Originally posted by: Duvie
IMO it is better (especially with these finicky A64 controllers) to test small FFT and use ltittle memory in testing to isolate CPU...There are far better apps to isolate and test the memory far better then Large FFT (which dioesn't do a good job of it), or superpi which is far too short to stress the memory....
I don't get it. If the A64's memory controllers are "finicky", wouldn't it be best to test the most-stressful scenario, rather than the least? So for A64's, that would be the "blend" tests, with a custom RAM amount specified, such that P95 doesn't go into swap, I think.
I was just playing with P95 on my Athlon tonight, after moving some RAM back into my system, and tweaking the timings slightly. I set my RAS precharge, RAS-to-CAS delay, and something else, all to "AUTO", and then checked with AIDA32, and it did what I suspected - the BIOS simply used the most conservative settings possible for each of those, which is what I was planning on doing manually anyways.
No new version of P95, but they did find a new prime number, just last month. That was cool news.