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Socket 939 dual core build. Decisions, decisions....

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Reply 120 of 125, by AlexZ

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s939, AM2, s775 can be used as office PCs even today if you can fit them with SATA SSD, 8GB RAM (modern browsers and other apps need a lot of RAM) and install Linux. If you use just one app at time or NVME storage you might get away with 4GB RAM.

386/486/pentiums had a much shorter life span. You could live with single core Athlon XP/s754 perhaps until 2010 as office PC. The term "retro" should probably apply to single cores only.

Pentium III 900E,ECS P6BXT-A+,384MB,GeForce FX 5600, Voodoo 2,Yamaha SM718
Athlon 64 3400+,Gigabyte GA-K8NE,2GB,GeForce GTX 275,Audigy 2 ZS
Phenom II X4 955,Gigabyte GA-MA770-UD3,8GB,GeForce GTX 780
Vishera FX-8370,Asus 990FX,32GB,GeForce GTX 980 Ti

Reply 121 of 125, by Archer57

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Living wrote on Yesterday, 12:45:

i find amazing that a 20 year old processor its still usable today for mundane task. I cant be the only one here feeling that, who, like many others, grew with CPUs that were obsolete in less than 5 years

Also, i noticed in recent years that a core 2 duo / pentium dual core stalls much more than a similar aged 939 / AM2 processor. Maybe its the on die memory controller and communication between cores. I not saying that the experience is better since Conroe still is faster in single core, but when taken outside of the period correct software, things gets much more closer and smoother with K8

Yeah, what's even more baffling to me is that if you go to a store an buy "the cheapest laptop", which many people do when they do not have a PC and suddenly need one for something like working from home mess of 2020, it ends up being significantly slower than a system like this. Dual core atom (atom-based celeron/pentium), 4GB of RAM, eMMC instead of SSD, win11... and everything soldered so no upgrades possible.

douglar wrote on Yesterday, 13:47:

I hear you, it feels strange that a 20 year old 939 could still come out of mothballs and make a workable PC like a world war II battleship. Well, almost. "ad funded websites" are the exception. You might feel the pain if you go to one of those websites that make my Ipad turn to lava if I click on the wrong link. What are they doing? Mining bitcoin? Had to upgrade my mother-in-law to 4 cores to deal with that.

Why would anyone use modern internet without some form of ad blocking though? I can not, regardless of performance, it is simply unusable.

Yes, browser extensions which do that cost a fair amount of performance themselves (processing all the lists and rewriting pages), but ultimately they improve performance by removing all the crap from pages.

DNS based blocking on a router or something does not cost anything to client device significantly improving performance and also does not require installing anything on client device, but the results are a bit more... ugly.

AlexZ wrote on Yesterday, 17:28:

s939, AM2, s775 can be used as office PCs even today if you can fit them with SATA SSD, 8GB RAM (modern browsers and other apps need a lot of RAM) and install Linux. If you use just one app at time or NVME storage you might get away with 4GB RAM.

386/486/pentiums had a much shorter life span. You could live with single core Athlon XP/s754 perhaps until 2010 as office PC. The term "retro" should probably apply to single cores only.

Yeah, generally more RAM=better in this case, 16GB are possible on AM2 and are useful. But... at least for now with linux, SSD and some tweaking (perhaps using zram, likely - very high "swappiness" value) 4GB still provide comfortable experience. It does not even start actually writing to swap all the way to a browser with a dozen of tabs, music/video player, open office writer or something and a few windows of file manager. Which i'd consider multitasking enough.

Once you run a couple different browsers it'll start swapping and slowing down, but even then performance remains acceptable for a while.

There is no objective way to measure it and people will have different opinions, but IMO progress started slowing down significantly somewhere around pentium 3. Before that each generation provided benefits so huge it was often simply impossible to run some software on previous generation. After that... even high-end pentium 3 system could be used all the way to XP being completely phased out, not to mention later single core CPUs. And first dual cores are still usable to this days...

AthlonXP 2200+,ECS K7VTA3 V8.0,1GB,GF FX5900XT 128MB,Audigy 2 ZS
AthlonXP 3200+,Epox EP-8RDA3I,2GB,GF 7600GT 256MB,Audigy 4
Athlon64 x2 4800+,Asus A8N32-SLI Deluxe,4GB,GF 8800GT 1GB,Audigy 4
Core2Duo E8600,ECS G31T-M3,4GB,GF GTX660 2GB,Realtek ALC662

Reply 122 of 125, by Ozzuneoj

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Man... has anyone ever gotten an Athlon XP working on Windows 10? I know the lack of SSE2 is a pretty serious limitation.

I've been thinking about how cool it'd be to build a system in a brand new modern fishtank style case with all the RGBs, quiet fans etc. But have it running a highly overclocked Athlon XP on a late VIA chipset (for AGP support post-XP), 4GB RAM (I know it'd be limited to 3.25GB at best), an HD 3850 and the last 32bit supporting version of Windows 10.

Probably run really bad, but it'd still be fun. 😁

I also have a couple of dual-socket Athlon XP boards, but I'm sure the chipset limitations (overclocking and drivers) are going to be a deal breaker with those.

I will probably have to settle for Windows 7 for this one, which is neat but it loses that "wow, look at the new PC!" effect.

Now for some blitting from the back buffer.

Reply 123 of 125, by Archer57

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Ozzuneoj wrote on Today, 00:45:

Man... has anyone ever gotten an Athlon XP working on Windows 10? I know the lack of SSE2 is a pretty serious limitation.

I seem to vaguely remember that we've tried to run win10 on LGA775 pentium4 at work and that did not work, it lacked something win10 required. AthlonXP would be even worse, so it probably will not work. But i am tempted to try 😀

Linux works though, LMDE still has 32 bit version and that runs reasonably well. AGP on nforce2 and everything.

AthlonXP 2200+,ECS K7VTA3 V8.0,1GB,GF FX5900XT 128MB,Audigy 2 ZS
AthlonXP 3200+,Epox EP-8RDA3I,2GB,GF 7600GT 256MB,Audigy 4
Athlon64 x2 4800+,Asus A8N32-SLI Deluxe,4GB,GF 8800GT 1GB,Audigy 4
Core2Duo E8600,ECS G31T-M3,4GB,GF GTX660 2GB,Realtek ALC662

Reply 124 of 125, by douglar

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Archer57 wrote on Today, 01:07:
Ozzuneoj wrote on Today, 00:45:

Man... has anyone ever gotten an Athlon XP working on Windows 10? I know the lack of SSE2 is a pretty serious limitation.

I seem to vaguely remember that we've tried to run win10 on LGA775 pentium4 at work and that did not work, it lacked something win10 required. AthlonXP would be even worse, so it probably will not work. But i am tempted to try 😀

Linux works though, LMDE still has 32 bit version and that runs reasonably well. AGP on nforce2 and everything.

Some early 775 processors lacked the NX bit required for Windows 8 & 10

Reply 125 of 125, by Archer57

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douglar wrote on Today, 01:15:

Some early 775 processors lacked the NX bit required for Windows 8 & 10

That would explain it. And also means it would not run on AthlonXP either - IIRC AMD added NX bit with AMD64...

AthlonXP 2200+,ECS K7VTA3 V8.0,1GB,GF FX5900XT 128MB,Audigy 2 ZS
AthlonXP 3200+,Epox EP-8RDA3I,2GB,GF 7600GT 256MB,Audigy 4
Athlon64 x2 4800+,Asus A8N32-SLI Deluxe,4GB,GF 8800GT 1GB,Audigy 4
Core2Duo E8600,ECS G31T-M3,4GB,GF GTX660 2GB,Realtek ALC662