First ever board was an Asus A8V socket 939... that thing lasted forever. Started with a 3500+ and replaced it with an Opteron 185. I even had one of those AGP HD3850s!
I like that Galaxy innovates with custom coolers and new ideas like removable fans for easy cleaning. Hope they move over to the red team as well to push some more competition.
Makes sense... but I thought light was a constant (c) no matter what medium (multiply c by the resitance level). I've only taken freshmen level physics at tOSU so I may be way off...
The other article mentioned using different wavelengths (colors) of light but I'm still not understanding how...
Can someone explain this quote?
"Their method splits light, speeding up one part of light and slowing down another."
If they are speeding up light, aren't they then making light travel faster than light? I'm interested in this stuff and just curious how that would work.
I don't believe I've EVER heard a negative review of a Corsair product and personally own some DDR sticks that have been humming along nicely since 2003ish. Yes I still have an AGP system... the one below doesn't work yet. Fried PSU.
price/performance can't be beat. owned nothing but AMD since the Althon 64 days. I can't believe how well they're able to keep up with Intel despite all the anti-competitive measures and tiny capital compared to Intel. Looking forward to Bulldozer!
Not as horrible as I thought... I guess it only allows you to view recommended results of your "friends."
This article gives more detail:
http://www.tomsguide.com/us/Google-Recommendations-Rob-Spiro-Facebook-Twitter,news-10687.html
Just asking because the guide says ATI/AMD 2XXX cards and up, NVidia 8XXX and up are supported, which are all designed to be PCI-E. Some manufactures decided to use some 3rd party PCI-E to AGP bridge chip for a few of the ATI cards.
Guess I'll find out next week.
The new one is running in an HTPC case with only 2 80mm fans... don't want to leave it running 24/7 until I can afford some better cooling. That 6950 is going to heat that sucker up. Definitely willing to run both just don't want to kill my PC before I can finish it. That's why I didn't use...
Still running my Corsair DDR sticks in my S939 machine... finally upgrading and would love to stick with a reliable memory maker. Those sticks have lasted me 6 years with no issues to date (nearly 100% run time).