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Intel 32/64-bit Nocona CPU

OCGeek writes "A picture of the upcoming Nocona processor of the Xeon family that has 64-bit extensions known as Intel EM64T has appeared on VR-Zone website. Nocona will have 604 pins and supports HyperThreading, SSE3, PCI Express, DDR2, Vanderpool technology."

4 of 244 comments (clear)

  1. Where do they get their sample units? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just for starters, notice that all the hardware sites get their test units from the manufacturers. In other words, they call the manu and say 'please send me a free hard drive to test for a review'. The manu then tries out 5 units to find the one that works best and sends it.

    Consumers Reports, on the other hand, goes to the store and buys a random unit, same as you or I might.

    Personally, I trust www.storagereview.com, but they do the same thing.

  2. Re:In case of slashdotting by Tribbin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You make me realize how weird it is that I can just be too excited to see the newest CPU in too high resolution.

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  3. But don't forget... by Kjella · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just for starters, notice that all the hardware sites get their test units from the manufacturers. In other words, they call the manu and say 'please send me a free hard drive to test for a review'. The manu then tries out 5 units to find the one that works best and sends it.

    ...that there's such things as rated speeds. For a CPU that would be something like "This CPU is rated at 3.0 GHz, but it'll overclock to 3.6 GHz". Maybe the average consumer CPU won't overclock to that. But it's a pretty sure thing it *will* work at 3.0GHz, and that's the benchmarks I read.

    As for harddisks, I imagine they find one with no remapped sectors (a "perfect" disk) but otherwise, I doubt they can do much either without rigging the specs. There's simply not much room for variability these days. Maybe they have a perfectly balanced/aligned disk that could do more than 7200rpm, but that's a different story.

    Kjella

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    1. Re:But don't forget... by InfiniteWisdom · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There was this story a while back about how manufacturers send units that are far better than the retail unit to reviewers.

      For example, Samsung sent the reviewers LCD monitors with a 700:1 contrast ratio, while the off-the-shelf ones have only 450:1

      http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/10/29/1352 20 9&mode=thread&tid=137&tid=149&tid=98&tid=9 9