Posts Tagged ‘geforce’

Gateway NV53 Laptop Review

In this video i’m going to be reviewing the Gateway NV53 Laptop

CPU overclocking guide (Intel) HD

A video I made for people who want to know the basics of CPU overclocking. System specs are stated at the beginning the video.

Spec Review of the Cube Computer TallTower Maxx Xtreme Gamer

Spec Review of the original configuration (January 2010) of the TallTower Maxx Xtreme Gamer from Cube Computer Company

Gateway SX2801 Desktop Computer Review

This is a review for a New gateway computer I just bought for christmas 2010

My computer, Intel core i5 2500k, gtx 480, ASUS PRO motherbord 08-2011 #2

PC specs: MB: ASUS P8P67 PRO CPU: i5 2500K, cooler: Artic freezer pro 13 RAM: 2 x 2 GB 1600mhz CL7 1.65 V MUSHKIN GPU: NV GTX 480 HDD: 500GB WD blue 7200 rpm sata 2 and 1TB WD green 7200 rpm sata 2 PSU: 750 watt Intel never quite reached 4GHz with the Pentium 4. Despite being on a dedicated quest for gigahertz the company stopped short and the best we ever got was 3.8GHz. Within a year the clock (no pun intended) was reset and we were all running Core 2 Duos at under 3GHz. With each subsequent generation Intel inched those clock speeds higher, but preferred to gain performance through efficiency rather than frequency. Today, Intel quietly finishes what it started nearly a decade ago. When running a single threaded application, the Core i7-2600K will power gate three of its four cores and turbo the fourth core as high as 3.8GHz. Even with two cores active, the 32nm chip can run them both up to 3.7GHz. The only thing keeping us from 4GHz is a lack of competition to be honest. Relying on single-click motherboard auto-overclocking alone, the 2600K is easily at 4.4GHz. For those of you who want more, 4.6-4.8GHz is within reason. All on air, without any exotic cooling. Unlike Lynnfield, Sandy Bridge isn’t just about turbo (although Sandy Bridge’s turbo modes are quite awesome). Architecturally it’s the biggest change we’ve seen since Conroe, although looking at a high level block diagram you wouldn’t be able to tell. Architecture width hasn’t changed, but internally SNB

7 – magicJack Review

This is one USB gadget that can cut out your monthly phone bills entirely. The magicJack is a USB device which plugs into your computer. With this device, you can plug in almost any typical telephone and make/receive free local and long distance calls for only .95 a YEAR, not a month… You can buy the device at Walmart, Target, Best Buy, etc. for about and this covers your first year of service. In order for magicJack to function properly, you need to have a decent computer (multicore CPU recommended if it’s your primary machine) and a decent internet connection. Take my word for it, you’ll enjoy this device as long as you have the proper setup to run it.