Overclockers Australia Forums

OCAU News - Wiki - QuickLinks - Pix - Sponsors  

Go Back   Overclockers Australia Forums > Manufacturer-specific Forums > Intel x86 CPUs and chipsets

Notices


Sign up for a free OCAU account and this ad will go away!
Search our forums with Google:
Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 28th December 2001, 3:03 PM   #1
Chris Nolan Thread Starter
Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Posts: 908
Default S-specs

Nothing here.

Last edited by Chris Nolan; 13th October 2007 at 7:10 AM.
Chris Nolan is offline   Reply With Quote

Join OCAU to remove this ad!
Old 1st July 2002, 7:38 PM   #2
Reaper
Member
 
Reaper's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Brisbane, Qld, Australia
Posts: 9,098
Default

Expect to see this soon:

http://developer.intel.com/design/pc...s/D0102322.pdf
Reaper is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 30th September 2002, 5:44 PM   #3
looktall
Working Class Hero
 
looktall's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: morley.wa.au
Posts: 17,910
Default

the celeron and P4 s-spec charts have been updated with the latest chips and steppings. including the 2ghz (northwood?) celeron and the 2.8ghz P4.

the url's are still the same.
__________________
JoJoker endorses this product and/or comment.
looktall is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 30th September 2002, 6:07 PM   #4
Creative
Member
 
Creative's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 7,865
Default

Nice Chris, thanks for this....
__________________
Gigabyte P55-UD4P ¦ Intel i7 860 @ 3.90Ghz (Still testing) ¦ Noctua NH-U12P SE ¦ 2 x 2Gb G.Skill Trident DDR3-2000 ¦ Inno3D 896Mb GTX275 ¦ 1.5 TB of HDD ¦ Cheap DVD Drive ¦ Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Platinum ¦ Thermaltake ToughPower 600w ¦ Logitech Z-5500 ¦ Samsung P2350 ¦ Asus VW222 ¦ Windows 7
Creative is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 1st October 2002, 2:48 AM   #5
chainbolt
Little member
 
chainbolt's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Tokyo
Posts: 76,384
Default

thanx, I am still wondering how often Intel updates the lsit, quite often CPU are missing, I am still confused about the C1 stepping. Some ppl say they have 2.26 and 2.53 C1 stepping P4, although according to the Intel S-spec list they don't exist (yet)
chainbolt is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 1st October 2002, 9:32 AM   #6
chainbolt
Little member
 
chainbolt's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Tokyo
Posts: 76,384
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by Chris Nolan
chainbolt, this site isn't definitive and certainly isn't up-to-the-moment complete. You must combine the information in the latest Specification Update and all subsequent PCNs, and even then there are s-specs (for example Angryant's 2.53B) which are not yet documented.
the problem is that you never know what is actually retailing/available. The update informaton in the technical docs for developers are given out far ahead on one hand and the CPU in the actual S-spec list are sometimes outdated. It's really confusing.
chainbolt is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 7th December 2002, 7:41 PM   #7
EazyduzIt
Member
 
EazyduzIt's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Darwin - home to scoffee
Posts: 2,573
Default

I used Intel's Frequency ID utility which gives me the cpuid but doesn't tell me the s-specs. How do I go about converting the cpuid to s-specs? I realise this can be done by looking at the box or physically inspecting the cpu. Just wondering if there is another way.
__________________
vv.txt | ePenis

Last edited by EazyduzIt; 7th December 2002 at 7:48 PM.
EazyduzIt is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 7th December 2002, 11:17 PM   #8
martinus
Imperator Augustus
 
martinus's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Holy Roman Empire
Posts: 2,642
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by EazyduzIt
I used Intel's Frequency ID utility which gives me the cpuid but doesn't tell me the s-specs. How do I go about converting the cpuid to s-specs? I realise this can be done by looking at the box or physically inspecting the cpu. Just wondering if there is another way.
Did you check the links Chris gave? You'd realize that the relationship between S-spec and the tupel (architecture, frequency, cpuid) is a 1 to n relationship. So in general you can't tell the S-spec from the cpuid.
martinus is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Sign up for a free OCAU account and this ad will go away!

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT +10. The time now is 5:21 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. -
OCAU is not responsible for the content of individual messages posted by others.
Other content copyright Overclockers Australia.
OCAU is hosted by Internode!