CPU3D grills the Kingston HyperX DDR2-800 1GB memory kit. And it is hot, that's the least I can say. You get the traditional memory heatspreaders and that's basically it. Very stable though, especially when overclocking - it went all the way to 764MHz FSB with the Pentium D 805. They are not expensive and are probably a better investment than most cheaper models. benchmarks include PC Mark, Sciencemark2 and Sandra Memory benchmark.
TT-hardware - French content ahead - reviews the Maxtor DiamondMax 10 and the Western Digital Caviar SE which brings SATA2 and NCQ to the Mid range level. TT-Hardware's aim is to test SATA2 and NCQ and see whether the difference is academic or tangible. Other models are included in the review from previous reviews. Conclusion from the reviewer, neither does NCQ or SATA2 bring any notable change. Worse, it can apparently make things much worse. The WD drive is more silent, runs cooler and is slightly bigger with a three year warranty.
In the meantime, Matbe tests the Core Duo against a slew of contenders. Three socket 479 motherboards are presented. Apart from the Asus and the Aopen which normally appear in reviews, there's also one from MSI, which is the 945GT Speedster. Far from being biased, Matbe brings another variable on the table when comparing the Core Duo and the other actors. Price. The Top Core Duo - the T2600 - processor and a motherboard will cost more than Eur 1050, which is way too much for most of us. The Core Duo is a tamed beast when running at normal speed and it is only when it is overclocked that it can really show what it can do.
Legionhardware reviews the OCZ GameXstream 700W power supply unit. It bears the usual characteristics of quality PSUs. Honeycomb panel, 120mm fans and a three year warranty. Efficiency level is very high and features like Overvoltage, Overcurrent, Short Circuit and active PFC are included. Now OCZ is a specialist in memory modules rather than PSUs, but they seem to have done a really good work regardless of their rather recent pedigree. The reviewer tested the PSU with a Pentium D 805 with a 7900GT SLI rig. I wonder whether a Quad SLI will finally make it come to its knees.
Another PSU tested is the Coolermaster Real Power 550w model. It supports all the new features that are en vogue like Honeycomb finish, SLI, Crossfire and Dual core processors support. On top of that it has a fan speed control - with a 3.5-inch front panel display - and a blue fan LED. Note that the 550w is the real power - hence the name - delivered, rather than the peak output. After some torture tests, the only fault DH could find was the lack of protection on most cables. µ