Hi all. I have an hd 5770 and an hd 5750 in xfire together. They're on an MSI am3 motherboard labled as crossfire ready, but the other day while playing crysis 2 multiplayer, I noticed that my usage on the 5750 was at absolute zero while the 5770 was at 100 percent constantly. It's not a CPU...
I remember hearing AMD scrapped the original bulldozer in favor of the modern design. what was the original design like? Did it still include the shared resources like today?
Has anyone out there been crazy/ rich enough to build a system with at least two Nvidia cards in SLI alongside two Radeons in crossfire and then tried to use the hack where you can run the physx on the nvidia card and the AMD cards are primary? The system is possible from a hardware standpoint...
BTW, this is on a different mobo than when I posted about overclocking this exact same chip a few months ago and you responded. The last one's chipset completely baked. (Same overclock, except using oc genie)
Thank you. I was really supprised at the results, myself. That's why I posted this. I was wondering if I was missing some instability somewhere. It didn't seem natural that i could get it up by 400 mghrzt without at least a little voltage bump. Seems I lucked out on this, though, and managed to...
I started out with an AthlonII x4 620 at 2.6 stock and managed to push it up to 3.0. I did it in 100 megahertz increments and prime 95 tested for about six to eight hours each time to make sure it was stable. Was that long enough or should I have tested longer? I've heard you need 24 hrs to be...
It wasn't originally in english, so the translation is a little off..
http://www.bzebuzz.com/gossip/politics/israeli-cyber-attack-to-iran’s-nuclear-centrifuges-computer-virus-stuxnet-is-working/20
This seems strange.... If this were Youtube, just the fact alone that i'm AMD and you're Intel would have us threating each other and claiming that we know where each other live and will kill the other in their sleep. This conversation seems almost... too... civil....