I agree, and don't worry I was compensated. I made my employer pay the fee to the state so they could provide me with unemployment (I'm not proud of it, but I have bills)Coaan wrote:Religion has or should not have any bearing on a service that you provide...what would it matter to someone if you were a devil worshipper so long as the work was done and they were satisfied?Kamakazie Sith wrote:Yeah.......Keevan_Colton wrote: Actually it can be mother board dependant....some (good ones) have heat sensors built in and will cut out the computer before the proccessor can pass a certain temp.
On another topic. I don't work at that place anymore and you people would love the reason why I had to quit.
Everything is going great, I'm getting lots of hours and pulling in around $900 - $1000 dollars every other week (yeah I know that isn't a lot to some of you).
We were encouraged to carry on conversations with the companies clients while out on a job, I did have a conversation and happened to mentioned my religious standing(athiest, yes it was a stupid move). I live in Utah, and I'm sure you know what Utah is famous for at least as far as religion is concerned. Well after that conversation my work load dropped by 90% because 90% of my work load was for an entire county, I was told that they didn't want me around anymore.....I'm sure you can guess why. Fuckers..
people are strange.
Pentium, AMD, or Celeron?
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I know the feeling..work these days is almost as difficult to find as snow...in AyrKamakazie Sith wrote:I agree, and don't worry I was compensated. I made my employer pay the fee to the state so they could provide me with unemployment (I'm not proud of it, but I have bills)Coaan wrote:Religion has or should not have any bearing on a service that you provide...what would it matter to someone if you were a devil worshipper so long as the work was done and they were satisfied?Kamakazie Sith wrote: Yeah.......
On another topic. I don't work at that place anymore and you people would love the reason why I had to quit.
Everything is going great, I'm getting lots of hours and pulling in around $900 - $1000 dollars every other week (yeah I know that isn't a lot to some of you).
We were encouraged to carry on conversations with the companies clients while out on a job, I did have a conversation and happened to mentioned my religious standing(athiest, yes it was a stupid move). I live in Utah, and I'm sure you know what Utah is famous for at least as far as religion is concerned. Well after that conversation my work load dropped by 90% because 90% of my work load was for an entire county, I was told that they didn't want me around anymore.....I'm sure you can guess why. Fuckers..
people are strange.
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Whats with you and all the childish comments? You don't expect to be taken seriously do you?Hyperion wrote:Get an AMD, beit Duron or Athlon/AthlonXP, for the price you get a hell of a lot more performance than inhell will ever give you.
Anyway it's hardly a simple matter anymore, the latest pentium's with hyper-threading are definitly fast and furious, and AMD's have that whole VIA chipset situation.
I'd reccomend a latest gen. P4 if you got the money.
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Actually, there was an article on this, Intel CPU's have much better safeguards against this.Coaan wrote:the Intels are no better, infact they are even more prone to overheating without the small fridge they attach these days...that's there for a reason boys and girls
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Uhm, haven't that been also the deal with Intel for a looong time?Crayz9000 wrote:The difference is that AMD is planning to leave it up to the user to activate Palladium, like they've left it up to the user about overclocking. At least, that's what I recall.Keevan_Colton wrote:As for Palladium IIRC AMD have signed up for it aswell...leaving only Crusoe....but I cant remember where I read that info....
Those who beat their swords into plowshares will plow for those who did not.
yeah, it's called automatic shut down when it gets too hot...and it's standard these days no matter what the makeHis Divine Shadow wrote:Actually, there was an article on this, Intel CPU's have much better safeguards against this.Coaan wrote:the Intels are no better, infact they are even more prone to overheating without the small fridge they attach these days...that's there for a reason boys and girls
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My current setup is an AMD, but Intel has really been taking back lost ground as of late and they have alot better chipsets and are more reliable, so thats what I'm getting for my next computer.
IA-64 stands to be very interesting too, and may finally kill x86
IA-64 stands to be very interesting too, and may finally kill x86
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Yeah but AMD's safeguards where alot worse and the CPU melted anyway.Coaan wrote:yeah, it's called automatic shut down when it gets too hot...and it's standard these days no matter what the makeHis Divine Shadow wrote:Actually, there was an article on this, Intel CPU's have much better safeguards against this.Coaan wrote:the Intels are no better, infact they are even more prone to overheating without the small fridge they attach these days...that's there for a reason boys and girls
Those who beat their swords into plowshares will plow for those who did not.
You don't have a choice with intel chips...I seem to remember palladium was active on them no matter what....to the well read computer user, this is a major concern, what next...big brother cameras watching our every move and security tags?His Divine Shadow wrote:Uhm, haven't that been also the deal with Intel for a looong time?Crayz9000 wrote:The difference is that AMD is planning to leave it up to the user to activate Palladium, like they've left it up to the user about overclocking. At least, that's what I recall.Keevan_Colton wrote:As for Palladium IIRC AMD have signed up for it aswell...leaving only Crusoe....but I cant remember where I read that info....
Xcom ; Standing proud and getting horrifically murdered by Chryssalids since 1994
When they were first released yes, but since then their safeguards have improved no end....I've had my cpu over heat at least 5 times in the past and all that happened is the computer shut down..the computer in question was a 1.4ghz thunderbird...damage?..none at all.His Divine Shadow wrote:Yeah but AMD's safeguards where alot worse and the CPU melted anyway.Coaan wrote:yeah, it's called automatic shut down when it gets too hot...and it's standard these days no matter what the makeHis Divine Shadow wrote: Actually, there was an article on this, Intel CPU's have much better safeguards against this.
Xcom ; Standing proud and getting horrifically murdered by Chryssalids since 1994
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That was a long time ago, they're supposed to be a lot better now.His Divine Shadow wrote:Yeah but AMD's safeguards where alot worse and the CPU melted anyway.Coaan wrote:yeah, it's called automatic shut down when it gets too hot...and it's standard these days no matter what the makeHis Divine Shadow wrote: Actually, there was an article on this, Intel CPU's have much better safeguards against this.
They are....I swear by them....Crazy_Vasey wrote:His Divine Shadow wrote:Yeah but AMD's safeguards where alot worse and the CPU melted anyway.Coaan wrote: yeah, it's called automatic shut down when it gets too hot...and it's standard these days no matter what the make
That was a long time ago, they're supposed to be a lot better now.
*curses* see?
Xcom ; Standing proud and getting horrifically murdered by Chryssalids since 1994
When it was first remarked upon on in the magazine I read it in, they mentioned that it was going to be a mandatory feature for all intel chips, as intel heartily agree with the idea we should all be slaves to the fat cats who hold the licenses..His Divine Shadow wrote:Hmm, I've been told Palladium will be optional, an MS employee on another forum I remember also said that it will be optional and not mandatory.
Also, Intel is moving to 90nm processes, thats cool.
Personally I think it's a breach of an individual's personal freedoms, restricting what they can and cannot do on something they pay hundreds of pounds (or whatever currency you used to buy it) to purchase...it's akin to putting chips into cars and controlling who and who cannot drive yet if the manufacturers came up with this idea, there would be public outrage, it's partly the reason linux is becoming so popular these days (aside from the fact it's free) because I believe there is a work around in linux to counteract palladium iirc
Last edited by Coaan on 2003-02-19 11:27am, edited 1 time in total.
Xcom ; Standing proud and getting horrifically murdered by Chryssalids since 1994
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Heh.
To be honest I couldn't give a shit what happens to a processor when you take the heatsink off. If you're stupid enough to do so then you deserve all you get, and it it falls off you're fucked anyway because a heatsink is pretty heavy and will almost certainly damage the delicate components in a PC.
To be honest I couldn't give a shit what happens to a processor when you take the heatsink off. If you're stupid enough to do so then you deserve all you get, and it it falls off you're fucked anyway because a heatsink is pretty heavy and will almost certainly damage the delicate components in a PC.
Ether your source is lieing to you or you just don't want to admit that you were wrong, because celerons are NOT falled pentium chips but purposely designed/constructed "bargin" chips.Hyperion wrote: Btw, I did re-check on the inhell celerons, they are still done the same way as the old ones, normal pentium which failed some sort of minor test, or had minor varience out of tolerance, clip the cache, then slap it in a PGA package and sell.
There is no problem to dificult for a signifigantly large enough quantity of C-4 to handle.
If you're leaving scorch marks, you aren't using a big enough gun.
If you're leaving scorch marks, you aren't using a big enough gun.
Bah, AMD's Hammer will kill IA-64, since it's backward compatiable - I think they use the code-morphing stuff licenced from transmeta.His Divine Shadow wrote:My current setup is an AMD, but Intel has really been taking back lost ground as of late and they have alot better chipsets and are more reliable, so thats what I'm getting for my next computer.
IA-64 stands to be very interesting too, and may finally kill x86
It's also planned for the desktop.
Hyperthreading is overrated, unless you do heavy multitasking or run multithreaded apps like photoshop.
ah.....the path to happiness is revision of dreams and not fulfillment... -SWPIGWANG
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Anything worth the cost of a missile, which can be located on the battlefield, will be shot at with missiles. If the US military is involved, then things, which are not worth the cost if a missile will also be shot at with missiles. -Sea Skimmer
George Bush makes freedom sound like a giant robot that breaks down a lot. -Darth Raptor
I've used nothing but AMD chips for about 5+ years now in my primary (and until recently, only) computer and have yet to have a single problem related to the CPU (and my system has averaged about 18 hours "up time" per day for that period). I'd consider that quite reliable for any home user.MKSheppard wrote:Performance doesn't matter worth a damn if it dies after beingCrayz9000 wrote:Shep, you're forgetting the performance difference...
coughed on. AMD is good for cheap rigs like 2nd computers.....
but for your primary rig, I'd have to go with Intel, despite
the cost/performance difference, because I value reliability
over cost/performance ratio.
There is no problem to dificult for a signifigantly large enough quantity of C-4 to handle.
If you're leaving scorch marks, you aren't using a big enough gun.
If you're leaving scorch marks, you aren't using a big enough gun.
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LordChaos wrote:I've used nothing but AMD chips for about 5+ years now in my primary (and until recently, only) computer and have yet to have a single problem related to the CPU (and my system has averaged about 18 hours "up time" per day for that period). I'd consider that quite reliable for any home user.MKSheppard wrote:Performance doesn't matter worth a damn if it dies after beingCrayz9000 wrote:Shep, you're forgetting the performance difference...
coughed on. AMD is good for cheap rigs like 2nd computers.....
but for your primary rig, I'd have to go with Intel, despite
the cost/performance difference, because I value reliability
over cost/performance ratio.
Mine is up 24/7 most of the time....and has been for about a year and a half....and its still going strong.
"Prodesse Non Nocere."
"It's all about popularity really, if your invisible friend that tells you to invade places is called Napoleon, you're a loony, if he's called Jesus then you're the president."
"I'd drive more people insane, but I'd have to double back and pick them up first..."
"All it takes for bullshit to thrive is for rational men to do nothing." - Kevin Farrell, B.A. Journalism.
BOTM - EBC - Horseman - G&C - Vampire
"It's all about popularity really, if your invisible friend that tells you to invade places is called Napoleon, you're a loony, if he's called Jesus then you're the president."
"I'd drive more people insane, but I'd have to double back and pick them up first..."
"All it takes for bullshit to thrive is for rational men to do nothing." - Kevin Farrell, B.A. Journalism.
BOTM - EBC - Horseman - G&C - Vampire
No, it was MB designers not following AMD's recomendation for a thermal cuttoff on the board. Those that did had AMD based systems responding to overheating similar to intel's, aka - shut down without frying the CPU.MKSheppard wrote: WTF is it about AMD chips that kills them in 5 seconds if
the heat gets too high, but not Intel chips?
Conscious design decision to save money by being less
heat tolerant?
There is no problem to dificult for a signifigantly large enough quantity of C-4 to handle.
If you're leaving scorch marks, you aren't using a big enough gun.
If you're leaving scorch marks, you aren't using a big enough gun.
The answer is quite simple:
Value: AMD
Performance: Intel
AMD packs a great punch for the price, but it just can't compete with the better Intel based systems, I currently have an Athlon XP computer, but I would have gone the Intel way if I had the money, so it really depends on how much you are willing to spend.
Value: AMD
Performance: Intel
AMD packs a great punch for the price, but it just can't compete with the better Intel based systems, I currently have an Athlon XP computer, but I would have gone the Intel way if I had the money, so it really depends on how much you are willing to spend.
IA64 contains a P5 core in it so it will execute older IA32 code, abliet not very fast.Pu-239 wrote:Bah, AMD's Hammer will kill IA-64, since it's backward compatiable - I think they use the code-morphing stuff licenced from transmeta.His Divine Shadow wrote:My current setup is an AMD, but Intel has really been taking back lost ground as of late and they have alot better chipsets and are more reliable, so thats what I'm getting for my next computer.
IA-64 stands to be very interesting too, and may finally kill x86
Hammer natively runs IA32 code, none of this code morphing trickery is neccessary.
There's a reason why IA-64 (Itanium) is nicknamed ItanicPu-239 wrote:Bah, AMD's Hammer will kill IA-64, since it's backward compatiable - I think they use the code-morphing stuff licenced from transmeta.His Divine Shadow wrote:My current setup is an AMD, but Intel has really been taking back lost ground as of late and they have alot better chipsets and are more reliable, so thats what I'm getting for my next computer.
IA-64 stands to be very interesting too, and may finally kill x86
It's also planned for the desktop.
Hyperthreading is overrated, unless you do heavy multitasking or run multithreaded apps like photoshop.
ah.....the path to happiness is revision of dreams and not fulfillment... -SWPIGWANG
Sufficient Googling is indistinguishable from knowledge -somebody
Anything worth the cost of a missile, which can be located on the battlefield, will be shot at with missiles. If the US military is involved, then things, which are not worth the cost if a missile will also be shot at with missiles. -Sea Skimmer
George Bush makes freedom sound like a giant robot that breaks down a lot. -Darth Raptor