Tech News

  • asetek WaterChill Extreme Watercooling Kit @ Viperlair

    Published: Tuesday, December 6, 2005 | By: Dennis

    We reviewed this kit not to long ago and I can easily speak to its performance, and it is good. The only drawback is the size of the radiator, a two fan unit will fit 80% of the mid tower cases out there without to much trouble but a triple fan unit takes some modding.
    "Of all the components in this kit, this is the one you will need to take the most consideration in when it comes to mounting it; not because it is difficult endeavor, but because of the shear size of it (I’ve personally bracketed mine and hung it under the top of the stand my case sits on). Of course, being a triple radiator, and having six 120mm fans supplied speaks volumes to the intended performance."

  • PCMech: Optimize Your SLI Rig

    Published: Tuesday, December 6, 2005 | By: Dennis

    I actually see this article to be more about the effects of AA and AF on an SLI system but I'll let you call it as you see it.
    "Do you notice that AA SLI 8 and AA SLI 16 show around a 50% decrease in FPS than the rest of the AA settings? And do you remember that AA SLI 8 and AA SLI 16 rendered images which were visually the same as AA 8xS? I think this means we can forget about using either AA SLI 8 and AA SLI 16 because it shows no noticeable gain and sacrifices performance drastically."

  • NL: Review Block - Memory Strikes Again!

    Published: Tuesday, December 6, 2005 | By: Dennis

    Be sure to check out our latest memory review.

    - Corsair DDR1 2GB Memory Roundup @ Legit Reviews
    - Corsair TwinX XMS PC4000 2GB DDR @ Pimprig
    - Crucial Ballistix PC2-8000 review @ Driver Heaven
    - OCZ EL DDR PC-3200 2GB Gold GX XTC @ techPowerUp!

    For more news and reviews check the site below

  • DFI nForce4 Infinity SLI Review @ Futurelooks

    Published: Tuesday, December 6, 2005 | By: Dennis

    I would have to agree, right down to the brown PCB.
    "Compared to the non-SLI variant, the only significant change is the addition of the second PCI-E x16 slot, which functions as an x8 in SLI mode. All other features are intact, and surprisingly none of the other PCI-E or PCI slots were sacrificed. The size of the board has increased slightly by 2cm, but it appears to have been done to the benefit of the layout, which seems much more spacious with the IDE headers being a nice distance away from the ATX and FDD headers."
    Here is a quick tip, flip to page 4 to begin the review. wink smile

  • DFI LANParty UT RDX200 CD-DR Review @ The Tech Report

    Published: Tuesday, December 6, 2005 | By: Dennis

    It would seem that the "me-to" push behind the ATI crossfire also created a somewhat limited chipset. I think we all remember that even the might nForce was once the underdog in the Athlon64 arena.
    "To help make up for the SB450's mediocre RAID support, DFI equips the RDX200 with an auxiliary Serial ATA RAID chip from Silicon Image. The Sil 3114 serves up an additional four Serial ATA ports and can handle RAID 0, 1, 0+1, and 5 arrays, but you won't find support for 300MB/s Serial ATA transfer rates or NCQ here, either. You will find a pokey PCI interface, forcing the Sil 3114 to compete for bus bandwidth with the RDX200's Firewire chip and its PCI-based Gigabit Ethernet controller."

  • Logitech Z-5450 Digital 5.1 Review @ The TechZone

    Published: Tuesday, December 6, 2005 | By: Dennis

    I haven't been following the computer speaker market but based on this review Logitech has finally started moving their wireless quest to their speaker line.
    "Leave it to Logitech to once again raise the bar for computer speaker systems. The Logitech Z-5450 provides high performance sound with the innovation of wireless rear surround satellite speakers. The introduction of dual wireless rear speakers finally solves the common headache of having to run those long unsightly wires that run to your rear surround speakers."

  • Abit Fatal1ty AN8 SLI Review @ The Tech Report

    Published: Tuesday, December 6, 2005 | By: Dennis

    I like the color but the layout could use some serious work.
    "The Fatal1ty AN8 SLI is mainly red, though black is used to differentiate the OTES cooler, floppy drive port, PCI-E slots, CPU cooler bracket, and one set of DIMM slots. The USB 2.0 headers and IDE ports are blue for no apparent reason, though it does give the board a bit of additional color contrast without overwhelming the eye."

  • DFI Infinity NF4 Ultra Review @ Overclockers Online

    Published: Tuesday, December 6, 2005 | By: Dennis

    We recently reviewed this board and found it to be a very capable mainstream motherboard offering, actually the only bad thing was the PCB color. tongue smile
    "The DFI Infinity nF4 Ultra is a very solid motherboard. The build quality is great and the components that are used are top notch and seem to be almost the same as the LanParty Ultra-D. I have basically compared these two motherboards throughout the review and have come to the conclusion that the Infinity nF4 Ultra is almost the same model but without the options or accessory package. Call it the base model if you will with the LanParty Ultra-D being the GT or Type-R version that has slightly better performance and more buttons."

  • Corsair Twinx2048 4000 DDR500 Memory Review Posted

    Published: Sunday, December 4, 2005 | By: Dennis

    Secret weapons come in all shapes in sizes; some consist of throwing stars to the head while others are simpler more effective alternatives. In the case of the Corsair TwinX2048-4000 we get two times the normal memory, enhanced bandwidth for overclocking and no messy cuts that cause you to bleed profusely. In short the best of both worlds.

  • DFI LanParty NF4 SLI-DR Expert @ techPowerUp!

    Published: Sunday, November 27, 2005 | By: Dennis

    Here is a board that I wouldn't mind taking a look at.. big grin smile
    "The DFI LanParty NF4 Series is legendary among overclockers. The boards are well known for their excellent performance and overclocking features.

    When I first heard that DFI is coming up with a new "Expert" version of this board, I was wondering if they could really improve things so much that it warrants a new product. Yes they did!

    Like the non-expert boards the DFI LanParty NF4 SLI-DR Expert is based on NVIDIA's nForce 4 chipset. At the moment DFI offers only the SLI-DR Expert, but there may be cheaper versions without SLI or the additional SATA chip."