Tech News

  • Radeon 9700 Release Day

    Published: Monday, August 19, 2002 | By: Dennis

    Hardware sites across the net lucky enough to obtain the awesome Radeon 9700 have released their reviews. The first to be linked here is the "always good" review by Anandtech.

    As usual some sites are pretty slow today so, if you come across some other 9700 reviews send them in and we'll make a collection.

  • Corsair XMS 3200 Review @ Hexus

    Published: Monday, August 19, 2002 | By: Dennis

    Corsair has long been known to supply high-speed memory modules in many cases targeted to the overclocking market. XMS3200 happens to fall into that category and the Hexus crew was quite ingenious in how they attainted their 200MHz memory speed, I would suggest that you take a look.

  • WaterCooled Case Review @ Techware Labs

    Published: Saturday, August 17, 2002 | By: Dennis

    Watercooled systems offer some things that a normal aircooled system can't. Two of the most notable are cooling and noise. Water by nature has better thermal properties than air so your system will remain cooler, sometimes enough to allow some serious overclocking. Noise is also reduced since the only needed fan will be to cool the radiator. If you were ever curious about watercooling but don't have the time to build the system yourself Techware Labs might have a solution for you.

  • Silly Chipmunks

    Published: Thursday, August 15, 2002 | By: Dennis

    Breakdown sent in this story and his explanation was just too funny and needed to be posted.

    "sorry, but I would have just assumed that "Chipmunk in the toilet" was a euphemism for "my boyfriend took a big dump and it scares me"

    good thing I'm not a firefighter wink smile

    j"


    The site is work safe so feel free to click.

  • SiS and VIA Dive Into the DDR400 Market

    Published: Wednesday, August 14, 2002 | By: Dennis

    SiS and VIA are taking their Pentium 4 chipset designs to the next level by using DDR400 as their anchor into the high-performance P4 market. Kind of sounds like what Intel did with Rambus a few years back, wonder if it will work. wink smile

  • The Poisoned Apple

    Published: Wednesday, August 14, 2002 | By: Dennis

    This is an older mod that has been done quite often since the release of the G4 tower but it will still turn heads and get you in good with the graphics guys at work. The best part is you'll get all this and more without needed to jump to the Mac platform. big grin smile w00t!

  • Dual-channel DDR

    Published: Wednesday, August 14, 2002 | By: Dennis

    DDR seems to be the answer to the Rambus problem and until DDR-II becomes around the next logical solution is dual channel DDR, basically DDR333x2

    "The dual-channel DDR-333 systems will offer 5.3 Gbytes/s."

    "Currently, Nvidia Corp. is the only company to offer a dual-channel DDR chip set for mainstream PCs, which was released last summer. The company has not claimed much in the way of market share, partly because the set is based on CPUs from Advanced Micro Devices Inc. "
    Ouch sad smile

  • 3Ware 4 Serial ATA/150 RAID Controller Review @ GamePC

    Published: Wednesday, August 14, 2002 | By: Dennis

    This is a 4-channel Serial ATA controller meaning it supports up to 4 Serial ATA drives, one on each channel. The controller will also perform RAID operations in 0, 1, 1+0, and 5 making it similar to the Standard ATA RAID controller from Adaptec. I'm not sure you will need RAID 5 on the desktop seeing that RAID 10 is faster but it does offer more HDD space.

  • Zalman ST300BLP Power Supply Mod

    Published: Wednesday, August 14, 2002 | By: Dennis

    The last time I modded a power supply I started getting random power outages to the molex connectors so tread lightly when you mod electronics.

  • Triplex Millennium Silver GeForce 4 Ti4600 Review @ RadiativeNZ

    Published: Tuesday, August 13, 2002 | By: Dennis

    This card has been out for quite some time now and is finally starting to filter around the world. If you remember the Triplex card card comes in its own metal briefcase with a nice plexi window in the side for video card viewage.