MSI Wind U100, Overclocked With Liquid Nitrogen
james writes "What do you get when you combine a MSI Wind U100 notebook with liquid nitrogen?
The new Intel Atom frequency World Record ... and some
damn cool pictures!
A large copper pot is used, sitting on top of the GPU and chipset, and cold transfer through the original heatsink plate to the CPU. This was cooled down to about -20 C to achieve the new world mark. (Intel Atom N270 @ 2315mhz) For more information you can check out the original forum thread.
+5 hack points for being completely impractical. I like...
...and you thought it was bad when your laptop's battery started leaking into your lap. Just wait until its liquid nitrogen cooling system starts leaking.
The really impressive thing isn't that they overclocked a processor, it's that they cooled it to -20 K!
All this shows is that Atom is clock limited by design. A 700MHz speed up - less than 50% in this case - from using liquid nitrogen? And all to get a CPU that's about as powerful as a 1.5GHz Pentium M or a 1.2GHz Core 2 Duo ...
Atom is reasonably neat, but I would have been more impressed with under-volting to half power consumption. Or designing a better chipset.
Better wear the insulated cod piece.
There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
I've always wondered why things like this don't cause physical problems related to thermal expansion/contraction - why doesn't the processor package crack due to the temp differences? Or condensation form in bad places etc? There's gotta be a whole list of bad side effects to worry about when supercooling one part of your computer...?
I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
Try here.
The simple truth is that interstellar distances will not fit into the human imagination
- Douglas Adams
The author clearly has a very broad definition of cool.
No sooner do I get over one, then you put a better one right next to me. Bastards.
first one, then t'other.
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
What no Vista jokes yet? Must be the Slashdot holiday skeleton crew...
Skilled in differentiating ravens from a writing desks.