bridge CPU and DDR3 RAM for 25 USD (the price of a Xeon E5450)? Given that you can’t, I still think this mod is very applicable if you need more power and you can’t afford spending more.

  4. 5 minutes ago, PAR21VAL said:

    will this method damage any pins from motherboard because of tape? I wanna make sure that I would be able to use my pc if it became unstable due to overclock.

    The short answer is it will not damage the board if you do it properly, but:

    On 4/17/2017 at 8:14 PM, oskarha said:

    Disclaimer:

    Overclocking is never a guarantee, and it does not always work, for example, my Q6700 was not stable after I had performed the BSEL mod in my Dell OptiPlex 755.

    A mod like this will most likely void your warranty, but this is LGA 775 we are talking about, so you probably don’t have that anyway.

    I am not responsible for any damage to you/your equipment, proceed at your own risk.

     

  5. Might be worth asking the people over at r/thinkpad.

    The keyboards on most thinkpads are excellent and the trackpads are very good (taking into consideration that they dont have glass surfaces).

    Make sure to get an IPS panel if you want a good screen, the TN panels are usually pretty bad.

    Battery life depends on the external battery you get (24whr, 48whr or 72whr).

    With a 72whr external battery (72whr external and 24whr internal for 96whr total) battery life should be brilliant.

    Reviews here and here (and probably other places too).

  6. A look at "older" (probably post ultrabook introduction - sandy bridge and newer) used premium laptops (eg. T or X series thinkpads, XPS, Latitude, MBP/MBA) and comparing them to new alternatives (in terms of build, input devices, screen, i/o, features, ease of simple upgrades (ssd and battery would be important), performance etc) in the same price category could be interesting.

  7. 30 minutes ago, TheSebware said:

    Second: Anything that can trigger an ATA Secure Erase will do the same as the manufacturer's tool (as long as Secure Erase is supported by the drive).

    So, a Free tool for SSDs:

    hdparm on Linux (USE WITH CAUTION!): https://ata.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/ATA_Secure_Erase

    This.

    SSDs should be erased with Secure Erase, not overwrites like with spinning rust (eg. CCleaner only does overwrites and refuses to overwrite an SSD).

    This USB seems to be overwriting SSDs and not secure erasing them, making it no better than Darik's Boot and Nuke.

  8. On 17.8.2018 at 7:01 AM, reflectionxrage said:

    What is the similar mod for 1333mhz cpus?

    From the pinned comment on the video:

    "For any 1333MHz FSB CPU (eg. C2D E8400 C2Q Q9400) try this mod: http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/showthread.php?232678-E8xxx-Q9xx0-FSB-1600-pin-mod"

    Note that upping the FSB to 1600MHz requires the 1600MHz FSB to be natively supported by the board; I have only succeeded in making it work in an ASUS P5Q Deluxe, which already has OC options in the BIOS, rendering the mod useless on that board.

  9. Should you run Crossfire with integrated graphics?

     

    When most people think of multiple graphics cards in the same system, they often think of two of the exact same card in Crossfire or SLI. While that is mostly true, especially in the case of SLI, AMD Crossfire is a little more lenient when it comes to what cards you can run together.

     

    Prefer b-roll over written text? Watch my video here:

     

    AMD crossfire has allowed two GPUs from the same GPU design to run together for a long time. For example, you can run a HD 6970 (Cayman XT) and a HD 6950 (Cayman PRO) in crossfire without too much trouble; the 6970 disables a few components to essentially become a HD 6950, and it’s off to the races. However, crossfire also allows for even weirder configurations.

     

    AMD Radeon HD 2400 XT

    AMD Radeon HD 2400 XT

     

    AMD first did crossfire with integrated graphics in 2008 with HD 2400 and HD 3400 series cards being able to work in tandem with the integrated graphics in AMD 700 and 800 series chipsets. This was done again with AMDs APUs, but this time with the iGPU integrated in the CPU package instead of being on the motherboard. AMD calls this technology Hybrid Crossfire or Dual Graphics. AMD recommends a specific GPU for each APU that roughly matches the specifications of the APUs iGPU. In the case of my A10 6800K, this GPU is the HD 6670. However, you don’t have to oblige to these recommendations, which allows us to run the iGPU of an A10 6800K, a TeraScale 3 based GPU in crossfire with a HD 7750, a GCN 1.0 based GPU.

     

    AMD A10 6800K surrounded by a HD 5770, HD 7750 and a HD 6950

    AMD A10 6800K surrounded by a HD 5770, HD 7750 and a HD 6950

     

    The setup process is fairly simple; install the dGPU and enable Dual Graphics in the UEFI and in Catalyst Control Center. Unsurprisingly though, this obscure crossfire configuration refused to work in any of the games I tried. It only worked in 3D Mark, showing decent scaling, but this isn’t exactly very useful if you want to play actual games instead of watching a benchmark all day. Furthermore, the Piledriver based CPU in the AMD A10 is truly terrible, being easily beaten by Conroe based Core 2 Quad at roughly the same clockspeed due to the poor multi thread scaling of the module based Piledriver architecture. So the AMD A10 6800K cant redeem itself as a powerful CPU either, and when it’s one of the fastest FM2(+) CPU available, the FM2(+) platform seems rather obsolete in 2018.

     

    So how do these parts perform?

    Benchmarks can also be found at at 2:00 in my video above.

    Benchmarks (image heavy):

    Spoiler

    Lysbilde1.jpg.813cd9d87b7b009ed72c8c849169be5a.jpg

    Lysbilde2.jpg.7199847fab2d01f3e6f2905254ffb2f0.jpg

    Lysbilde3.jpg.e9591f16449dad824b4ebf0b3078d2f7.jpg

    Lysbilde4.jpg.a54ff01b8a0bc0d63835dd8ab9c6ef16.jpg

    Lysbilde5.jpg.c526f74691365519325fdc76813d7a41.jpg

    Lysbilde6.jpg.13966d7f86ee52adbd5377a99d90b95c.jpg

    Testbench specs:

    Spoiler

    AMD testbench specs:

    AMD A10 6800K

    MSI A88X-G45 GAMING

    16GB (4x4Gb) DDR3 1600MHz CL11

    Kingston UV400 240GB (OS)

    Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 750GB (Games)

    Corsair TX750 (750W)

     

    Intel testbench specs:

    i7 2600 @ 4.1 GHz (OC)

    ASUS Sabertooth Z77

    16GB (4x4Gb) DDR3 1600MHz CL9

    Kingston UV400 240GB (OS)

    Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 750GB (Games)

    Corsair TX750 (750W)

     

    So should you put an iGPU and a dGPU in crossfire? Definitely not. There is practically nothing that supports such a configuration, and AMDs FM2(+) platform lacks any modern fast CPUs to back it up. In the end, AMDs Dual Graphics was an interesting concept. If it had worked properly in games, it would have allowed for cheap GPU upgrades, perfect for the gamer on a budget (that hasn’t discovered the used market).

  10. 8 hours ago, kodel said:

    You fixed it!

    I modded my Vostro 220 a few years ago and had the same problem: very laggy windows 10 system due to high DPC and ISR CPU usage. Flashing your modded bios based on 1.2.0 immediately solved the problem.

    I didn't need to disable Speedstep or C1E support. I only disabled C-STATE.

     

    Thank you for sharing!

     

    Additional info:

    For the last 2 years I had Apple OS X installed on my Vostro. Strangely enough, the C-STATE incompatibility didn't effect OS X. It only caused a problem for Windows 10.

    I'm glad it worked for you! Interesting remark about issues only appearing in Windows 10.I wonder if Linux would be fine too, this might be a Windows only issue.

  11. 1 minute ago, limegorilla said:

    If that doesnt work, just use Bootcamp, make the MacOS partition about 2GB more than it needs xD 

    Am not sure, thinking about it, if this or @oskarha's option would work as I am not sure if it has bootcamp. Just check, if it does, both options would work, but if not, the above *should* work in theory but you'll need to do some digging for the drivers

    If it already has OSX bootcamp is the easiest, as it hands you the drivers for you to put on a USB drive.

    When using my solution you either have to get the drivers from bootcamp before you nuke the drive in the windows installer or go searching the apple website for them.

  12. Here's the full doc from Intel on the status of microcode updates for their CPUs:

    https://newsroom.intel.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/11/2018/04/microcode-update-guidance.pdf

    I find it interesting how Gulftown is getting left out, but Westmere EP and WS have already been updated when they (to my knowledge) are very similar CPUs.

    Nice to see the W3670 in my server still being supported, just have to find a way of installing the microcode onto my X58 Sabertooth ?

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