Something I produce on an hourly basis.neoDS said:whats a sticky?
Something I produce on an hourly basis.neoDS said:whats a sticky?
I'm sorry but I have to correct this because it's way off.THe San Diego is for the higher end AMD 64 and the Vience is for the lower end AMD 64s. When I say lower end I dont mean worse, I mean 3200+ and up, where as the San Diego is 3800+ and up. Vience and San Diego are both awsome, its just the difference of FSB I believe.
no I'm not. the FSB is for RAM onlyCodeine said:Apokalipse, your wrong man. FSB not only sends data to your RAM, but other computer entities. Like i said, it communicates from the processor, to other components. Such as RAM, HDD, and PCI. RAM is among one of the few components your FSB communicates with. Thats just a small portion of FSB occupation. FSB has been removed for the On Die Memery Controler. HT is a single path connection for computer components to communicate with hardware devices. So in a sense, its not really a fsb. FSB was used for striaght communication reasons. HT just set's the path for bytes of data, so it can channel to hardware entities.
When you say MCC, are you refering to Multiversion concurrency control?
technically it's just 'the chipset' since theres no longer a north and south bridge in particular......but yeah that chipset controls the aspects of your hard drive, PCI slot and even graphics communications I believe as people were putting their cards in the bottom PCI-E 8x slot and it turned out it was keeping their chipset cooler and giving them more stable OC's......but as far as I'm aware the primary HTT bus is purely for communication between the CPU and memory and then as been said the chipset does all other communications because it's already enough to handle all the requests unlike the memory being handled as we noticed it was able to be improvedthey still have a southbridge which they use for all other components