Your search for "cache" returned 107 results.
Intel Pentium 4 Prescott 3.2GHz
by Tim Dean
The latest iteration of the Pentium 4, code named Prescott, is an interesting development for a few reasons. First off, it represents Intel's entry to the world of 90nm (90 nanometre, or 0.09 micron) fabrication for processors. For the uninitiated, all this means is the size of individual components on the processor core have been shrunk to even smaller levels. It's a natural part of processor evolution to shrink the size of components, as it allows more transistors to be packed into a smaller space, reduces heat and resistance, and this all leads to faster CPUs.
Apr 14, 2004
AMD Phenom 9500
by David Fearon
A world first on the desktop, Phenom is good but a long way from outstanding.
Jan 17, 2008
Pentium 4 Extreme Edition
by Tim Dean
Chance or coincidence? AMD releases the Athlon 64, specifically targeted at the consumer performance market, and only days later Intel announces a secret processor aimed squarely at the same MHz-hungry community: the Pentium 4 Extreme Edition (P4EE).
Nov 12, 2003
Intel Core 2 Extreme QX9650
by David Fearon
This first of a new generation is only a little faster than the old, but its potential is clearly huge
Dec 11, 2007
IBM System X3550
by Dave Mitchell
The first of the new breed of IBM rack servers, delivering superb design and a wealth of new features.
Mar 30, 2007
Intel Pentium 4 2.8E
by Dan Chiappini
When Intel announced the production of 90nm products over a year ago, the most obvious change was the move to double the existing 512KB L2 cache to a full 1MB of on die memory. This simple transition added more performance than some of the minor clockspeed increases to date, and made the Prescott a household name.
Apr 7, 2005
DVD IDLE PRO
by David Neiger
In order to control distribution of movies and prevent piracy, many most DVDs are region protected to ensure that they cannot be played outside of their region of issue. In short, this means you can't play American DVDs on an Australian player and vice versa. To further complicate the matter, PC and notebook DVD drives are locked to the least region set with DVD drives correspondingly locked after five changes of region code by the user.
Feb 11, 2004
Samsung Spinpoint T
by Darien Graham-Smith
How much capacity and how many drives do you need? We look at a selection of storage options
Jun 17, 2008
Seagate Momentus
by Dan Chiappini
Currently only available to OEMs, although it should be released later to the consumer market, Seagate’s Momentus hard drive upgrade kit is designed to boost the common bottleneck issue of hard drive performance in notebooks, tablet PCs, digital audio players and blade servers.
Sep 10, 2003
Intel Pentium D
by Dave Bayon
The 915 is an good budget choice, but elsewhere this family is eclipsed by newer offerings.
Feb 26, 2007
Intel Pentium 4 3.73EE
by Dan Chiappini
While AMD has been waving hybrid 32/64-bit CPUs for some time now, speculation has risen over when Intel would unleash their product onto an already expecting market. Here it is, Intel's newest addition to their Extreme Edition clocking in at an impressive 3.73GHz and boasting a 2MB L3 cache.
Apr 7, 2005
SERIAL ATA SEAGATE 120GB BARRACUDA IV
by Darren Ellis
Just over four months on from our massive hard drive roundup (October 2002, page 74), and Serial ATA (SATA) hard disks have finally arrived. Phew.
Feb 1, 2003
AMD ATHLON 64 FX-51
by Dan Chiappini
While 64-bit computing has been around for a while (for the two of you who could afford Intel's Itanium, and now Itanium II processors), the dream of 64-bittery for the humble home system has been a long time coming.
Oct 7, 2003
AMD Phenom X4
by Darien Graham-Smith
A smartly engineered processor, but for today’s applications it’s lacking in bang per buck.
Jul 29, 2008
Viewmaster Portiva 5223
by Dan Chiappini
Hallmark has opted to take advantage of Intel’s Extreme Graphics 2 integrated shared graphics, taking up to 64MB of video memory from the on-board 512MB of PC2700 DDR to power the display. While not designed for gaming, it did manage to churn out almost 3000 points in 3DMark01SE with some help from its Pentium M 1.6GHz CPU.
Jan 4, 2005
TOSHIBA TECRA S1
by Dan Chiappini
This is no ordinary notebook, sporting Intel’s 1.6GHz Centrino processor with a 1MB on-die L2 cache, 400MHz frontside bus and a half gig of DDR. It’s nothing short of impressively fast.
Jul 1, 2003
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