Tech News

  • TWIN2X2048-6400C4D DOMINATOR Memory Delivers Innovative Features including Dual-Path Heat Xchange

    Published: Monday, October 30, 2006 | By: Dennis

    Corsair is at it again with an patent pending design.
    "Corsair’s patent pending DOMINATOR printed circuit board and 4-layer heat sink design offers superior heat dissipation than standard heat spreaders thanks to the DHX technology. It substantially increases the memory module’s thermal dissipation so that the heat generated by the RAM cells can be more efficiently removed from the module via two paths. RAMs that run at lower temperatures enjoy improved performance and extended reliability. Available in 2GB kits, the new TWIN2X2048-6400C4D is fully optimized to deliver rock solid stability."
    No lights this time?

  • Foxconn 975X7AB-8EKRS2H Motherboard Review Posted

    Published: Monday, October 30, 2006 | By: Dennis

    The layout of this motherboard is very well designed with quite a bit of detail given to making room for two monster video cards. Of course if you don't have two monster video cards you'll get to use the abundance of expansion slots otherwise you'll likely be down to a single 1x PCI Express slot and one regular PCI.

  • Quad SLI under the microscope at TR

    Published: Thursday, October 19, 2006 | By: Dennis

    "OVER THE PAST few years, we've seen an incredible number of extreme hardware solutions marketed to PC gamers: graphics cards that cost over five hundred bucks, thousand-dollar "Extreme Edition" CPUs, motherboards with more ports than Dubai, custom physics processors, and now even a "killer" NIC. Without a doubt, though, the most extreme of all of these offerings has to be Nvidia's vaunted Quad SLI."
    I would agree, just the thought of 4 GPUs all working together for gaming goodness brings joy to all of the rich kids of the world.

  • NinjaForum Back Online

    Published: Thursday, October 19, 2006 | By: Dennis

    It would seem that the crazy "extra space" issue when using never version of PHP cropped up again, but after some crafty debugging the issue was traced down and resolved.

    As the title suggests the forum is back open for business. big grin smile

  • Ninjalane Message Forum Down

    Published: Sunday, October 15, 2006 | By: Dennis

    Hello everyone just a quick note saying that the forum will be down for awhile, I'm doing some updates that should stop the crazy ass robot registrations. I also figured it would be a good idea to update to the latest version too (which means all of the other mods have to be reinstalled as well)

    The system should be back up shortly.

  • DFI LANParty UT NF590 SLI-M2R/G Review @ PC Modding Malaysia

    Published: Tuesday, October 10, 2006 | By: Dennis

    Out of all the AM2 motherboards on the market I have to say the DFI offering is by far the coolest looking board on the market and according to PCmoddingmy is a decent overclocker as well.
    "Now, we’ll look at the NB and SB cooling solutions. The nForce 590 SLI SB chipset is actively cooled via copper heatsink fan. The copper SB cooler is DFI’s first motherboard to use such high performance cooler. The cooper cooler is relative large and helps to keep the chipset cool, even when overclocking. In most cases,"

  • Abit AB9 Pro and AW9D MAX Motherboard Review @ The Tech Report

    Published: Tuesday, October 10, 2006 | By: Dennis

    "ABIT HAS BEEN ON the comeback trail since its acquisition by USI, and we've been impressed by the company's recent AN8 32X and AT8 32X motherboards for Athlon 64 processors. Intel's Core 2 Duo has become the processor of choice for PC enthusiasts, though, and we've yet to see what a reinvigorated Abit can do with an LGA775 socket.

    Interestingly, Abit's most famous boards have been for Intel processors. Classics like the BH6 and BP6 essentially defined the enthusiast-oriented motherboard genre, making us particularly eager to see how Abit can complement the Core 2 Duo. "

    I would love to see Abit make a strong comeback, though things are tough when a company gets acquired. However personally I'm glad they ditched the "Wendell" editions.

  • Intel IHS Lapping and Removal For LGA775 CPU's @ Legit Reviews

    Published: Tuesday, October 10, 2006 | By: Dennis

    Here is a fun one for you all.
    "To get the IHS off we used four razor blades and placed two under opposite corners to apply force on the IHS. We then got out the Craftsmen propane torch and fired it up. After the CPU was cleaned we used four layers of electrical tape on each side of the core to prevent cracking the die and removed the load plate off our abit AW9D-MAX motherboard so the water block would make contact with the core and not the load plate. We applied Arctic Silver Lumiere to the core and after a test fitting to make sure the water block made contact with the die we fired up the test system..."
    Never would have thought to take a blow torch to a processor but, hey whatever works. happy smile

  • Cooler Master Mystique 632 ATX Case @ PCApex

    Published: Tuesday, October 10, 2006 | By: Dennis

    This is an Alu case so you can expect it to be light and not very strong however the door mechanism is very unique. I'm still holding out for a clear door that opens when you wave your hand in front of it. tongue smile (yes I know its been done already, just not on a PC)
    "The Mystique 632 carries the same name as a case we have previously reviewed here at PC Apex... the Mystique 631. This is a bit odd since the two cases look nothing alike from the outside... but they do seem to use the same internal framework. So let's see if the Mystique 632 is a well-made as its predecessor."

  • Patriot DDR2-1066/PC2-8500 Review @ Hardware Secrets

    Published: Tuesday, October 10, 2006 | By: Dennis

    "With the introduction of AM2 socket by AMD all new high-end PCs are finally using DDR2 memories. Right now the standard DDR2 speeds are 533 MHz, 667 MHz and 800 MHz, but Patriot was one of the first manufacturers to release 1,066 MHz models."
    It is pretty easy to say that a company was one of the first to offer a new technology when in actuality several companies came to market at about the same time. Corsair comes to mind as being one of the first ones I knew of to offer a 1066Mhz DDR2 module.

    I will admit though, I love the heatspreaders on the Patriot memory modules.