bryanW1995
Lifer
i had the link posted in my profile when I set it up as a new member. I didn't realize that we had that type of person here. now, at psychoexgirlfriend.com I could see something like this happening, but here?😕
Originally posted by: aigomorla
tutelary and bryanW1995
I ask you guys to step back, take a deep breathe before you guys post anything else to each other.
The next time a mod writes something to you guys, its gonna be mark.
And this isnt a flame war or pissing contest. We dont know for sure 100% if they can'd overclocking or not.
Most likely they didn't because they would kill all the other board manufactors.
Anyhow lets continue in a civilized manner, so mark doesnt have to bust out the locking stick!
Originally posted by: tutelary
Going to call *very likely* on this as it is complimentary to what they are already planning: Tiers of motherboards/processors for different 'levels' of consumer.
Most people here probably have too much processor for their needs anyway, and I'm going to stick with that regardless of how much it gets me flamed. Let's be realistic here: running a game on a 30inch lcd at full res isn't a 'need' either. Aside from the occasional professional/real power user I'm willing to bet anyone here with a quad could skip the next round of cpus and never notice outside the outrageously expensive gaming scene.
In short, I think Intel is going to catch all kinds of flack for what is really just a sound business strategy.
Originally posted by: GuitarDaddy
I build a new rig every 18mos to 2yrs because I want a new toy to play with not because I need the computing power. Hell my old A64 3200+ would still handle most of the tasks I do just fine.
Originally posted by: aigomorla
You know in the business financial world, they recomend replacing OEM computers every 1 to 1.5yrs.
Not because of functionality, but for reliability.
Originally posted by: Yoxxy
up to the third party mobo manufacturers to find a way around it.
Originally posted by: tutelary
I can't even begin to understand the concept of replacing a machine 2 or 3 times a year.
Originally posted by: tutelary
Being a computing enthusiast doesn't mean you have to be an idiot with your money.
Originally posted by: v8envy
Computing is a dirt cheap hobby. If you have any other hobbies I could throw just as many stones at them as a 'waste of money'
Originally posted by: Zap
[
How true! A friend of mine is into RC planes. A single flight can cost a couple hundred if you "land" it wrong. Someone at another forums is getting some work done on his car... "enthusiast" work... started with a $30k car and put in another $15k of work. Wow, that's an expensive hobby. How about a $6 million home theater?
I think my couple hundred per month (offset by a couple hundred per month selling off old parts) makes for a fairly budget hobby.
But that's just me.
Originally posted by: v8envy
Intel has never 'supported' overclocking. Just look at their boards. It's up to the usual suspects selling mainboards to figure out how to best OC Intel's products and then charge us a premium for the privilege.
Originally posted by: v8envy
For stuff you do, sure. There were two things I've come across re: Nehalem that tell me I'm probably getting one whether or not I can OC the bad boy. The biggest reason is SSE will have instructions for *string manipulation*, ostensibly to speed up XML processing.
If they get this right it'll be HUGE and will only take a very minor compiler tweak to make everything from the OS kernel to every app on the system take a giant performance leap. Everything from Java to network transfers to Oracle client calls are going to get faster. This is where I believe the claims of 100% performance gain over core2 are coming from.
String primitives (e.g., strncpy and friends) in OS libraries are on the order of 300 instructions with several pushes of registers to main RAM. Feel free to disassemble one if you don't believe me -- and these calls get executed hundreds of millions of times a day.<orgasm>If I can replace a function call (or nasty inline equivalent) with a single CPU instruction... And if it's atomic and doesn't require concurrency control...</orgasm>
Originally posted by: v8envy
Now take the same graph, and go from 1970 until today. You'll see that outside the dotcom and y2k insanity of 1998-2001 we're about as low on the unemployment curve as we've been in many decades. 5% is what the department of labor considers 'full employment' and going below 4 is seen as highly inflationary and in fact a bad thing.
Now, the trend UP in unemployment is definitely there. The magnitude of the trend is not as large as 01-04 though. Overall I don't think you can read trouble into that graph -- yet.
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
<snip>
...The economy isn't growing like it has been for the past 7 years, but it is still going unbelievably well. unemployment is still at historically low levels, and unless you're trying to sell or refinance a home you're probably not hurting for money right now.
Originally posted by: Nemesis 1
Just to add to the above offtopic. Look at how the US government is hiding the inflation numbers from the public. Food has gone up dramaticly . Gas is crazy. Why do these guys hide the real inflation numbers. PAY RAISES. Government SS. and the private sector. Its all about screwing us.
Originally posted by: Cogman
Intel has never supported Overclocking
Originally posted by: Idontcare
That was Clinton who monkeyed with the US government's definition of CPI (consumer price index) in the nineties...much to the chagrin of economists then and now.
Originally posted by: Jax Omen
Except Nehalem doesn't use FSB anymore.
Originally posted by: Dadofamunky
Originally posted by: Jax Omen
Except Nehalem doesn't use FSB anymore.
One thing we DO know for sure, it will a be a completely new architecture for Intel, and the immediate effects will be unpredictable.