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Australia IT N2 series
by Staff Writers
While this system may not be the highest performer overall in the group, it still represents very good value for money, as demonstrated by its above average 112 Value score.
May 12, 2004
Intel Pentium 4 3.2GHz (800MHz FSB)
by Dan Chiappini
Your PC is only as good as your last upgrade, and this is truer than ever with current gaming and software applications milking machines for everything they're worth.
Jul 29, 2003
ALTHON XP 3200+
by Darren Ellis
The Athlon XP 3200+ will probably be the last Barton-core desktop processor to come from AMD before the launch later this year of the Athlon 64, its desktop 64-bit processor.
Jul 1, 2003
Feature
The Ultiimate Upgrade Kit - 2002 era PC
by Staff Writers
Last year the Pentium 4 was beginning to show its true colours as a top performance desktop CPU, but it was still squarely outmatched in the value stakes by the new Athlon processor. DDR RAM was also becoming the standard, with SDRAM finally going the way of the extinct plankton, graptolites.
Jul 1, 2003
Abit NF7-S
by Nirmal Chandrasena
ABIT's new NVIDIA nForce2 motherboard, the NF7-S, supports the AMD Duron, Athlon, and Athlon XP, and also features dual 400MHz DDR memory controllers.
Mar 1, 2003
Intel Pentium 4 2.8GHz
by Daniel Gardiner
The Athlon XP 2700+ represents a significant leap forward for the Athlon line – it solves a long-term problem by stepping up the default frontside bus (FSB) speed from 266MHz to 333MHz.
Jan 2, 2003
AMD ATHLON XP 2700+ vs. INTEL PENTIUM 4 2.8GHz
by Daniel Gardiner
The Athlon XP 2700+ represents a significant leap forward for the Athlon line – it solves a long-term problem by stepping up the default frontside bus (FSB) speed from 266MHz to 333MHz. This means that the Athlon XP can finally run in sync with 333MHz DDR RAM. While most currently available Athlon motherboards support 333MHz DDR, there is virtually no performance boost between this and 266MHz DDR when running an Athlon XP with a 266MHz FSB. The extra speed offered by the RAM quite simply goes to waste, because the CPU can't keep up with it.
Dec 1, 2002
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