Pour ceux qui ont la chance d'avoir un P4: - Overclocking, Cooling & Modding
Marsh Posté le 24-09-2001 à 02:35:42
C'est une chance avoir un p4 !?
Marsh Posté le 24-09-2001 à 03:09:23
en tout cas ça ne peux que améliorer ces perfs vu que c'est une grosse merde
Marsh Posté le 24-09-2001 à 05:30:13
l'un coute nettement moins cher que l'autre
Marsh Posté le 24-09-2001 à 06:14:44
Futile a écrit a écrit : Entre un DUDU800 et un P4, j'ai une autre opinion de ce qu'est une mèrde! |
moi aussi j'ai un duron800
Marsh Posté le 24-09-2001 à 07:31:29
"Coco""" tu assais de dire quoi ??? et bien un DUDU n'est pas une merde. ni le celeri. c'est nous qui ne nous tolerons "Si peu"
Marsh Posté le 24-09-2001 à 07:50:19
Il faut que ceux qui en ont 1 donnent les identifications des P4 si non on n'ensortira rien de l'experience des autres. Voirtel CPU SL5n8 "exemple" a combien monte l'O/C.
Marsh Posté le 09-09-2001 à 21:15:30
Ca a peut etre deja etait signale sur le forum vu que l'arclicle n'est po recent alors po taper hein!
C'est pour boster les perf des P4.
N'ayant po de P4 moi-meme si qqu'un veut bien le tester:
"Posted By Johan
Monday, May 14, 2001 - 8:41:20 AM
A few days ago, I was testing with the Pentium 4 1.5 GHz and the AOPEN AX4T motherboard. You might remember from our last "Pentium 4 in depth" article that the Pentium's 4 x87 FPU performance was rather mediocre.
When I tested with Test 1 of the Flops benchmark, I found out that the x87 FPU performance of my test system was much lower than the results that I got on Intel's review system. The P4 system I build scored only 464 in first test, while Intel's almost identical system scored 541, or no less than 17% higher! As you know, the Flops benchmark runs totally in the L1-cache and the results depend only on the clockspeed and FP architecture of the tested CPU.
Than I stumbled upon a "FPU OPCode compatibility" BIOS option. When I disabled this option, the flops result was back at 541. Sandra Kuo of AOPEN send me this interesting comment:
FPU OP Code is a BIOS emulation for solving backward compatibility issues under old MS-DOS mode, and some performance is lost if the feature is enabled. [...]
Based on Intel recommendation, the default setting of " Compatibile FPU OPCODE" is enabled.
So it is possible that many Pentium 4 systems out there offer worse x87 performance than they should. Very few people run old DOS programs today, so if this BIOS option is available, disable it! If you disable the bios option "FPU OpCode Compatible", you get up to 17% x87 FPU performance for free!
Conrad Song has found more information about the FPU opcode compatibility issue:
I've tracked down the issue... it can be found in Section 8.1.8 of the IA-32 Intel Architecture Software Developer’s Manual Volume 1: Basic Architecture. Also, a reference to it exists in The IA-32 Intel Architecture Software Developer’s Manual, Volume 3: System Programming Guide under Appendix B, register 0x1A0 (IA32_MISC_ENABLE).
8.1.8.1. FOPCODE COMPATIBILITY MODE Beginning with the Pentium 4 processors, the IA-32 architecture provides program control over the storing of the last instruction opcode (sometimes referred to as the fopcode). When the fopcode compatibility mode is disabled (default), the value stored in the x87 FPU opcode register is undefined (reserved). The benefit of disabling the fopcode compatibility mode is better processor performance.
Thanks goes to Sandra Kuo, Conrad Song and Robert Pearce for sending us the hard-to-find Rambus modules. "