Shponglefan wrote on 2024-05-26, 00:38:Re-flashed the BIOS on my Asrock 775i65G R2.0 and enabled support for Core 2. […]
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Re-flashed the BIOS on my Asrock 775i65G R2.0 and enabled support for Core 2.
Tested it with an X6800 processor and seems to be working well.
I tried disabling L1 & L2 cache to see what sort of throttling capabilities it has. Playing around with multipliers and FSB settings, I get 3DBench scores ranging from 20.8 down to 5.9. That seems to put in the range of a slow 486 to a fast 286.
Tested Ultima 7 with cache disabled and it actually runs quite well. Probably on par with a 486 DX-33 from what I could tell.
Okay, but that's S775 already. S478 P4 is current. Directly disabled cache generally results in a jerk. The 775 is also fast enough for the SBEMU/CPUSPD combination, which gives a good result under DOS/WIN98. And natively. And here the awakening power is dominated.
As below.
S478 Flex :
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S775 Flex :
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Then the line can be continued on the P45/PCIe-> after the S2011V3, they are all strong enough for the above modern retro drivers ...and if not, conventional drives are recommended with older slowdowns.
The 3 body problems cannot be solved, neither for future quantum computers, even for the remainder of the universe. The Proton 2D is circling a planet and stepping back to the quantum size in 11 dimensions.