@Nihil: Yes we would have to do some testing with it , I merely talking for a personal viewpoint. Business is different :)
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@Nihil: Yes we would have to do some testing with it , I merely talking for a personal viewpoint. Business is different :)
Looks like MS have released a updated dev build of ie10 .
http://connect.microsoft.com/ie
off course you won't be able to install on XP :( although i did give it a good attempt :D
Yep, like I said, that's the one I used to start this thread :D
Incidentally, I did not see a download for IE10 on its own........ only as part of Win8 developer Preview???
Otherwise it is IE9, that works with Vista and Win7, but not XP. We had a thread about that a while back, but I am afraid that I have forgotten the technical details :(
This is the new crashtest dummy (#3)................
AMD Sempron 145 2.8GHz single core
Asus Radeon 5570 1GB DDR3 (PCI-E x16)
Kingston VM 4GB DDR2/800MHz Dual Channel
1TB 7,200rpm SATA2 HDD
I guess that will be a low end machine when Win8 hits the shelves?
I seems to work just fine, and is noticeably faster than the 10 year old 32 bit Athlon 3000+.
Windows Experience Index is 4.6/7.9 which is twice that of the 32 bit machine :D Raw scores are:
Processor: 4.6
Memory: 5.8
Graphics (Aero) 6.7
Graphics Gaming: 6.7
HDD: 5.9
The 32 bit machine scored:
Processor: 2.9
RAM: 4.0
Graphics (Aero): 2.3
Graphics Gaming: 3.0
HDD: 5.7
Already posted; but for completeness the H/W specs are:
AMD Athlon 3000+ 2.17GHz single core
NVIDIA GeForce 6200 512MB DDR2 (AGP slot)
512MB DDR1/400 + 1GB DDR1/333 (MoBo only supports 400 in slot 0)
7,200rpm EIDE(PATA) HDD
Right now it appears to me that Win8 is just an enhanced version of Win7 so I am thinking that the comparison would be Win98 to Win98SE, and don't see any particular reason to hold back?
I will get back to reporting on the main x64 test box once I have fitted a video card............... got to resite the HDD to fit it in!!! :mad: It's an Asus Radeon HD 6770 with heatpipe cooling..............good job it's a full ATX MoBo.
I should be getting my new PC's / laptops some time this week/next week. Already got everything ordered and now just waiting for the Insurance Company to release the money so i can pay the account and pickup all my new goodies. :D
Then i can re-download the .iso and give it a play.
Hi there HYBR|D, glad to hear someone else is going to join in.:D
My main interest so far has been the hardware requirements and compatibility, as I have some kit I built 1999~2002 that has reached the end of its useful life and needs upgrading.
I guess I have never been much of a one for upgrading operating systems other than the obvious Win95 - Win98 and ME - XP. All that was really needed there was to increase the RAM to 1GB for XP.
I would certainly upgrade Vista to Win 7 or 8 apart from the fact that I need one reference machine for support purposes. :(
At the moment, I don't see any real incentive to upgrade Win 7 as it is a pretty good OS. If your kit runs Vista OK then I would live with it and just get a new box when support ends in 2015.
I have now completed my main x64 test machine as follows:
AMD Phenom II x4 965BE @ 3.4GHz
Asus Radeon HD 6770 1GB DDR5
8GB Kingston Xtreme DDR3/1333MHz
2TB SATA3 HDD
The scores are:
Processor 7.4
Memory 7.5
Graphics (Aero) 7.2
Graphics (games) 7.2
HDD 5.9
I must say that I am a little suspicious of the HDD scores?
Nihil; Do you upgrade ALL of your hardware, or do you keep some of it to run legacy / fun stuff on?
I saw you saying you had kit from the end of 1999 to early 2000s that needed upgrading, and I was mainly wondering if you upgrade everything, or, if you keep some of it around the way it is.
I personally can't really afford to get any new toys right now, and the Computer my Mom bought me for Christmas two years ago is the newest / fastest thing I have. The rest, I've kept anyway.
My very first Computer that I ever bought is actually stick chugging long somehow. Oddly enough, I bought that Computer in 2000, and the ONLY thing I've done with the hardware, is back when I bought it, it came with 128 MBs of RAM, and I upgraded that to 384 MBs, and then, I bought a 120 GB HD about 7 or so years ago, and then, I grabbed the 43 GB HD it came with, made it secondary, and made the new one the master, and the / partition, and now use the old one as /storage. This way if it goes on me, it won't matter so much.
Oh and I ripped out the ****ing POS "Sound Card Modem" the damn thing came with. I couldn't Believe someone had an idea to make a Modem with the Sound Card built into it..... So I bought a Sound Blaster Live! Card and popped that in. Other than that, it's all original, and all still up and running.
Depends on what RPM the drives are pulling. low rpm drives get a lower score, were as though top end very expensive drives that have huge transfer speeds will get a high score.
@Cider:
Well, I did build me a Windows 7 x64 Ultimate box a little while back...............
AMD Phenom II x6 1090T BE @ 3.2~3.6GHz
8GB Kingston DDR3/1333MHz
Sapphire Radeon HD5770 1GB DDR5
Onboard Radeon 4250 512MB DDR3
2x WD 1TB 7200rpm SATA2 HDDS
Scores are:
Processor 7.5
Memory 7.5
Graphics (Aero) 7.4
Graphics (Games) 7.4
HDD 5.9
Yet the 10 year old 7200rpm EIDE drive scores 5.7 on Win 8 against 5.9 for a 7200rpm SATA2????????????? or SATA3............... I don't believe that or their management software must be total crap?
//me I don't think that it can count more than 5.9? :D
@gore
Mostly I keep them. These are ones that have issues.........mostly the MoBo capacitors. That is a pretty common problem with MoBos of that era. I have shuffled around the HDDs and video cards so the surviving "old" machines have the best stuff and the rest is available for spares.Quote:
Nihil; Do you upgrade ALL of your hardware, or do you keep some of it to run legacy / fun stuff on?
I have a fair collection of parts to keep my stuff working, but not MoBos.
It can count a bit higher. My Vertex 3 drive scores a respectable 7.0 when connected to a sata 2 controller. I wonder what it will do on a sata 3 controller.
:D