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Techbits

Greg
Techbits are a brain child of Greg Hess, who initially started them on the Discreet Forum, then moved them here to a permanent home; they are gathered, (chewed up) and processed by Greg Hess and Thomas Bruno, an all around good guys, hardware experts and 3DLuVr staff/contributing authors.

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 Source: http://www.aceshardware.com by maximum3d on Fri Sep 26 2003 
The Athlon 64 FX at 2.8 GHz
When working with this system, a few interesting facts popped up. The system was actually running at 14 x 200 MHz, and could be set at multipliers ranging from 4 (800 MHz) to 14 (2.8 GHz). All AMD Athlon 64 FX are de facto unlocked and it seems that the maximum multiplier for this stepping is 14. The only thing from stopping you from overclocking with the multiplier seems to be the BIOS. The ASUS SK8N inside the nVENTIV Mach II featured a special ASUS bios that allowed us to change the CPU core voltage and multiplier.
 Source: http://www.sudhian.com by maximum3d on Fri Sep 26 2003 
Athlon 64 FX-51 Battle Pentium 4 Extreme
Sudhian Media has posted a comparison review between AMD's Athlon 64 and Intel's Pentium 4 "Extreme Edition"
 Source: http://www.digit-life.com by maximum3d on Fri Sep 26 2003 
Athlon 64 Notebook PC Review
The notebook weighs about 2.5 kg. Judging by a powerful battery and a bulky cooler AMD's new processor is not a competitor for the Intel Pentium M. It's not that light and slim. Well, the mobile Athlon 64 differs from the desktop one only in a metallic cover on the die, that is why the Mobile Athlon 64 3000+ consumes up to 85 W. This particular sample consumes 81.5 W. As a result, the AMD Mobile Athlon 64 is targeted at powerful notebooks like DTR (desktop replacement) and universal models, i.e. the models which actually work in the steady-state conditions and which, if necessary, can function in the offline mode. Hence its main competitor will be the Intel Pentium 4-M.
 Source: http://www.inmatrix.com/ by maximum3d on Tue Sep 09 2003 
Zoom Player Standard (Beta) 3.20
Zoom Player Standard a flexible feature rich Media Player that for all its features and goodness remains bloat-free. And Zoom Player Professional, which on top of being a great Media Player, incorporates the most powerful DVD Front-End you could imagine (and is even a few features you didn't think of imagining).
 Source: http://www.xbitlabs.com by maximum3d on Tue Sep 09 2003 
Turn AMD Duron Into AMD Athlon XP
If you take a closer look on AMD Duron and AMD Athlon XP processors you will notice only tiny difference: the L2 bridge is not locked on the Duron processor. If you lock it again, everything should work and the processor will have an L2 cache of 256KB!
 Source: http://www.madshrimps.be by maximum3d on Tue Sep 09 2003 
How to remove IHS on P4
The Madshrimps let us know they have published a how-to for removing the IHS (Integrated Heat Spreader) from the Pentium 4 processor.
 Source: http://www.bigbruin.com by maximum3d on Tue Sep 09 2003 
Alienware Mousepad Review
Its the mouse mat surface that really makes the difference... The smooth side of the mouse mat is made of fUnc Industries sUrface 1030, ideal for surfing the net and basic computer functions, but the rough textured side of the mat is ideal for gaming and desktop publishing as it has a precise and solid feel to it.
 Source: http://www.monster-hardware.com by maximum3d on Tue Sep 09 2003 
Ximeta 80 GIG NetDisk review
The Ximeta NetDisk is not only an 80 GIG 7200 RPM, USB 2.0 external hard drive, it is also an Ethernet drive.
 Source: http://www.notforidiots.com by maximum3d on Tue Sep 09 2003 
NV40 Rectifications
NV40 Rectifications: supports FP32, FP16 and FX16 natively. Whether there is any performance difference between FP16 and FX16 is unknown, and whether there are any truly non-FP32 units is also unknown. 175M transistors, 600Mhz core clock, 1.5Ghz effective GDDR2 ( Samples already shipped to nV - 16 memory chips per board ); Not taped-out yet, or if it did, tape-out failed. To tape-out sometime this month.; 8 pipelines, Speculation: probably 8x2 and no 16 zixel trick ( not worth it with 4x+ AA, which is really a minimum with 48GB/s of bandwidth ) - Maybe such a bypass path for low-end models ( NV42/NV43 )
 Source: http://www.darkhardware.com by maximum3d on Tue Sep 09 2003 
Gainward CoolFX
During the Cebit - Eurasia which happened this week in Istanbul, the chaps over at DarkHardware managed to took some detail photos of the Gainward's oncoming CoolFX 5900 Ultra product. As far as we know, these are the first shots of the CoolFX showing the underside of the card, as well as the water pump and the reservoir.

 
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