Many people were taken by surprise when trying out the Internet Explorer 8 beta 2 when it first came out. It was buggy, and the main deal breaker for me was the fact that the Netflix ‘Watch Instantly’ feature didn’t work. Not that its a feature I use everyday, but at times it just turns a laptop into a portable movie player, and in my application, my laptop sits next to my bed and acts as my movie player since I don’t have cable or a vcr/dvd player in that room. Not only was it annoying not being able to use the service, but a quick google search showed me that uninstalling IE8 from Vista SP1 wasn’t going to happen (although if you’re upgrading to vista from XP SP3, you’re automatically downgraded to IE7 for the save). › Continue reading…
Archive for September, 2008
While web 2.0 does turn the internet into more of a community, turning every website into a social network, it isn’t without its negatives. One of them, there is no common identity system yet, so everytime you goto a website, you have to sign up and validate an account everytime you goto a website. This kinda leads to the second negative. Those who take the time to sign up and comment on sites seem to only be the jerks and cynical.
Logging onto any web2.0 site and reading the comments leads to frustration as there tends to be a balance of 25% positive or informed posters and %75 jerks. I think if there were a unified login for all web2.0 sites, people would be more willing to take the time to post, rather than doing as I do, and avoiding most comment threads because there isn’t anything worth reading. › Continue reading…
Ok, so I’m sure you’ve heard by now about overclocking and the resulting influx of cooling products to the marketplace. I had too, but still computed along through Silicon Valley with my stock retail AMD cpu cooler and heatsink combo.
Crysis and some major graphics editing, however, pushed my x2-4200+ clocking @ 2.2 GHz to the 60 degrees Celsius and above marks. That’s hot, precariously close to way too hot. At these temperatures Crysis would slow to a crawl with the best examples being the lack of synchronicity between the spoken words of the game’s characters and the actual visual mouthing of the words. In stark contrast however, the game would run the same cutscenes flawlessly at cooler operating temperatures.
How do I know this? Enter the Zerotherm BTF-90 Copper heatsink cooler/quiet fan combo. I traded a nice gentleman off of craigslist an AMD x2 processor for it and am very pleased. I probably would never have purchased the cooling unit and that’s why I decided to write this article. I believe it’s important that those who don’t know whether or not actually shelling out money for an aftermarket CPU cooler is worth it, that indeed it is. My idle temperatures reported by SpeedFan (a wonderful temperature monitoring application, IMHO) average 37 degrees Celsius and 49 degrees Celsius during high computing loads. This is much better than my average idle temperature of 50 degrees Celsius and 61 degrees Celsius during high CPU usage periods.
One could probably argue with the overclockability options of motherboards today and the ability to push CPUs well beyond their advertised speeds that buying a nice aftermarket cooling unit like the Zerotherm or similar and then overclocking your processor could even be a cost effective speed upgrade. But even with the potential higher clock speeds and increased reliability and longevity of your processor, I’d have to argue the biggest reason to upgrade from your stock heatsink and fan is in the increased responsiveness of your computer.
While I don’t have statistical proof to validate my claims of increased responsiveness, with my lower operating temperatures I have been noticing fewer hangs and no lock ups as of yet. All in all, I highly recommend contemplating upgrading your heatsink/fan cooling combo as your next computer upgrade (especially if you had temperatures in the range that I had).
In summary, I’m certainly pleased with trading an x2 that I wasn’t using for saving and improving upon the performance of the x2 I currently use; yet must state that I am most pleased by the new firsthand experience and knowledge I’ve gained regarding the practicality of an aftermarket cooling solution.
