Hey is Nforce 3 a newer version of Nforce 2? Is it worth the extra money..whats the diff? Im not seeing any boards with this
Hey is Nforce 3 a newer version of Nforce 2? Is it worth the extra money..whats the diff? Im not seeing any boards with this
[SIZE=1]AMD 4200 X2 @ 2.65Ghz, ASRock 939-VSTA
1.75GB PC3200, 2 X 160GB Seagate w/ 8MB Buffer
HIS Radeon X800 Pro, Antec Super Lanboy Aluminum
NVM...its for the new amds..you can close this if ya want lol
[SIZE=1]AMD 4200 X2 @ 2.65Ghz, ASRock 939-VSTA
1.75GB PC3200, 2 X 160GB Seagate w/ 8MB Buffer
HIS Radeon X800 Pro, Antec Super Lanboy Aluminum
yeah, nforce 3 is for amd64 chips. an not socket a boards
Ill probably think about getting a 64 bit cpu after the technology has improved a bit.
I think it too early to be getting one.
i was thinking about going amd 64 next april or may, but i'll wait and see what the support's like then (hardware-wise)
<span style='font-size:14pt;line-height:100%'>BLAH</span>
<span style='font-size:14pt;line-height:100%'>Wayne Rooney - A thug and a thief</span>
I don't think that hardware will be the bottleneck.Originally posted by 3rd gen noob@16 December 2003 - 06:39
i was thinking about going amd 64 next april or may, but i'll wait and see what the support's like then (hardware-wise)
How quickly ( and effectively) the compatable software is available will be my deciding factor.
Even though MS says that the 64 bit Windows will be out in Feb/March, I'd hate to have all the hardware sitting at the ready and have the software be a disappointment.
Which never happens, does it?
"I am the one who knocks."- Heisenberg
i still dont get the diff between 32 and 64-bit (talking about differences in software)
anyone care to explain?
the architecture, its implies to the bus the cpu is on, at the moment it is 32bits wide, but if it was twice as wide, 64bit, u can get alot more data through. thats some of it anyway. and you need a 64bit os for it to work since the cpus are diff.Originally posted by DWk@16 December 2003 - 14:55
i still dont get the diff between 32 and 64-bit (talking about differences in software)
anyone care to explain?
I believe that essentially we're talking about how big a chunk of data the chip can manage in one bite.
Bigger mouth (64bit), more intake.
I know that the new chips will run 32bit software so that's not a problem. It's just a question of long it will take for the bulk of software to be written to optimise the new technology.
Probably at least a year or two, I'm guessing...
"I am the one who knocks."- Heisenberg
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