October 2009
 | OCZ published a new memory kit with a feature to get high memory performance without manual settings. We are talking about the brand-new OCZ AMD Black Edition PC3-12800 CL8 kit. When the 4GB AMD Black Edition kit is used in conjunction with an AMD Black Edition CPU on an AOD capable motherboard, the RAM settings can be downloaded by the AMD OverDrive software over the Internet and adjusted automatically. The new OCZ AMD Black Edition PC3-12800 4GB kit was extensively tested, overclocked and compared with some other memory modules in the current ocinside.de review. OCZ AMD Black Edition 4GB Kit DDR3-1600/PC3-12800 OCZ3BE1600C8LV4GK Memory Review |
 | The interactive Intel product ID guide is used for a fast and easy identification of the most Intel processors. Just select the description of the Intel processor in the interactive guide and you will see immediately the most important technical information like the frequency, power, L2 and L3 Cache, Socket, etc. The current version 2.2 contains additionally to the previous version a lot of new processors like the Intel Core i5, Core i7, Mobile Core i7, Core i7 Extreme, Mobile Core i7 Extreme, Intel Celeron Dual-Core, several new Intel Atom processors, dozens of new Xeon CPUs, some of them with up to 6 cores and much more Intel processors information. Interactive Intel processor product ID guide v2.2 |
 | In this Review the performance and the overclocking of a Crucial Ballistix Tracer PC3-10600 CL6 4GB DDR3 kit are tested and compared with 16 Dual Channel kits of previous reviews. Since current AMD processors supports DDR3 memory modules, DDR3 Dual Channel kits got more demand. Because who like to build a new PC system with an AMD Phenom II processor, surely prefer a motherboard with DDR3 Dual Channel support. This OC review will show the difference between DDR3 and DDR2 RAM and the review will also show how far this DDR3 kit can be overclocked on a current AMD 790GX system. Crucial Ballistix Tracer 4GB Kit DDR3-1333/PC3-10600 BL2KIT25664TA1336 Memory Review |
I don't hold any responsibility for any damage caused by overclocking.
There is always a risk of damaging your hardware.
And your warranty becomes void if you overclock something.
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