VictimOfGrief
Banned
FINALLY! Good god Nvidia, took you a while.Epix said:
EDIT : and people saying Quad-Core sucks for gaming.....
don't have a quad-core1!! :lol
FINALLY! Good god Nvidia, took you a while.Epix said:
Your reading the thread wrong. We are saying that Dual-Cores, particularly the E8400, are equal if not a little bit better for gaming not that Quad-Core's suck. Just saying that, FOR GAMING, there is no point in spending extra money for more cores on your CPU when they aren't going to be used. General usage is a different story, as you'll get faster decompression times, faster encoding of audio and video, etc.JudgeN said:So what people are trying to say is that quad-core processors suck for gaming? Well that just fucking sucks, I just upgraded to a quad-core :lol
But I have a Q6600 that I have OC to 3Ghz and it was pretty easy.
Developers should start programing there games with quads in mind, USE MY FOUR CORES DAMN IT.
VictimOfGrief said:FINALLY! Good god Nvidia, took you a while.
EDIT : and people saying Quad-Core sucks for gaming.....don't have a quad-core1!! :lol![]()
Trax416 said:I have two quad cores, and nobody is saying they suck for gaming. E8400 just outperforms them on most games. Plus it's extremely easy to overclock an E8400 on stock cooling. You can't do that well with Quads.
Not only that but the money can be better spent in other areas. If you are willing to buy a Q9450 and an 8800GT, you could get an E8400 and a 9800GTX instead. The Quad core varient would perform worse then the duo core one. However both would be good.
This is especially so for people who understand how to overclock. If you know how to overclock there is absolutely no point in buying a quad core because you could get your E8400 at 4.4GHZ without much problem and it will outperform everything.
bee said:with overclocking if you actually look there is practically zero difference in gaming performance over a certain level, the level seems to be around 3.5ghz on the core2 platform, so clocking any chip to 4ghz and beyond really doesn't make much difference (except the quad core qx9650 when they hit like 4.5+ghz and suddenly they can feed tri/quad sli properly)
which is why quad core is the way to go, no its not gonna be future proof as everyone knows nothing is, but it will certainly last longer than a dual core, i can only name 3 or 4 games that benefit from quad core at the moment but that number will only rise in the future, they'd be UT3, assasins creed, supreme commander and maybe crysis, quad core also gives you a nice boost in general windows performance, having said that the 45nm yorkfield quad cores are all gimped imo with stupidly low multipliers and high prices, the q6600 is definetely the chip to get right now 3.5-3.8ghz is no problem for them
Open Source said:I don't buy computer parts for software that may take advantage of it down the road. Because down the road, if that happens, I can just buy newer, better, cheaper computer parts.
bee said:i was more aiming that at people who wont be changing parts for 2, 3 or 4 years after buying one now, which i would argue will be the majority of people
There is value for getting quad core processors... for applications that use more than two threads...FirstInHell said:I don't understand the argument that started over the Q6600 and the E8400. How can anyone say price is a major concern when the price of the quad core CPU is only $20 more.
Are you saying that there is no value in getting a quad core? Is the performance you lose going with a quad really that drastic?
I just bought a Q6600 and you are basically saying I got a lower performing CPU (lower ghz) and paid $20 more for it.
Blakero said:I know neither of these cards are great, but which one is better?
HIS X1950pro Turbo 256mb
or
EVGA 8600GT 256mb
Blakero said:I know neither of these cards are great, but which one is better?
HIS X1950pro Turbo 256mb
or
EVGA 8600GT 256mb
NarcissisticJay said:Im having this problem .. when I connect my seagate external HD to my freshly built vista 64 rig.. it almost instantly locks up vista. The HDD has been plug and play on all the comps Ive tried it on. Including Vista 32.
Any Ideas?
NarcissisticJay said:Im having this problem .. when I connect my seagate external HD to my freshly built vista 64 rig.. it almost instantly locks up vista. The HDD has been plug and play on all the comps Ive tried it on. Including Vista 32.
Any Ideas?
GHG said:Try and find vista 64 bit drivers for it, if not you're out of luck. Vista 64 is a pain in the ass for hardware (at least that was my experience with it).
rabhw said:It's an external hard drive, it's plug and play, there shouldn't be a need to find any drivers.
Epix said:Posting this on my new PC.
Q6600 @ 3.4GHz
4GB DDR2 800
8800GTS 512 OC (800/1060)
Vista Premium 64-bit
15k - 3dMark06
Trax416 said:Finding a Q6600 that can even go to 3ghz is super rare, and nobody who reads this thread for computer advice will get it close to that overclocked.
HardForum said:Q6600: 9 × 266 = 2.4Ghz, DDR2-533 << STOCK speeds
Q6600: 9 × 333 = 3.0Ghz, DDR2-667 << Nice OC
Q6600: 9 × 378 = 3.4Ghz, DDR2-756 << Good OC, near max for B3 stepping
Q6600: 9 × 400 = 3.6Ghz, DDR2-800 << Great OC, near max for G0 stepping
sevenchaos said:What's a good processor and motherboard combo that I could get for around 200 dollars?
I recently upgraded to a 8800gt and would love to get a better CPU/Mobo to use along with it.
What about the E7200? Would that be good processor to OC?SRG01 said:If you're planning to OC, get a E4500.
If you're not planning to OC, get a X2 5200+.
FirstInHell said:I don't understand the argument that started over the Q6600 and the E8400. How can anyone say price is a major concern when the price of the quad core CPU is only $20 more.
Are you saying that there is no value in getting a quad core? Is the performance you lose going with a quad really that drastic?
I just bought a Q6600 and you are basically saying I got a lower performing CPU (lower ghz) and paid $20 more for it.
Kadey said:
rabhw said:Have you tried plugging the hard drive in BEFORE boot and seeing if it locks up as it loads into Windows? Have you tried safe mode? If it has firewire and usb, have you tried the other connection type? Have you used Windows Update to download Service Pack 1 (you said it was a fresh install)?
Mr. Hyde said:My pc has been running for a while now, so I think it's time to figure out how to overclock.
Q6600 (the more energy efficient G0)
2X2GB A-Data Ram
P35-DS3L Mobo
Tuniq Tower heatsink
8800GTS 512MB
VISTA 64-BIT
What's the best way to learn how to overclock the CPU? I am just trying to push it around the 3-3.2GHZ level, nothing higher.
Also, what is the best way to overclock the video card? I am not going to try pushing it too much
Do you have any logs that state what went wrong when it shut down?Andokuky said:Ok so my PC keeps shutting itself off. I built it a few months ago, never had any sort of problems until now. I start a torrent last night before bed and wake up this morning only to see the PC shut down minutes after I went to lie down. It's been running fine today, but every time I try to use the DVD drive, it shuts off.
At first I figured maybe dead fan and overheating CPU but SpeedFan suggests otherwise. Idk why the DVD drive would be making it shut off, but my 1 year old sometimes stands by the tower and beats on it, but not very hard. Maybe he jarred something loose? All I can think of. Guess I'll take it apart later.
Could it also be the PSU? Never any problems until last night though.
sevenchaos said:What about the E7200? Would that be good processor to OC?
Vista speeds already matched XP speeds in all major games, and even surpassed them in DX10 games. Get it now. Vista 64 of course, and soup up your ram too.The Chef said:Hey I got a quick question for all you PC gurus.
Because of all the criticism towards Vista I naturally stayed with my copy of XP for my recent build. But now I am dying to try out some setting on Very High on Crysis and really want the additional video options for Bioshock.
So is DX10 worth upgrading to Vista?
godhandiscen said:Vista speeds already matched XP speeds in all major games, and even surpassed them in DX10 games. Get it now. Vista 64 of course, and soup up your ram too.
"Optimally" depends on what you do with it...The Chef said:Vista needs like 4Gb of Ram to run optimally, correct?
Nope, readyboost only really helps computers with less than 1GB of RAM, pretty much.Jamesfrom818 said:So I just got a Vista laptop a few weeks ago and I just discovered the ReadyBoost feature. If I won't be gaming much, would I see much of a boost if I use a 4 GB SD card when I already have 2 GB of RAM?
The more ram the better. I wouldn't go below 4GB personally, especially with DIMM prices so low.The Chef said:Vista needs like 4Gb of Ram to run optimally, correct?
Not at all. Vista runs fine with 2GB. I was running Vista 64 with 2GB in single channel (one of my dimms was defective initially) and everything ran fine but Crysis. 4GB will just speed all your games. Vista 64 has just way better memory management than the 32 bit version. Faster addressing.The Chef said:Vista needs like 4Gb of Ram to run optimally, correct?
The Chef said:Vista needs like 4Gb of Ram to run optimally, correct?
Andokuky said:Ok so my PC keeps shutting itself off. I built it a few months ago, never had any sort of problems until now. I start a torrent last night before bed and wake up this morning only to see the PC shut down minutes after I went to lie down. It's been running fine today, but every time I try to use the DVD drive, it shuts off.
At first I figured maybe dead fan and overheating CPU but SpeedFan suggests otherwise. Idk why the DVD drive would be making it shut off, but my 1 year old sometimes stands by the tower and beats on it, but not very hard. Maybe he jarred something loose? All I can think of. Guess I'll take it apart later.
Could it also be the PSU? Never any problems until last night though.
I only brought up the E7200 as it's only 12 dollars more than the E4500 (at newegg).SRG01 said:That and a motherboard is going to be more than $200.
sevenchaos said:I only brought up the E7200 as it's only 12 dollars more than the E4500 (at newegg).
I just built a PC this week with that processor, Vista 64, and 4GB of RAM. I posted the fastest Photoshop Speed test benchmark I've ever seen posted on the interwebs. It will scream.The Chef said:I just want to make sure that if I spend the cash on Vista 64 it will run great.
This is my processor for my new PC I built:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819115017
So this along with 4 Gigs of ram - will that run well?
Epix said:I just built a PC this week with that processor, Vista 64, and 4GB of RAM. I posted the fastest Photoshop Speed test benchmark I've ever seen posted on the interwebs. It will scream.