The Inquirer-Home

Don't want a QX6850? Overclock a Q6600!

HW Roundup Plus, Canon PIXMA printer impresses
Wed Jul 25 2007, 06:14
LEGIT REVIEWS PUBLISHED a review of an unusual player in the world of system memory, PNY XLR8 2GB 800MHz CL3 memory. This memory is slated for operation on 3-4-4-8 latencies, but the lads brought it all the way down to 3-3-3. Memory heatsinks are dead ringers for Corsair Dominators, though.

ComputerShopper tested Polywell Poly P503 desktop, a system running Core 2 Extreme QX6850 quad-core processor.

If you don't plan to spend ton of money of Extreme Edition processor, you can clock this more affordable processor to heaven's high. Bit-Tech spend some time on overclocking Core 2 Quad Q6600.

BIOSmagazine reviewed Canon PIXMA Pro9500, a A3+ low-profile printer that has a lot of interesting features.

DVHardware came up with a review of Logitech V220 notebook mouse. This is an entry-level notebook mouse that does not cost as much as high-pitching VX Revolution or VX Nano.

Fudzilla.com posted a review of JetWay's 966PDAG, an interesting low-end motherboard that has the performance of those from the high-end segment.

Legion Hardware posted a review of interesting concept called Asus P5K3 Premium, a motherboard with integrated DDR3 memory modules. Even with overclocking potential of 1.5GHz (up from 1.33GHz), it the fact remains that you have 2GB memory on board, and you can upgrade it with additional 2GB.

Benchmark Reviews published a review of Hiper HPU-4K530-MS Type-R, a modular 530W power supply.

OCC posted a review of Sapphire X1950 Pro Ultimate Edition, passive-cooled graphics card for those that want silent PC operation.

Hardware.info came up with a review of CoolerMaster GeminII and ThermalTake V1, CPU coolers for high-heating processors of today. Or simply, something to cool down your key component in summer.

Send your news'n'reviews directly to this address. ยต

Share this:

Comments

There are no comments submitted yet. Do you have an interesting opinion? Then be the first to post a comment.

aboutus
Advertisement
Subscribe to INQ newsletters
Advertisement
INQ Poll

48 core processors

What would you use a 48-core processor for?