Tech News

  • Soltek K8AN-RL Review @ x-bit-labs or Digit-Life

    Published: Tuesday, February 17, 2004 | By: Dennis

    Or whatever, they are the same site, wink smile anyhow they have a review up of the nForce3-150 enabled Soltek K8AN-RL. We reviewed the same board not to long ago and was actually quite impressed with it.
    "According to the preliminary testing this model demonstrates the highest performance level among all other boards based on this chipset. But even in the most memory-hungry applications its speed advantage is not great, and in other tests it doesn't exceed even 2%, that is why its advantage is not that grave argument."
    Now if this were an ATI vs nVidia article that 2% would be night and day. tongue smile

  • Radeon 9600SE vs GeForceFX 5600XT @ Elite Bastards

    Published: Tuesday, February 17, 2004 | By: Dennis

    It would seem that review sites are getting a kick of out showing how ATI is faster than nVidia. In the big picture 10fps only really matters when frames drop below 30-40fps and when that happens you have more things to worry about than framerate.
    "So, with this first section of testing over, it seems fair to conclude that the 9600SE has an unassailable advantage in all situations here. This is no doubt largely due to the far higher core speed (and thus fillrate) that it enjoys over the 5600XT on show here, although its adaptive anisotropic filtering and more efficient antialiasing techniques picked up from its bigger brothers helps to keep performance hit to a minimum where possible."
    btw anyone want to fathom a guess why the name of this site isn't l337 b45+4rd5?? big grin smile

  • IBM GXP fiasco secrets revealed

    Published: Tuesday, February 17, 2004 | By: Dennis

    I think we all know about this but for those living under a rock IBM Deskstar drives, though super fast, had a dark side... They failed, and quite often I might add. Over the years I’ve owned 4 of these drives and so far two of them have failed.

    I have since bought a Hitachi Deskstar Serial ATA drive; it is just as fast (if not faster) than the IBM Deskstar and so far has been very robust.

  • V-pr0n with Dan

    Published: Tuesday, February 17, 2004 | By: Dennis

    This is work safe stuff just a small little thing about how pr0n drives technology with links to various sites, ya know typical Dan's Data stuff. wink smile

  • Two FX 5700 Ultra Reviews

    Published: Monday, February 16, 2004 | By: Dennis

    The FX 5700 Ultra is a pretty solid video card with some very respectable performance.
    Inno3D Geforce FX 5700 Ultra
    "Any gamer on a budget should consider the 5700 Ultra as a serious option when selecting a video card. Respectable frame rates, good gameplay, and clear image quality are among the benefits."

    Ohhh, check out the red PCB! big grin smile
    Gainward GeForce FX 5700 Ultra Golden Sample
    "Gainward has upped this card's specifications to 500MHz core and 1000MHz memory. We're not too surprised to see a core jump, but we're pleased to see bandwidth being pushed out to a theoretical 16GB/s. Lots of antialiasing and anisotropic filtering will make full use of it. "
    It should be noted that the Gainward card is using a dual DVI setup making this card perfect for LCD's and high quality CRT setups. I would expect this setup to become the norm later this year.

  • XGI Volari Duo V8 Ultra Review @ Digit-Life

    Published: Monday, February 16, 2004 | By: Dennis

    The initial release of this card didn't seem to turn many heads, performance was less than expected and the price tag was pretty high. Though I've always been a sucker for a SMP and the whole dual processing movement. happy smile
    "Obviously, dual-processing is based on the old principle of master and save processors. They have a special internal bus between them marked as X-Link (also known as BitFluent). This is actually the internal AGP2x, 32 bits wide and working at 133 MHz. The processors work similarly to those in the ATI RAGE MAXX - everyone renders its own frame, but unlike to ATI's product, the chips do not wait for each other to sync when rendering is completed."

  • Soltek SL-K8AV-R Review @ 3DXtreme

    Published: Monday, February 16, 2004 | By: Dennis

    The 3DX gang really had some issues with their SL-K8AV-R board and really makes the review sound more like a complaint than anything else. We had the opportunity to review this board a few months back and though the board was lacking in onboard features it did quite well in the benchmark arena. Check out our review here for more information.
    "Today 3DXtreme is taking a look at another AMD64 motherboard, this time around it’s the Soltek SL-K8AV-R. This particular Soltek board is based on the VIA K8T800 chipset and features a more robust HyperTransport than the previously reviewed nVidia Nforce3-150 Motherboard (Soyo CK-8)."

  • NL: Review Block - Cases

    Published: Monday, February 16, 2004 | By: Dennis

    Kind of a small review block considering the stuff that came in over the weekend, you'll live.

    - Thermaltake Damier V5000A @ TechTastic
    - SilverStone Temjin @ A True Review
    - Silverstone Temjin @ Modsynergy

    More of the same sometime later..

  • Go-L Out For Blood

    Published: Friday, February 13, 2004 | By: Dennis

    I posted some news a while back about Extreme Laptops and how this company "Go-L" was building some pretty sweet units. I didn't really research the company or their claims but was impressed with that the site had to say. I even thought about buying one.
    "Recently a forum thread (http://notebookforums.com/showthread.php?t=14210) was brought to my attention regarding a notebook vendor, Go-L. The thread got really nasty, really quick as tends to happen on forums. The main thrust of the thread is that Go-L, a high end computer vendor, is making claims about their computers that do not stand up to scrutiny."
    I still may consider getting a Go-L laptop but not for personal use. I'd take the thing apart and find out what the truth really is.

    Something tells me that Go-L prolly won't be sending a sample my way. wink smile

  • No Slacking for Game Developers

    Published: Friday, February 13, 2004 | By: Dennis

    Being a sudo programmer myself I understand that writing a game from scratch takes time but in the case of Duke Nukem Forever I think 8+ years is time enough to simply drop the project and move on.
    "The main problem seems to be that development teams face growing technological complexity that only adds to the inherent unpredictability of software development. They also often have to go back to the drawing board close to release when a competing game comes out with features that have to be matched."