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Athlon Overclocking - The AfterBurner

NoWhere Man writes "Over at RB Computing (an AMD-only shop in Ottawa, Canada), they are distributing the AfterBurner, an Athlon Overclocking card, developped by Golden Fingers. It offers on-the-fly frequency and core voltage modifications, that is a reasonable alternative to building your own, as shown at Tom's Hardware Guide. "

124 of 193 comments (clear)

  1. Cost-effective? by vectro · · Score: 2

    Is this really cost effective? I mean, you could probably get a better performance/cost ratio by SMPing two processors, each 3/4 the speed of the one processor you were going to overclock.

    Or, am I missing something?

    1. Re:Cost-effective? by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't think any SMP Athlon motherboards are out there yet. This is something you can do right now.


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    2. Re:Cost-effective? by spiral · · Score: 2

      The people who really benefit from high clock speeds are the 3Dgamers. AFAIK there aren't any games that take advantage of SMP.

      ID was looking into it, but I don't believe they shipped the hacks with Q3A. Anyone know what happened with this?

      --
      Drinking will help us plan!
    3. Re:Cost-effective? by toast0 · · Score: 1

      well perhaps it would be more cost effective, but as of now, there is no SMP atlon board, so its a moot point

    4. Re:Cost-effective? by mongus · · Score: 1
      Q3A does support SMP. You have to set a variable from the console to enable it (search Deja for the variable).

      Not a 2x performance increase but it does make a difference.

    5. Re:Cost-effective? by jemfinch · · Score: 2

      That variable is r_smp.

      Type r_smp 1 at the console, and restart the game, and you've enabled q3's smp support..

      Also important to note is that 3dfx cards do not support q3 in SMP mode.

      Jeremy

    6. Re:Cost-effective? by warmi · · Score: 1

      Well, there are in the way... If you running NT then at least there will be much more processor-time for the game as some of the system threads will run on the other one. Not tremendous speedup but still something to consider.

    7. Re:Cost-effective? by karnal · · Score: 1

      I'm curious -- why wouldn't q3a support SMP under 3dfx cards? Why would it matter what card you have?

      I don't mean to sound rude - I'd actually like to build a dual celery system... and that is one of the reasons I want do build it... ugh...

      --
      Karnal
  2. Overclock Wars? by Maul · · Score: 1
    Well, we all are pretty much aware that Intel and AMD are having a speed war. It seems just about every few weeks, they push their chips faster to claim to have the fastest.

    I know that the AMD chips that are currently coming out overclock pretty well, but I'm wondering if the new "Merced" or whatever Intel is going to call it now is going to be so responsive to overclocking. My friends claim that P2s and P3s are pretty crappy for overclocking, but Celerons seem to be good. Is the new chip from intel going to overclock well?

    "You ever have that feeling where you're not sure if you're dreaming or awake?"

    --

    "You spoony bard!" -Tellah

    1. Re:Overclock Wars? by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 3
      Actually the PIII is WAY overclockable. The PIII-550E can be clocked up to 825 MHz according to some reports. Consider that a PIII-550E costs $350 and an Athlon 800 costs $904. An 825 MHz x86 processor cannot even be purchased on the open market yet. Anand's has a pretty good report on overclocking the PIII.

      -jwb

    2. Re:Overclock Wars? by Tranquillus · · Score: 1

      Ok, my bet will be that very few people will even attempt (some always do of course) to OC the IA64 when it comes out. Why? It's going to be damn expensive. They're releasing for a server chip there, at least initially... expect pricing like the Xeon used to be, at least, and wait for AMD's counter move. Now, the Celeron OCs well for 2 reasons first, it's the same chip as the PIII but clocked down with a 66mhz bus instead of 100 and with integrated cache (which helps OCers). So, since they got damn good yields up until they started rushing the transition to smaller size, a lot of those 300s and 366s are capable of easily and smoothly cranking up to 4 and 550 since that was about the low end of the yield curve for Intel by then. But, much more difficult to work higher with that kind of a jump (50%)once you're working with a higher clocked chip (like a celeron 500, say) to begin with. Anyway, look for Athlon to OC better as they deploy .18s from Dresden Fab this year and keep praying for good Mobos and 8 way SMP...(and SMP SuperGs! heh). Tranq

  3. Afterburner by toofast · · Score: 2

    I spoke with the owner, and he said the afterburner works quite well. He actually sells systems pre-configured with the device in place.

    Rock-on, but won't this (can this?) hurt AMD's sales for the high-priced, high-speed chips?

    1. Re:Afterburner by Hyper · · Score: 1

      It seems overclockability will only increase a chips popularity, in fact.
      Check out Kyrotech: http://www.kryotech.com/

      --

      ::: Hyper
  4. Re:Linux? by ctepher · · Score: 1

    There's nothing to not be compatible with as there is no software involved. If you're asking if you can run Linux on an Athlon, then the answer is yes. -ctepher

  5. Re:Linux? by vectro · · Score: 2

    Since it requires no software support (even the hardware dosen't know it's there), it should work with linux, any of the BSDs, windows, V2OS, Mach, DOS, any of the Windows (including 1.0), CP/M, App-specific OSes such as Kings Quest 1 and 2, and Zork 1-3, and any other x86 operating system you'd care to mention.

  6. Review by Fjord · · Score: 3

    Here's the Hard OCP review of the Afterburner (from the link).

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    -no broken link
  7. Re:Linux? by wavelet · · Score: 1


    i doubt it but he could be talking about the following...


    from http://www.rbcomputing.com/ab/afterburner.html
    UPDATE: Word is, software will be coming available to adjust the L2 divider through software shortly. RB Computing will keep you updated!

  8. Old News by Oscarfish · · Score: 2
    There are about a half-dozen of these adapters available for sale. They range in price from $20 to $125 depending on options (voltage tweaks, build quality, etc.).

    The hard-wired multipiler lock of the Athlon (and awful motherboard support, you can't argue that) were the only reasons keeping me from upgrading to an Athlon. Instead I'm using a Coppermine 500E and I have it overclocked to 700MHz (5.0*140) on a Soyo 6BA+ III motherboard with an IWill Slotket II.

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    Oscarfish.com: tropical fish with attitude. Way t

  9. Crippling the L2 for the sake of the core? by DiningPhilosopher · · Score: 3

    The cache divider is not controllable through the Athlon's edge connector. In some cases, higher overclocked speeds may be possible by changing the cache divider from its default setting of 1/2 to 1/3.

    I'm no overclocking master, but are they suggesting you cut the L2 cache speed from 1/2 core to 1/3 core? Why on earth would you do that? Let's say your core frequency is 800 MHz, and your L2 runs at 400. If you overclock it to 900 but your L2 cache is only running at 300, surely you're getting worse performance overall than you were before...

    Is this just another example of the blind worship of the almighty MHz? I think this is the first time I've seen anyone sacrifice performance for higher core processor frequencies...

    Or have I just forgotten everything from my architecture class? :-)

    --
    /* The beatings will continue until morale improves. */
    1. Re:Crippling the L2 for the sake of the core? by ChadN · · Score: 2

      The Athlon has 128k of L1 cache, so reducing the the L2 cache speed may not have as much effect as on a PII/III chip which has 32k of L1 cache (?).

      --
      "It's overkill, of course. But you can never have too much overkill." - Anonymous Slashdot Coward
    2. Re:Crippling the L2 for the sake of the core? by jidar · · Score: 2

      You are not nessecarily going to be getting worse performance. How big of an impact cache speed has on your application depends on the application and the circumstances. Quake2 for instance is not much impacted by the cache as it is the raw power of the cpu and as such would see increases in framerates with this method. It all depends on what you are doing.

      --
      Sigs are awesome huh?
    3. Re:Crippling the L2 for the sake of the core? by barleyguy · · Score: 2

      The effect of the cache depends mostly on the application you are running. Some applications will benefit more from higher megahertz, others will benefit more from a faster clock rate. With an overclocking card, you can actually go from one state to the other fairly easily, depending on the application you are running. Some applications are more memory or cache dependent, others are more megahertz dependent. Also remember that the Athlon has 128K of L1 cache, and a damn good branch predictor, so on some apps the L2 cache may make very little difference.

      Some other points:

      1. This is not the first overclocking device of this type. There are a couple of others, the most prominent being one from Trinity Micro.

      2. There is also a 2/5 cache divider option, which allows you to get to higher megahertz without going all the way to 1/3. Also, there is a way to set the divider in software, so you don't have to solder to change the divider. I think that is why AMD didn't give access to the cache divider on the "golden fingers" connector on the top of the processor. The program to do this is still not posted in a public spot on the net, as far as I know. "Soon"

      3. The L2 cache is sometimes more than a little bit of a limitation. Let's suppose your processor only does 600 mhz at 1/2, but it does 900 mhz at 1/3. That's a 50% increase in megahertz, both ending with a 300 mhz cache, so in this case you would DEFINITELY be faster.

      4. Athlons should soon have onboard cache, at full speed, so you won't need to do this. There is supposed to be a version of this with up to 2 megabytes of cache, called the Mustang, or "Athlon Ultra". This chip should kick some serious ass.

      --
      --- "So THAT's what an invisible barrier looks like!" - Time Bandits
    4. Re:Crippling the L2 for the sake of the core? by barleyguy · · Score: 1

      If you troll with your real ID, maybe we'll all chip in and get you a fishing pole. I bet Rob is numb to you by now, so I'm not sure if you just do this to irritate everybody, or whether you're just bored. Anyhow...

      --
      --- "So THAT's what an invisible barrier looks like!" - Time Bandits
    5. Re:Crippling the L2 for the sake of the core? by vectro · · Score: 1

      Of course, switching to java would make it impossible for me to view slashdot in lynx.

    6. Re:Crippling the L2 for the sake of the core? by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 3
      According to Anandtech, who did a review of overclocked Athlons (including ones with the L2 cache switched to 1/3), you still get a performance boost if you up the MHz and change the L2 cache multiplier to a lower setting. Granted, it's not linear, but you still *do* see a significant boost. Here's the article -A.P.
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    7. Re:Crippling the L2 for the sake of the core? by FigWig · · Score: 1

      Completely offtopic, but the content of the HTML is independent of the type of server generating it. Thus a Java servlet engine can generate content suitable for any HTML browser.

      --
      Scuttlemonkey is a troll
  10. Re:Cost-effective? Depends by webslacker · · Score: 1

    AFAIK, the biggest bottleneck in SMPin' is the OS. According to my blurry recollection, BeOS is supposed to be the most efficient at utilizing the multiple processors, NT does a half-decent job, and Win9X doesn't do SMP at all. I don't know anything about how well Linux does, but I suggest you do some more research if you want hard numbers.

  11. Cool by Perrin-GoldenEyes · · Score: 1

    I thought about getting one of these things for my Athlon 700, but the idea of taking the plastic casing off the cartridge always scared me off. I'm not generally all that squeamish, but we're talking about a pretty expensive CPU here. It'd really suck to screw it up. I wish AMD would provide some sort of safe access to the pins for overclocking.

    Cheers,
    Perrin.

    --
    -Perrin.
    Now I want you to go in that bag and find my lightsaber. It's the one that says bad mother-fscker on it.
    1. Re:Cool by NoWhere+Man · · Score: 1

      Actually...according to the first article written on Tom's Hardware guide about overclocking the Athlon, the case is not easy to open.
      Of course...I think he was trying to overclock a 500Mhz version or something...might have changed since then.

      --

      "Imagination is the only weapon in the war against reality." -Jules de Gautier
  12. Motherboards an issue? by toofast · · Score: 1

    I've had my Athlon 550 for a few months now, fully-loaded with the ASUS K7M.

    Just about every computer store in Ottawa (Canada) has the K7M in stock. Even the onboard VIA audio just recently got inserted into the Linux Kernel (although I prefer the good ol' Sound Blaster).

    I fail to see how the motherboard issue remains.

    1. Re:Motherboards an issue? by Fiore2 · · Score: 1

      I have this motherboard as well using the 500mhz chip. I LOVE this motherboard, very sweet. Just got the system last night. Have you tried overclocking it?

    2. Re:Motherboards an issue? by Oscarfish · · Score: 1
      Come on, you want anyone to believe that there are a quality selection of Slot A motherboards out there? Even the K7M as its problems: placement of the ATX power connector, an AMR Slot, onboard sound (with select boards), lack of overclocking via bus speed selection, and let's not forget the chipset itself - until the KX133 comes out Via motherboards are still in the doghouse for disk performance, memory bandwidth, a horrible AGP implementation, compatibility, and CPU execution. The BX trounces the Via even with the Via proclaiming a 200MHz EV6 front side bus.

      If you want to get critical, think of the FIC SD11, possibly the worst mainboard ever created. Did you know FIC's engineers dropped the ball on this one? The board is a preproduction sample. They had to rush their product to market so better boards won't hog all of the sales.

      --

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      Oscarfish.com: tropical fish with attitude. Way t

    3. Re:Motherboards an issue? by Oscarfish · · Score: 1

      What about it? It's a stable board, not made for overclocking (but no Intel-made board is)...my Coppermine runs exceptionally well on my BX Soyo 6BA+ III.

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      Oscarfish.com: tropical fish with attitude. Way t

    4. Re:Motherboards an issue? by Oscarfish · · Score: 1

      Even with an MTH which transfers RDRAM requests to SDRAM the i820 beats out the Via. You want to talk about memory bandwidth and performance, the Via is the worst of the bunch.

      --

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      Oscarfish.com: tropical fish with attitude. Way t

  13. Kind of pricey by sodergren · · Score: 2

    $125 for three switches, an Rpak, and a connector?
    Wow, that seems steep considering the cost of the
    parts.

    I've modified a couple of Athlon 500s (which both
    turned out to actually be 650's based on the legend on the chip itself) to overclock at 750.
    It just involves moving a few SMT resistors. This
    board just gives you easier access to selections that are already possible.

    1. Re:Kind of pricey by �Network+Error� · · Score: 1

      Try here instead: http://www.ninjamicro.co.uk/ It's 65$. And they'll ship it anywhere in the world with no shipping charges. (Dip switch driven.)

    2. Re:Kind of pricey by Capt+Dan · · Score: 2

      that's $125 canadian dollars. It should be much cheaper in USD.
      "You want to kiss the sky? Better learn how to kneel." - U2

      --
      Sig:
      Barbeque is a noun. Not a verb.
  14. AMD market share by guerby · · Score: 2
  15. Start at a lower frequency by Spoke · · Score: 2
    It is much better to start with a slower chip, say a Athlon 500, and then clock it up as necessary while lower the cache divider.

    I bet a fair number of 500Mhz Athlon cores can do 750Mhz but are held back by the cheaper L2 cache they run. Getting a 750Mhz chip at the cost of a 500 aint too bad, even if it isn't as fast as the "real" Athlon 750s.

    1. Re:Start at a lower frequency by 348 · · Score: 1
      . . . I don't get it.

      Sorry for being dense but. why start with a slower chip?

      --

      More race stuff in one place,
      than any one place on the net.

    2. Re:Start at a lower frequency by Tower · · Score: 2

      way cheaper.

      Athlon 700 ~$500
      Athlon 550 ~$200

      if they both can get to 650MHz (since they may be from the same fab lot (taking all sorts of things into account), you feel smarter and not so poor...

      --
      "It's tough to be bilingual when you get hit in the head."
  16. The race for the MHz by toofast · · Score: 1

    I tend to agree with this, but public perception is based on the higher MHz. It doesn't matter that you're using a 3600 RPM 15ms drive, or 16 MB of RAM (ugh), as long as it's equipped with an 800MHz Athlon, people think it's a rocker of a machine.

    The amount (and speed) of RAM as well as the speed of the HD and accompanying bus are equally important. Otherwise, Linux (or Windows 2000) will load just as slow as a Pentium 200 with 128 MB. But most people ignore this.

    The almighty MHz. Some people's friend. Some people's ennemy.

    1. Re:The race for the MHz by billybob+jr · · Score: 1

      I think you are exagerating just a tad. One big driver of fast Mhz processors are games, which makes HD slowness an inconvenience, but not a huge factor. Memory is always important but most systems I've seen with Athlons come with 64 Megs of ram. 128 is nice, but 64 is sufficient for most people.

  17. Re:Except this by slickwillie · · Score: 1

    You still can't run Windoze over DR-DOS on it.

  18. Any resources for totally lazy OC-wannabe bums? by torpor · · Score: 2

    I read Ars Technica and Toms Hardware Guide often enough to know that it's all fun and games, and there are clans and cults of overclocking out there, etc. And if I wanted to, I could get into it and build myself a monster machine.

    Well, I don't wanna. I'm too lazy. I've got this aging Pentium Pro/200 system that's slow by todays standards, but which has served me quite well, and actually I just don't wanna mess with hardware anymore.

    This doesn't mean I don't want to *own* the fruits of such activities, though. I'd love to have the absolute screamingest machine that a couple G's could buy, and I'm sure there's someone out there that would be happy to provide such an elite box o' power for a small price.

    Point is, does anyone know of any companies that build these sorta monster boxes, or is it just better to go with a good quality hardware vendore like VA Systems or something like that for my 'leet hardware needs?

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    1. Re:Any resources for totally lazy OC-wannabe bums? by NoWhere+Man · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately buying one and sticking it on the card yourself and turning a few knobs if about as easy as it comes...just be thankful they came out with a better way then moving resistors around.

      --

      "Imagination is the only weapon in the war against reality." -Jules de Gautier
  19. Wow - I was JUST reading this today! by Fiore2 · · Score: 1

    I was JUST reading this today. Looks very interesting.

    Not sure I'd buy it though, $125 is pretty expensive.

    I just got my new Athlon system, 500mhz on a Asus K7 motherboard. It's great. A lot of the modifications towards overclocking can be done through the BIOS setup - very cool

    This is really a great chip and I'm happy to give my business to AMD. I looked at the Intel chips and everything pointed to the Athlon.

    1. Re:Wow - I was JUST reading this today! by Malc · · Score: 2

      125.00 Canadian dollars = 86.41 US dollars

      Exchange rate: 0.691300
      Rate valid as of: 1/10/2000

  20. You can always visit the manufacturer... by Ron+Harwood · · Score: 1

    Outside Loop as it says on the card... and they sell it for $80 US... (in the US)...

    The $125 Canadian from the Ottawa store is cool for us Canadians though. ;)

  21. The source of the overclocking fad. by TheDullBlade · · Score: 2

    Overclocking, today, is pretty silly. It's rather expensive and doesn't really provide that great a benefit. It's mostly an exercise in macho tinkering, done to brag about the top speed more than to actually run the thing.

    However, it was entirely sensible when Intel released a whole pile of Celerons which were perfectly capable of running at half again their stock speed, with no special cooling hardware.

    It didn't make sense not to to overclock, in that case. Intel's marketing department decided to lie to everyone about what these chips could do so they wouldn't cut into their high-margin market.

    However, chip manufacturers have now learned their lesson: a few people will always test to see if their chip is really as slow as the spec say, and if they learn otherwise they'll tell everyone else over the internet. So they will build their chips to run slower if they want a slow chip to sell at a cheap price, and make damn sure that there is no cost-effective way to run it faster. The golden days of overclocking are over.

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    /.
    1. Re:The source of the overclocking fad. by Jett · · Score: 1

      A lot people still build celeron overclocker systems. It's pretty common practice in the gaming scene. Overclocking isn't a fad at all. It may not be as cost effective with some of the newer processors, but for a lot of people it's still worth it. And don't forget, there is a lot more you can overclock than just your CPU. A lot of people overclock their video cards too. Why do chip makers care about overclocking so much? Why do they care what I do to the chip? It's MY CHIP. I bought it. If i wanna void my warranty and run the thing as fast as it can then why should they try to make that harder for me to do? I believe chip makers should make it as easy as possible to overclock just out of courtesy to their customers.

    2. Re:The source of the overclocking fad. by toast0 · · Score: 1

      the problem is, they don't want the people selling you your system to overclock it without telling you....

      if you buy a system that is specificially overclocked its cool

      but if you buy a pIII 600 system, and its running a pIII 500 chip, w/ no extra cooling, in a piece of crap case it has a higherpossibility of overheating and then who do you blame?

      intel, cause their chip overheated

      then you go get an amd chip, and intel has lost market share

    3. Re:The source of the overclocking fad. by MicroBerto · · Score: 1

      Not only is it silly/expensive/low benefits, but one thing many people don't realize is that these reviewers who check out the overclocked Athlons aren't using them for an extended amount of time. Try using it for 6 months+ and your chances for more problems gets worse and worse. Testing it for a week (if that) might sound good to test speed, but your chip probably isn't going to make the long haul.
      - Mike Roberto
      -- roberto@apk.net
      --- AOL IM: MicroBerto

      --
      Berto
    4. Re:The source of the overclocking fad. by Keeper · · Score: 1

      Gee, then I guess the overclocked K6/233 (to 264) I've using for the last two years right now shouldn't be working...

    5. Re:The source of the overclocking fad. by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      Why do they care what I do to the chip? It's MY CHIP. I bought it. If i wanna void my warranty and run the thing as fast as it can then why should they try to make that harder for me to do? I believe chip makers should make it as easy as possible to overclock just out of courtesy to their customers.

      Overclocking can be used to sell chips at clocks they weren't sold for. Also Intel's customers are distributors. Joe shopper buys an Intel PC at 500 MHz, with a remarked chip that was rated for 350MHz. Joe buys an AMD system that actually is more stable. Joe blames Intel for a flakey computer.

      Intel has no real way of determining wether you've exceeded the warranty bounds. Should they pay for the lunatic overclocker's attempts at speed trips? There are people that'll burn up chips and have no qualm returning them saying they're defective.

      Every product in every industry is capable of operating outside its maker's specs. When not done properly, this significantly reduces the life of the product. Do you pop two pills when the bottle only says one? Do you use a one ton jack to hold up a two ton truck?

      In every industry the manufacturer has to do what they reasonably can to reduce illicit use of their technology or else they could get sued or suffer some other harm.

    6. Re:The source of the overclocking fad. by Johan+Veenstra · · Score: 1

      > Try using it for 6 months+ and your chances for more problems gets worse and worse.

      It's more the other way around. Some chips seem to need a burn-in-period. I overclocked my celeron 300A, to 450. The first two month it needed a higher voltage to run stable. After two month I switched back to the normal voltage, and it runs without any problems. It's even stable at 504 (112x4.5).

  22. Why Overclock? by gillbates · · Score: 1

    Okay, so you want a fast system. You go out and buy an Athlon. Then you buy an overclocking kit to squeeze every last CPU cycle you can. The only problem: your machine runs just as slow as it did before because the rest of the system can't keep up with the processor. I don't understand why everyone worships processor speed when in reality it's bus, memory, and hard drive speed that have the greatest influence over system performance. Processor speed will never be the limiting factor in overall system speed. I'm not going to drool when the 1 GHz Athlons come out; however, I might get very excited when that $100 motherboard has a 500MHz backside bus.

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    1. Re:Why Overclock? by orangesquid · · Score: 1

      I have an SGI Indy, and supposedly the bus is capable of 2.3 Gb/s (on a 32-bit system, this would be like a 616 mhz bus i think) ... the system is only 1/6 the speed of my intel box (in terms of processor speed in MIPS), yet the two machines often run neck-in-neck. The only thing particularly slow I notice on the Indy is heavy disk access, but that's probably just my hard drive ;-)

      --
      --TheOrangeSquid Is it any wonder things seem so awry? We swim in a sea of confusion and don't have to think to survive
    2. Re:Why Overclock? by Malc · · Score: 2

      I tend to agree with you. There are better ways (of course, depending on how you use your machine though) of boosting performace. You can get a dual Mobo with 2 Celeron 500 for about $20 more than a single MoBo and a P3 500. In my experience Celerons are very good performers, and this is a really good way of getting something vastly faster than a P3 500 for roughly the same price.

      Incidentally, I've just ordered the parts for a dual P3 system (I got carried away when I came across a good deal whilst looking around at Slockets). Hopefully I won't be sitting around waiting for Visual C++ under NT for so long in the future. As I work from home, I can't afford take risks with my computer crashing due a minor instabilty caused by overclocking. I almost bought that dual Celeron hack the Abit-BP6, but I don't think that it is stable enough for me to risk not being payed for time spent recovering from a crash.

    3. Re:Why Overclock? by mtest · · Score: 1

      The only thing particularly slow I notice on the Indy is heavy disk access, but that's probably just my hard drive ;-)

      No, that's the crappy SCSI bus. Check the specs!

    4. Re:Why Overclock? by Johan+Veenstra · · Score: 1

      Take a pIII 500E (100x5) for example. The second level cache (256kb) is situated on the die, an ideally overclockable system. A lot of 500E's are overclockable to 700 (140x5), some even higher.

      Now you're not just overclocking you core,
      you're overclocking your 1st level cache,
      you're overclocking your 2nd level cache,
      you're overclocking your bus,
      you're overclocking your memory

      And if it runs stable, you've got a machine that will runs circles around the 500E, and even outpace a 'normal' PIII-700 (since your bus is 40% faster).

  23. Waste of money. by Rhombus · · Score: 1

    For the same amount of money, Trinity Micro will install switches on your Athlon, including a switch to change the cache clock multiplier.

  24. SMP not what it's cracked up to be.. by HomerJ · · Score: 3

    I jumped on the BP6 bandwagon when they were released with a couple of celeron366's at 458. BTW I got off-week celery's at a good price and hoped for the best for 504 and didn't work.

    q3a supports SMP, only in WinNT. I bought q3a expecting SMP code to be in there for linux, but Carmack doesn't think it's nessecary to have SMP in linux. That rant is for another day though =) I grabbed Win2k early to get a natvie DirectX and SMP support. The only thing I saw was complicated aps taking 50% cpu power. I never got the voodoo 3 driver to work in WIn2k quite right, so I didn't benchmark q3a with SMP(the drivers from NT game palace is you must know)

    Kernel compiles in linux only take a couple minues, but that's about the only real use I get out of SMP. Linux distributes the processes wekk enough, but I rarely do something that really taxes the machine, besides q3a and compiling kernels. And GCC is the only thing that uses both. About the only REAL benafit, is that I can run GCC with only one job, and it doesn't tie down the system.

    With just about every OS now supporting SMP, including WIn2k, OS X, linux, etc., when will companies start writing apps that take advantage of it? Is Win9x holding SMP back because it doesn't support it?

    1. Re:SMP not what it's cracked up to be.. by Malc · · Score: 2

      "With just about every OS now supporting SMP, including WIn2k, OS X, linux, etc., when will companies start writing apps that take advantage of it?"

      It depends what the app does really. A word processor doesn't benefit greatly from SMP (the CPU spends most of the time idle as the app is waiting for user input). MS Word is multithreaded in some areas though, for example, background printing. In this case, the multithreaded makes it Word feel more responsive, but as a side effect utilises SMP if available. As I understand it, an SMP OS like NT will automatically take advantage of extra CPUs when threads are in use. Just looking at my task manager, I see that the majority of processes have more than one thread (and thus could benefit in some way from an extra CPU), for example: Internet Explorer - 11 threads; McAffee Virus Sheild - 11 threads; the system - 31; SQL Server - 17; Yahoo! Messenger - 14; etc.

      I would think that SMP gives a real boost when two processes (or threads) pipe data from one to the other and work in parallel. Reduced context switches, and true parallelism rather than imitated parallelism (which takes twice as long).

      My point is: people already multithread their apps, so they will use SMP. Whether you see a benefit is another story - that depends on what you're doing.

      The other thing of course: it's much easier to quickly develop a single-threaded application. Companies are constantly rushing. On top of this, in my experience, a large proportion of the software developers can't handle concurrency. The amount of obvious multithreading bugs that I've had to fix is staggering. When a company realises that they could develop a not so nice and inferior piece of software in less time, they generally do so (unfortunately).

    2. Re:SMP not what it's cracked up to be.. by kijiki · · Score: 1

      You run X right? Well, on a single CPU box, your app and the X server constantly vie for the CPU, the app (well, actually xlib) queues up some drawing requests, then the X server takes over the CPU and draws them. Rinse, repeat.

      With SMP, the X server gets a CPU, as does the app. Much less context switching, and the cache doesn't get thrashed because the linux scheduler tries to keep processes on the CPU they last ran on.

      The old X FAQ actually recommends swaping workstation and $DISPLAY with a coworker on a fast network, to reduce the context switching overhead. You work on her machine, showing up on your local X server, and he does the same.

      SMP is the wave of the future. Between the dual celeron board, and $110 P-II 450s, SMP is the way to go for the fastest system available cheap.

    3. Re:SMP not what it's cracked up to be.. by jemfinch · · Score: 1

      You'll have to pardon me here, but I don't see the purpose of this "workstation $DISPLAY swap" thing. Either way, you're running both an X server and a client on the same CPU, so you're still gonna be context switching quite a bit. Except after the swap, you've got network overhead too.

      Jeremy

    4. Re:SMP not what it's cracked up to be.. by costas · · Score: 3

      I will repeat this until I am soar, 'coz, well, it's a soar point with us in the Beowulf community: Linux SMP sucks. If you want good SMP performance, you're better of with NT or Solaris.

      The big problem with Linux SMP, IMNSHO: NO CPU affinity. Which means roughly this: processes are rotated thru all available CPUs, instead of being assigned to one CPU and then being dynamically balanced (new jobs sent to the lightest-used CPU, when CPUs are imbalanced by some threshold %, move 1-2 smaller jobs that will balance them out).

      What does this mean? well, CPU cache is practically useless. Makes all that dough spent on Xeons instead of Celerons seem wasted --and it is.

      Don't get me wrong; I am all for Linux, and I am sure SMP will catch up pretty soon. But don't go spending $$$ on SMP machines expecting (n-1)*100% increase in performance.


      engineers never lie; we just approximate the truth.

    5. Re:SMP not what it's cracked up to be.. by pedro · · Score: 1

      Wow! If you're right, the cpu allocation in linux is pretty primitive. I have a scary alternative idea, though...
      How about some of us set about crafting a neural or fuzzy scheduler? Neural nets have have an incredible way of optimising to a problem. Speed might be difficult at first, but a simple checksum or crc pattern stream might provide enough clue to a neural net to allow it to balance loads in a meaningful way. Cached past patterns could be used for future prognostications...
      I can guarantee you one thing: someone will try this strategy, at some point. Might as well be us!

      --
      Brak: What's THAT?
      Thundercleese: A light switch.. of TOTAL DEVASTATION!
    6. Re:SMP not what it's cracked up to be.. by Yohimbe · · Score: 1

      Which version of Linux SMP are you looking at to make these comments? Last I read on the linux-kernel list, Linus detailed that linux threads do not switch CPUs.
      Also, From my last look at the scheduler, there is a big preference given to the previous processor a process was run on, so as to not incur a TLB flush.
      But on an overloaded box, TLB flushes are a huge overhead. But we are talking about where the # of running process == # of avail CPUs. So I don't see the "processes rotated thru all available cpus" that you claim.

      --
      -- Perl Hack, Web Hack, SQL Hack, Guitar Hack
    7. Re:SMP not what it's cracked up to be.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The optimal performance increase with 2 CPU SMP is about 45%.
      Linux is below 20%, Solaris is close to 40%.
      Optimal use of cache will on avarage increase performance of 80% for a batch.
      How this turns out in real life when compared I'm not sure, so if anyone knows I'd like to hear
      as benchmarks tend to have quite a substantual margin of error.

    8. Re:SMP not what it's cracked up to be.. by Lars+Arvestad · · Score: 2

      The AC said:
      The optimal performance increase with 2 CPU SMP is about 45%.
      Linux is below 20%, Solaris is close to 40%.

      Huh? Why 45%? Is this Quake performance or some kind of general claim? It sounds awfully low.

      I have made many CPU intensive tasks on a 4 CPU Solaris machine that I have shared with others (also doing intensive computations) and have not noticed anything like this. I have not made any timings, but each CPU is faster than what I have on my desk and it certainly looks like a linear speedup until the machine runs out of processes.

      Lars
      __

      --
      Reality or nothing.
  25. Concurrency matching by Nick+Mitchell · · Score: 2

    I've said it once, and I'll say it again! The biggest bottleneck for SMPs is the concurrency supported by the cachememory link. Not bandwidth, not latency, not capacity, concurrency.

    If you don't match the concurrency of your memory link with the concurrency of your clients (i.e. processors), you're hosed for any demanding application.

    What do I mean by memory link concurrency? It could come from crossbar versus bus, or multi-ported memories, or from multibanked (interleaved) memories.

    Cray has zillion-banked memories. Processors now have multi-banked caches, because there are lots of things going on at once inside out-of-order issue processors!

    It's all about concurrency matching!!

    nick

    1. Re:Concurrency matching by Nick+Mitchell · · Score: 1

      dangit! I always post too early. I meant to add that most commodity SMPs don't concurrency-match well at all. In fact, the concurrency of most commodity SMP subsystems is about 1!

      In contrast, the concurrency of "good" SMPs, like the convex exemplar or origin 2k is huge. For example, the exemplar has (can't remember exactly) like 8 banks or 32-way interleaved memory, attached to processors over a crossbar!

      And all this concurrency for a measily 16 processors :)

  26. I'm all for overclocking, but... by MVoelker · · Score: 2

    I'd rather buy this:

    http://www.kryotech.com/Products/superg/Tech_Spe cs/tech___specs.html

    It's a barebones athlon based PC overclocked to 1Ghz, and it comes with a 1 year warranty.

    I'd rather have someone else to blame if I happened to fry my machine.
    Mike


    --
    Sure, I have a thankless job. That's okay. I have a lot of (non /.)karma to burn off.
    1. Re:I'm all for overclocking, but... by NoWhere+Man · · Score: 1

      I was looking at that a year back and what I am disappointed about it that they used to offer a system case you could buy yourself and put your own computer into. Not as effective because you don't get the same expertise, but still pretty good.

      And if you combined the AfterBurner...with the Kryotech system, well, let's just say I wish I had a few grand lying around.

      --

      "Imagination is the only weapon in the war against reality." -Jules de Gautier
  27. Athlon Overclocking by toolj23 · · Score: 1

    This is cool, except for the fact that it's 120$ canadian. Right now, actually, I am building my own athlon OC'er with the circuit on tomshardware.

    I finally got 5 of those connectors after about 2 months of trying to find them. No one really sells them in non-bulk supply. Now I'm just waiting on my resistor packs and diodes. So far I've spent maybe 20$ on the whole thing and that's all I'm going to have to spend. If you know how to make one you can save a lot of money!

    Btw, if anyone wants to buy 1 or 2 of the actual 40-pin connectors email me at jpal@linuxfan.com. They're a bitch to find, and I'm willing to sell 1 or 2 of them if someone else wants to build their own.

    -John

  28. EDUCATE YOURSELF, BOY! YOU STUPID? by �Network+Error� · · Score: 2

    180 $ for Athlon 500. + 70 $ for NinaMicros overclocker. = Athlon 700 with slightly slower cache. For under 200 bucks, I have a slightly slimmed down Athlon 700. I don't see a PROBLEM with this. Do you? (And yes. Most reports indicate that you can overclock an Athlon 500 up to 700 and have it run just as reliably as a real 700.)

  29. Hell yes! by �Network+Error� · · Score: 1

    It's only 180$ or so for an athon 500, right? And about 70$ for ninjamicro's keen overclocker. That's under 200$. And most people have been able to clock up to 700 Mhz with no problems. Small minus for the cache slow down.
    So you've got a CPU that's almost as good as a 600$ CPU for less than 200$. Hell, get two of them, if you want an SMP setup so badly. :)

  30. SMP with AThalons by FoulBeard · · Score: 1

    Can you SMP Athlons..?
    I am considering getting a SMP box running and right now I have 2(370 Overclocked Celerons) in mind maybe I should change this to Athlons.
    Come lets here you suggestions for the best non Intel SMP machine....

  31. Really by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    Overclocking is great. Heck, any hardware hack is great. And it's not about 'sticking it to the man' either.. it's simply about knowing how to *use* technology instead of being enslaved by it.
    When I buy a PIII, I'm not paying intel for the right to use it at a certain frequency, I'm paying intel for a chip that *they* have guaranteed will run up to a certain speed. Over that speed, and you are on your own.

    Now.. when the Celeron 300A was out, and you could easily clock it to 150%, heck, that's fantastic. A real money saver... spend $30 on extra gear to cool it, and you were set.
    Now.... do I spend $75 on extra fans/heat sinks, when I could buy a chip that's rated at a a similar higher speed for about the same added cost? Sure.. it might cost me a few dollars more.. but then I *know* it will work too.

    Like.. Kryotech.. now, those Cool athlon 1Ghz jobs have major geek cool factor, I'll admit, and I'd love to have one.. but realistically, I could be 2 other full machines for the price of just their base model, each machine being around 600Mhz anyway.... so why would I bother? What good would it do?

  32. Not Quite Cool Enough by crisco · · Score: 2

    I want one that mounts the switches on an unused drive bay, kind of like Creative is doing with their sound card connecter bay 'Live Drive' or something like that. Then I'd need some big assed knobs that go up to 11 like Spinal Tap had. That way everyone knows I can crank that Athlon up anytime I want to.

    --

    Bleh!

    1. Re:Not Quite Cool Enough by sterwill · · Score: 1

      Go to 11? But couldn't you just make them go to 10, and make 10 be louder?

      --

    2. Re:Not Quite Cool Enough by karnal · · Score: 1

      But this one will go to 11!

      --
      Karnal
  33. The point was... by TheDullBlade · · Score: 2

    The point was that overclocking is a result of intentional under-rating for marketing purposes. There may still be some stuff out on the market for which it is practical, but now the chip makers are clued in to the fact that they can't get away with just underrating their own chips in the documentation. Someone will catch the lie.

    The reason they would make it hard for people to overclock is that they would rather sell you the more expensive chip. Courtesy to customers is in damn short supply, which is why low profit margin cars are built to disintegrate in time for the new model to come out ($6000 construction cost for a $10000 car that lasts 5 years, or $10000 construction cost for a $50000 car that lasts 50 years: looked at as individual jobs, the latter is much more profitable, but to a long-term industry, they are close to equal; fairness doesn't even come into it). In theory, competition is supposed to wipe out these tactics, but industries always have these little understandings that member companies will follow even to their own demise, like a daimyo refusing to arm his troops with modern guns and change the face of Japanese feudal society even when he'll be defeated otherwise.

    --
    /.
    1. Re:The point was... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

      Unfortunately, though you make a good case and have hit Intel right on the nose, you are wrong about AMD, at least about their Athlons. The chips they mail out as 500s roll off the same production line and have the exact same contents inside as a 700MHz machine except for a few resistors. Now, according to your theory that all chip makers have caught on, and I think they have, what would be the logic here?

      Easy, look how fast that one Celeron chip that was superoverclockable (and it was only one model boys and girls, your cousin never overclocked his 450 Celery to 900) sold out! Feed the overclockers a MASS of your 500MHz chips that can go to 700, make a huge profit in bulk there. Sell the overpriced 700MHz chips to power users in business and home that want power but don't really feel like cracking the case open on their chip... let alone simply opening the case which scares most people.

      E.
      I think this is probably the smartest thing AMD could ever do, even better than beating Intels chips in every single conceivable benchmark by a significant margin especially in the holy floating point arena...

    2. Re:The point was... by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      The number of people with overclocked Celerons is miniscule compared to the number of non-clocked Celerons humming away on business desktops.

      Both Intel and AMD are well aware of overclocking, but they will continue market towards the general case (business desktops) and not the specific (screwdriver guys). The overclockability of a specific chip will continue to depend on the fab output and the overall design of the chip. The loss of sales from overclocking is probably insignificant -- in fact Intel probably sold quite a few Celerons to overclockers that otherwise wouldn't have upgraded their existing systems.

      Basically the Celeron was just a nice convergance of good fab capabilities (Intel tries to keep the PII numbers on schedule), and marketing conditions (businesses demand cheap desktops). It could happen again, but then again it could not.
      --

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  34. 2nd try (way to go "preview mode"!): by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 1
    According to Anandtech, who did a review of overclocked Athlons (including ones with the L2 cache switched to 1/3), you still get a performance boost if you up the MHz and change the L2 cache multiplier to a lower setting. Granted, it's not linear, but you still *do* see a significant boost.

    Here's the article

    -A.P.
    --


    "One World, one Web, one Program" - Microsoft promotional ad

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
  35. Oh, fuck it... by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 1
    Rob, slashdot's broken. Fix it. - A.P.
    --


    "One World, one Web, one Program" - Microsoft promotional ad

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
  36. What are you on? by toast0 · · Score: 1

    does overclocking produce fumes that induce highness?


    how can you compare an overclocked chips price to a non-over clocked, but overclockable chip?

    that makes no sense

    especially since clock speed is not really a great measure of anything other than clock speed....

    it used to say how many instructions per time period, but it doesn't do that anymore w/ all the different execution units....

    not that overclocking is a bad thing but clock speed fixation is

  37. Gas pedal for PC? by hautis · · Score: 2

    Already a couple of years ago I thought about how nice it would be to have a gas pedal under the desk; when playing or compiling, you could speed the system up like a car... of course it's pretty idiotic idea. And now, it seems, anyone can do just that.

    --
    NOSPAM@REMOVETHIS.NO.SPAM - you'll find the real address somewhere
    1. Re:Gas pedal for PC? by karnal · · Score: 1

      sounds like a good replacement for those old "turbo" switches.. :)

      --
      Karnal
  38. Why NOT Overclock? by NoWhere+Man · · Score: 1

    As a techie the first question I asked myself was why not?. Why wouldn't you want to overclock an Athlon? True the other limitations of the computer bring down the effectiveness....but when you realize the difference between what we have...and what we could have...you'll know why...

    Its a driving force in us all...

    --

    "Imagination is the only weapon in the war against reality." -Jules de Gautier
  39. [shameless plug] Re:SMP not what it's cracked up by rcw-work · · Score: 2

    At least you can encode your cds to mp3 on both CPU's :)

  40. kool by jormurgandr · · Score: 1

    This is why AMD is gonna beat out intel on the chip market. Intel just locks their chips at one speed. AMD sets the Athlon to a speed, but makes it possible to OC by way of an add-on card which also generates revenue for those willing to manufacture/distribute it. They're opening a whole new avenue of sales in the PC arena.
    =======
    There was never a genius without a tincture of madness.

    1. Re:kool by karnal · · Score: 1

      or how about this -- scrap the card and stop locking these chips in any way. grrrrrr.

      --
      Karnal
    2. Re:kool by Vis · · Score: 1

      Okay, but why not just up your bus speed on your PII board? I've never been an intel fan by any means, but I needed a new box, and the pII's were fairly cheap... bought a pair of 350's, and they run just fine at 466, so, I'm still competing with the pIII 500's (since my bus speed is 33% up on them, as well as my L1, L2, etc). So, in reality here, why should I mess with dismembering my prosc, and soldering stuffs onto it when I can move a jumper, or change my bios settings? Athalon speed is nice, and I'd overclock the snot out of one if I had the extra $$. But ya can't go saying that AMD provides ways to overclock while Intel doesn't.

      --
      -- Hi! I'm a .signature virus! Copy me into your ~/.signature to help me spread!
  41. Re:Except this by Zurk · · Score: 1

    and why not ? i was wunning windoze 3.1 fine with drdos 6 & ndos 7

  42. What about,,, by Malc · · Score: 2

    Perhaps it's also getting harder to overclock these CPU's as they're getting faster, faster than the FSB is getting faster.

    Take for example: with a clock multiplier of 6 on a 100 Mhz FSB (600Mhz chip), upping the FSB to 133 MHz boosts the CPU to 798Mhz (198Mhz gain). Compare with a 400Mhz chip (multiplier of 4 on a 100Mhz FSB), upping the FSB to 133 will boost the CPU to 532MHz (132MHz gain). In both cases the CPU speed has gone up be a factor of 1/3. But perhaps CPU's are not effected so much by the factor, but the shear amount.

    I'm no hardware guy: I don't know the effects of increases MHz and heat on these increasingly smaller dies. Maybe somebody would like to dicuss this (and probably point out the error of my ways.)

  43. Re:First Post by Shanep · · Score: 1

    $125 CDN is pretty high, considering it's about $1 in parts.

    As per usual, I'll do it myself.

    --
    War crimes, torture, lies, illegal spying... Would someone give Bush a blowjob, already, so he can be impeached?
  44. Re:Cost-effective? Depends by Malc · · Score: 2

    From what understand, Linux doesn't scale past 2 CPUs at all well. It has it's arse kicked by NT which scales better.

  45. Re:Cost-effective? Depends by jkorty · · Score: 2

    This is true; however, the course-grained semaphoring in Linux is at this very moment rapidly being replaced with fine-grained semaphoring. When this is complete Linux likely may start beating NT in the large-cpu configurations.

  46. As in... ? by Malc · · Score: 2

    Okay, for my peace of mind, my interpretation of what you said be (please correct me if I'm wrong)...

    Coarse grained being (sorry, C++ not C):

    someObj::someFunc()
    {
    myMutex.lock();
    ... // Lots of processing
    mySharedObj->doSomeSomthing();
    ... // Do more processing
    myMutex.unlock();
    }

    Whereas fine-grained would be:

    someObj::someFunc()
    {
    ... // Lots of processing
    myMutex.lock();
    mySharedObj->doSomeSomthing();
    myMutex.unlock();
    ... // Do more processing
    }

    1. Re:As in... ? by jemfinch · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's about the idea. An example is the difference in the linux kernels. 2.0 just put the entire kernel in a lock, so only one processor could be in the kernel at a time. 2.2 Added locks to the major subsystems, so one processor could be sheduling while another processor did some memory management. 2.4 promises even finer grained locks. For instance, 2.2 locks all wait queues as a whole, while 2.4 will lock each wait queue individually.

      Jeremy

  47. Overclocking, a Silicon Valley perspective by Animats · · Score: 4
    Classically, overclocking was a terrible idea, because speed was a part selection. In other words, parts were manufactured to run at the highest speed, then tested. If a part was available in 100MHz, 150MHz, and 200MHz, a part marked 100MHz had failed the acceptance test at 150 and 200. But typically, only a few gates on the chip failed at the higher speed, so the chip almost worked at the higher speeds. And if its temperature was kept well below the upper limit of the rated range, it might work consistently. But in general, overclocking meant a system with a substantially higher error rate.

    As the fab for a given process became more mature, the defect level usually decreased. So at the beginning of a product cycle, you got more of the slow parts and fewer of the fast ones, and over time, more parts were produced with the higher speed ratings. Over time, then, the price of the high-speed parts declined.

    Then Intel reinvented itself as a consumer products company, and started pricing ICs the way GM prices cars. In the auto world, a luxury car costs maybe 30% more to build than an economy car, but sells for perhaps 3x as much. Intel started doing this for processors, with advertising-promoted brands at different points in the speed spectrum. The interaction between this policy and the way fabs actually work resulted in some deliberately undermarked chips, and the rebirth of "overclocking" as a semi-respectable enterprise.

    Then some distributors started shipping systems with overclocked CPUs. Some even printed fake part numbers on the chip package. This led to trouble. Intel may have lost some revenue, but worse, they were getting a reputation as an unreliable IC supplier. So they added holograms on chips, part ID info readable from software, and speed-checking (which is hard; CPU chips ordinarly lack an on-chip timebase.)

    Today, IC fab yields are so good that the part-selection approach is rare. If parts are failing, the fab has a problem. CPU speed and model has become mostly a market positioning thing.

    In the industrial computer world, underclocking is common; the temperature margins improve, and so does reliability.

    At this point, Intel and AMD are competing so hard on speed and price that neither can afford to undermark. So overclocking is a marginal idea at best. Gamers are probably better off getting a new graphics board.

    1. Re:Overclocking, a Silicon Valley perspective by Keeper · · Score: 2

      Actually, AMD has been putting 600 and 650mhz cores into the chips they are selling as 500mhz processors. If you crack open the case you can see what the processor is actually rated for... the late week 500 athlons also shipped with some rather quick SRAM...

    2. Re:Overclocking, a Silicon Valley perspective by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      At this point, Intel and AMD are competing so hard on speed and price that neither can afford to undermark.

      Sure competition between the two is tough, but Intel and AMD aren't stupid either. If they wanted to, they could blow their load and manufacture 1200Mhz chips tomorrow, and still make money.

      (Why? Because I purchased a 400Mhz PII in 1998, I probably wouldn't upgrade to any new CPU this year. However next year, 1200Mhz might seem worth it. Businesses think this way, systematically replacing desktops every 18-36 months, and buying whatever middle shelf system is available at the time.)

      They get far more revenue by stepping up the speed in a slow and predictable manner. The competition has just forced them to increase their schedules slightly. However, if they increase speeds too much, the buyers of midline chips will suddenly get far more price sensitive, which leads to lower profits. (This has already started happening with folks who decide a Celeron/K6 is 'good enough'.)

      The key here from a $ standpoint is the sweet spot at the middle of the market (currently 500-600Mhz), not the dick-sizing going on at the top end.
      --

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    3. Re:Overclocking, a Silicon Valley perspective by tred · · Score: 2

      I had wrote a lot in response, but it was a lot of stuff no one probably cares about. In short, I'll say this. AMD has said they could produce a 1GHz chip right now, but they're holding back for marketing reasons alone. So they're obviously not using the full potential of their great yields. Because their yields are so good, probably every single CPU they send out marked at 500mhz is good enough to run at 650, but the guys in marketing say they need to keep a 500mhz CPU on the market. This is the beauty of overclocking. The chip companies feel pressed to have a variety of speeds, the ubercheap consumer version and the uberexpensive 'power user' version. The smart ones among us realize the cheap ones usualy come from the same batch as the expensive ones, and the mhz rating isn't worth much. Intel most notably did this with the Celeron - which was originaly just a neutered P2, but now it's a P2 with 128k of full speed cache instead of 512k of half speed. For gaming, a lot of cache is useless - you really want raw power. The Celerons had to be clocked low because they were the 'cheap' version, but they could easily do more than there rating usualy. This was why there was such a big explosion with the 300a, the only reason they put out a 300mhz chip is because they thought the market needed one. There was also quite a bit of fuss over the 266 within the overclocking community, but it was fairly well contained. My point is, AMD and Intel are 'underclocking' as you call it. Most of their new chips can easily hit 650-750mhz, but they produce chips below that because that's what the market needs... Afterall, they couldn't just mark everything at the mhz it can run at, then they wouldn't make as much profit - god forbid.

      --
      - tred
  48. right! by /ASCII · · Score: 1

    ...

    --
    Try out fish, the friendly interactive shell.
  49. New PIII's by jallen02 · · Score: 1

    Ill say it again jus to reiterate. The PIII Flip-Chips (PIII 500E etc.) are HIGHLY overclockable. Almost intentionally so. They have lower multipliers than original PIII's and everything. There made with the smaller Micron Manufacturing process so they generate less heat. There core is 'flipped' upwards so the cooler cools directly to where the heat is being generated basically. All of that leads one to wonder.. And yes they can be made to SMOKE. Right now those sound like the most fun to OC. oh well

    Jeremy Allen
    jallen@idminc.com

    1. Re:New PIII's by tzanger · · Score: 2

      I had a pair of bitched-up Cel366s I (I think that was the speed) -- anyway -- one I tore apart and the die was welded directly to the heatsink pad, which is opposite of most chips and I believe the same as the 'flip-chips'. I don't beleive that process was unique to the E-series P3s.

      The other I drilled a hole in the corner and is on my keychain. :-)

    2. Re:New PIII's by jallen02 · · Score: 1

      Hehe! I hae a 486 hanging from my Cobra! :-) Its funny. People go what the hell is that. I say "its an artifact from the glory days of computing." when it was still cool to be an assembler weenie.

  50. Couple of comments... by theLime · · Score: 1

    Just a few things that may/may not have been said already.

    First of all, why is this particular product being highlighted? I've seen at least 8 other companies making these. Not to mention that making your own is a simple matter for a first-year EE student.

    Second, why do I see so much pooh-poohing of overclocking in this discussion? I think one of my happiest hardware moments was when I got my K6-2 380 to run stably at 500Mhz. Believe me there *was* a performance difference, and I don't really play 3D games. Now that I just got my Athlon 650, I'm assembling the parts to make my own "goldenfingers." I see many accounts of 650's doing 750 and 800 without a problem, and without modifying the cache divisor.

    Speaking of the Athlon, damn. I'm very impressed with this chip. I have never been this close to the "bleeding edge" before, and it's a neat feeling. It takes less then 6 minutes to do a complete kernel build (dep, clean, bzImage, modules, etc.), 3 SETI@Home packets a day, and I can turn on almost all the bells and whistles in E with no problems.

    If you dont want to overclock, don't. I wouldn't do it on a mission-critical machine, but it's a thrilling feeling the first time you boot up faster then before.

    If you want to see some crazy-assed OCing, check this out:
    http://totl.net/Eunuch/Eunuch2.html
    Now *thats* serious :)

    1. Re:Couple of comments... by Deosyne · · Score: 1

      If you want to see some crazy-assed OCing, check this out:
      http://totl.net/Eunuch/Eunuch2.html
      Now *thats* serious :)


      Holy shit! I don't know if I could possibly believe this one, but just the thought of clocking an SX-25 to 247 MHz and playing Half-Life on it (even for only 3 minutes or so :)) is friggin awesome. :) Thanks so much for the link!

      Deosyne

  51. My take on this... by RonaldReagan · · Score: 1

    There are about a half-dozen of these adapters available for sale. They range in price from $20 to $125 depending on options (voltage tweaks, build quality, etc.). I'm no overclocking master, but are they suggesting you cut the L2 cache speed from 1/2 core to 1/3 core? Why on earth would you do that? Let's say your core frequency is 800 MHz, and your L2 runs at 400. If you overclock it to 900 but your L2 cache is only running at 300, surely you're getting worse performance overall than you were before... http://www.tgwbp.addr.com/cgi-bin/wwwboard.cgi http://www.tgwbp.addr.com/cgi-bin/wwwboard.cgi http://www.tgwbp.addr.com/cgi-bin/wwwboard.cgi

  52. Roll your own! by JosefK · · Score: 1

    Check out this page for guidelines for building your own. John Carcich, a regular on the Alt-CPU mailing list, is a retired engineer who's taken up computing as a hobby to supplement his windsurfing. He noted some problems with Tom Pabst's original notes on the Athlon circuitry and has been refining the design found on this page. He decided to make everything available to anyone who wants to make their own for fun or for profit.

  53. Re:Where in the WORLD did you get those prices?? by Tower · · Score: 2

    Pricewatch:
    Athlon 700 MHz - 496 at tufshop.com
    497 at econopc.com...
    4 listed ~500

    2 listed ~529

    more 583+

    --
    "It's tough to be bilingual when you get hit in the head."
  54. This is pretty useful by Trit0n · · Score: 1

    This is pretty useful for me, seeing how I just got an Athlon and live an hour from Ottawa. Anyone wanna send me $125 to buy one? Please?

    --
    The answer is always C.
  55. Re:Linux? by Explo · · Score: 1
    No. Attempting to run Linux on an Athlon will result in a Blue Screen of Death.

    I think that this was a joke, but in case someone takes it seriously; this isn't true. There was some initial trouble with Linux and Athlon, but it's all sorted now.

    --
    Everyone who makes generalizations should be shot.
  56. overclock by toofast · · Score: 1

    Damn right! I got the FSB up to 112MHz, which gives me a 616MHz CPU!

    The overall system is much faster, including disk i/o and memory i/o, thanks to the faster bus.

  57. It also holds up for multiple users by hawk · · Score: 2

    Most of what we did on the departments alphas at Iowa State sucked cycles--when they were running, which was a small fraction (Gad, SAS is a pig). It turned out that (most of the time) an extra 32M or 64M for each extra user was enough to avoid most of the swapping, so that unless both jobs launched at the same time, the person sitting at the unit would never even notice the extra users.

  58. Re:not amd nor intel/sparc/mips just easy cpu for by pivo · · Score: 1

    Yeah! My thoughts exactly!

  59. FreeSpeed is a better card and cheaper. by GreyFauk · · Score: 1

    Yes.. it has dipswitches.. but c'mon.. who
    here is afraid of dip switches?
    It's also 60$ and not 100+

    www.ninjamicro.com

    --
    Friends don't let friends buy Compaq's. (Dell/Gateway... same same) You want a good computer? Build it yourself.
  60. Re:I see a PROBLEM with it by GreyFauk · · Score: 1

    Your math sucks...
    That's 200$ TOTAL...

    Not 500$ total for a 700mhz...
    and for the most part.... most of the 500's you
    get these days are just 700's underclocked...
    it's the SAME chip.

    Personally I'm ordering a 500.
    I will be quite happy with a 500.
    If I get more than 500mhz with a 65$
    overclocking card I'll be ecstatic.
    If I get 800mhz... I'll have saved myself approx
    500$.

    We'll see, eh?

    --
    Friends don't let friends buy Compaq's. (Dell/Gateway... same same) You want a good computer? Build it yourself.
  61. Freespeed Pro is a better deal by feech · · Score: 1

    Just get the Freespeed Pro. Stable and easy to install. And only $65 with shipping included. I'm just a satisfied customer. URL:

    www.ninjamicro.co.uk