Tom's Hardware is hilarious

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

Johannes H Andersen wrote:
>>Let me guess, he was one of those "my work is too important and valuable
>>to trust to AMD processors" types? %^)
>
> Where did I say that? Quote please.

Just tweaking you. 🙂

Besides, if you said it in response to JK, then anything goes. 🙂

Yousuf Khan
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

George Macdonald wrote:
>
> On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 10:46:35 GMT, Johannes H Andersen <johs@sizefitter.com>
> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> >George Macdonald wrote:
> >>
> >> On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 03:19:02 GMT, Johannes H Andersen <johs@sizefitter.com>
> >> wrote:
> >>
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >Yousuf Khan wrote:
> >> >>
> >> >> Tom's Hardware is hilarious. They've refined the art of *BS'ing* to a
> >> >> fine state. It's their pseudo-technical explanations that always try to
> >> >> be mindful of large advertisers are their biggest classics: techno-spin
> >> >> as an artform.
> >> >>
> >> >> Tom's is doing some kind of longevity endurance runoff test between an
> >> >> AMD and an Intel system. So far the test has run 5 days, and so far the
> >> >> Intel system has suffered two reboots, a failed power supply, and
> >> >> close-to-overage temperatures. The AMD system hasn't even had a hiccup.
> >> >>
> >> >> Listen to their explaning:
> >> >>
> >> >> > Wednesday, Dec. 22, 2004: After we had replaced the failed Tagan power supply through an Antec device, we noticed yet another problem. The temperature of the Intel system increased from 65 degrees Celsius to a concerning 75 degrees celsius (analysis of the temperature diode of the CPU). At the same time, the fan speed slowed from 4000 to 3500 rpm. What happened? During the exchange of the power supply, the cooler's position on the CPU moved by a shade and reduced its contact pressure. As a result, thermal resistance increased, while cooling performance was decreased. Since there is an additional temperature sensor on the CPU's cooler that notices a decrease in temperature, the motherboard automatically reduced the fan speed. To put it simple, The sensor of the cooler reacted to reduced heat flow.
> >> >
> >> >I run a Northwood 2.8 P4 overclocked to 3GHz with a Tagan 380W PSU. CPU cooler
> >> >is a Zalman duct HS fan, speed is 2000 rpm. Prime95 no problems whatsoever.
> >>
> >> Huh? You overclock? I thought your work was "valuable"? Don't tell me
> >> this is a new approach to Stochastic Programming!🙂
> >
> >I wouldn't call that small step overclocking. I have a good cooling system;
> >the temperature is hardly affected, so I see no problem. If I set the bus
> >to 214, memory will run at 428 MHz. If I set the bus to 215, memory drops
> >down to 357 MHz, so I stay with 214.
>
> Jacking up the clock rate is overclocking - 14MHz... that's a lot of extra
> cycles... your FSB data strobe clocks are jacked up by 28MHz+DDR
> signalling! Have you ever seen the effects of overclocking the memory on
> a graphics card? If you don't work it hard -- say, just normal everyday
> activities like browsing, e-mail and word processing etc., you'll barely
> notice any effect, even if you push the clock way past what the "breaking
> point" is.
>
> You will see the odd pair/group of pixels the wrong color but not often and
> not many; in 3D graphics you're not likely to notice anything because
> everything is moving/changing too fast. If you work it a bit harder -- a
> game of solitaire is very revealing IME (seems odd but makes sense when you
> think about it, since the background is persistent in the graphics card
> memory) -- you will get many very obvious pixel defects. If you then back
> off the clock (I'm talking 20-30MHz here), you can reach the point where it
> looks OK for a while but occasionally you'll get the odd defect. IOW the
> defects become more subtle and are highly dependent on how fast you can
> play.
>
> The question here is: what is tolerable?... how fast can you play solitaire
> before it breaks? Is defect free at your, or my, fastest good enough? Now
> apply this effect to your main memory. When you say Prime95, how long did
> you run the Torture Test?

Agreed with all of this. I just tried it and found no ill effect. On the
other hand, the practical gain is also very small, so I'll probably take
it off. The system is well cooled with the Zalman duct fan and the winter
climate also helps keeping temperatures down. My worry was really the memory
since it is only DDR400; serious overclockers would use a higher spec, but
the Crucial memory worked fine. In another news group you almost get mobbed
for not overclocking, so you can't keep everybody happy 🙂
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

Johannes H Andersen <johs@sizefitter.com> wrote:

>Agreed with all of this. I just tried it and found no ill effect. On the
>other hand, the practical gain is also very small, so I'll probably take
>it off.

Exactly. Why bother?
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

Yousuf Khan wrote:
>
> George Macdonald wrote:
> >>Let me guess, he was one of those "my work is too important and valuable
> >>to trust to AMD processors" types? %^)
> >
> >
> > Well it wasn't quite as blunt as that and it was likely in repsonse to JK
> > so.....🙂
>
> Oh yes, JK, the one that makes AMD'ers defensive about Intel.
>
> Yousuf Khan

Yes, where are all those 64 bit softwares that will make my humble 32 bit
processor obsolete? I'm still waiting...
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

In article <41D02A5B.334F57BD@sizefitter.com>, johs@sizefitter.com
says...
>
>
> Yousuf Khan wrote:
> >
> > George Macdonald wrote:
> > >>Let me guess, he was one of those "my work is too important and valuable
> > >>to trust to AMD processors" types? %^)
> > >
> > >
> > > Well it wasn't quite as blunt as that and it was likely in repsonse to JK
> > > so.....🙂
> >
> > Oh yes, JK, the one that makes AMD'ers defensive about Intel.
> >
> > Yousuf Khan
>
> Yes, where are all those 64 bit softwares that will make my humble 32 bit
> processor obsolete? I'm still waiting...
>
I'm not. ;-) Linux runs 64bit just fine.

--
Keith
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

On Mon, 27 Dec 2004 15:27:52 GMT, Johannes H Andersen <johs@sizefitter.com>
wrote:

>
>
>Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>
>> George Macdonald wrote:
>> >>Let me guess, he was one of those "my work is too important and valuable
>> >>to trust to AMD processors" types? %^)
>> >
>> >
>> > Well it wasn't quite as blunt as that and it was likely in repsonse to JK
>> > so.....🙂
>>
>> Oh yes, JK, the one that makes AMD'ers defensive about Intel.
>>
>> Yousuf Khan
>
>Yes, where are all those 64 bit softwares that will make my humble 32 bit
>processor obsolete? I'm still waiting...

Hmmm I thought you were selling software yourself though. For numerically
intensive work, which I believe is your niche(?) the extra registers, with
a well written compiler which uses the addressable FP registers could bring
a significant performance boost. The CAD vendors are certainly getting
"on-board" - take a look here:
http://www.ptc.com/partners/hardware/current/itanium_letter.htm

Rgds, George Macdonald

"Just because they're paranoid doesn't mean you're not psychotic" - Who, me??
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

George Macdonald wrote:
>
> On Mon, 27 Dec 2004 15:27:52 GMT, Johannes H Andersen <johs@sizefitter.com>
> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> >Yousuf Khan wrote:
> >>
> >> George Macdonald wrote:
> >> >>Let me guess, he was one of those "my work is too important and valuable
> >> >>to trust to AMD processors" types? %^)
> >> >
> >> >
> >> > Well it wasn't quite as blunt as that and it was likely in repsonse to JK
> >> > so.....🙂
> >>
> >> Oh yes, JK, the one that makes AMD'ers defensive about Intel.
> >>
> >> Yousuf Khan
> >
> >Yes, where are all those 64 bit softwares that will make my humble 32 bit
> >processor obsolete? I'm still waiting...
>
> Hmmm I thought you were selling software yourself though. For numerically
> intensive work, which I believe is your niche(?) the extra registers, with
> a well written compiler which uses the addressable FP registers could bring
> a significant performance boost. The CAD vendors are certainly getting
> "on-board" - take a look here:
> http://www.ptc.com/partners/hardware/current/itanium_letter.htm

Thanks for interesting link.

If you think about my sizefitter project; lots of downloads yes but not a
single genuine sale unfortunately. But I think that at this time it serves
more as a vehicle for other things. The program was prompted by a an urban
planner who was fed up messing about with a spreadsheet for finding ad hoc
solutions.

Potentially I have ideas for simulation and have worked to this end. The
target users by-and-large runs traditional company PCs that are a couple of
years old or so. That's a fact of life. Hence 64 bits is not an essential
requirement.
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

On Tue, 28 Dec 2004 11:11:49 GMT, Johannes H Andersen <johs@sizefitter.com>
wrote:

>
>
>George Macdonald wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, 27 Dec 2004 15:27:52 GMT, Johannes H Andersen <johs@sizefitter.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>> >
>> >
>> >Yousuf Khan wrote:
>> >>
>> >> George Macdonald wrote:
>> >> >>Let me guess, he was one of those "my work is too important and valuable
>> >> >>to trust to AMD processors" types? %^)
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> > Well it wasn't quite as blunt as that and it was likely in repsonse to JK
>> >> > so.....🙂
>> >>
>> >> Oh yes, JK, the one that makes AMD'ers defensive about Intel.
>> >>
>> >> Yousuf Khan
>> >
>> >Yes, where are all those 64 bit softwares that will make my humble 32 bit
>> >processor obsolete? I'm still waiting...
>>
>> Hmmm I thought you were selling software yourself though. For numerically
>> intensive work, which I believe is your niche(?) the extra registers, with
>> a well written compiler which uses the addressable FP registers could bring
>> a significant performance boost. The CAD vendors are certainly getting
>> "on-board" - take a look here:
>> http://www.ptc.com/partners/hardware/current/itanium_letter.htm
>
>Thanks for interesting link.
>
>If you think about my sizefitter project; lots of downloads yes but not a
>single genuine sale unfortunately. But I think that at this time it serves
>more as a vehicle for other things. The program was prompted by a an urban
>planner who was fed up messing about with a spreadsheet for finding ad hoc
>solutions.

Hmm, that's a shame that nobody wants to cough up.:-( The standard model
for "free" downloadable software seems to be to follow up with a major
improvement with addition of a nag and limited functionality.

>Potentially I have ideas for simulation and have worked to this end. The
>target users by-and-large runs traditional company PCs that are a couple of
>years old or so. That's a fact of life. Hence 64 bits is not an essential
>requirement.

OK I see what you mean... but it does depend on perceived corporate value
of the total solution. I know of people running "solves" which take two
days on a P4/Xeon system and they'd be glad to get that down to 1.5 days.

Rgds, George Macdonald

"Just because they're paranoid doesn't mean you're not psychotic" - Who, me??
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

The little lost angel wrote:
> On Thu, 23 Dec 2004 14:05:48 GMT, Bill Davidsen
> <davidsen@darkstar.prodigy.com> wrote:
>
>
>>To respond quickly to changes in case temp before the CPU changes? To
>>avoid driving the fan like mad if a quick load on the CPU causes a temp
>>spike but the heatsink is still as cool as it's going to get?
>>
>>I wonder if the control is the diff between the case temp and heatsink
>>temp? Once the heatsink is a cool as the case, more fan buys nothing.
>
>
> But if the heatsink was seated poorly, wouldn't it make matters worse
> when the heatsink decides the fan can go slower?
>
If the heat sink is the same temperature as the air in the case, more
fan won't matter.

--
bill davidsen (davidsen@darkstar.prodigy.com)
SBC/Prodigy Yorktown Heights NY data center
Project Leader, USENET news
http://newsgroups.news.prodigy.com
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

The little lost angel wrote:
> On Thu, 23 Dec 2004 11:52:12 -0800, "David Schwartz"
> <davids@webmaster.com> wrote:
>
>
>> Nope. It would have little to no effect. If the heatsink is seated
>>poorly, the temperature of the heatsink will make little to no difference,
>>and that's the only thing the fan speed can effect. What matters is the
>>temperature of the ambient air, the amount of heat the CPU is generating and
>>the thermal resistance between the CPU and the ambient air.
>>
>> The only variable fan speed can affect is the thermal resistance between
>>the heat sink and the ambient air. This would be totally swamped by the
>>thermal resistance between the CPU package and the heat sink, if the heat
>>sink is improperly mounted.
>
>
> But if the fan is turning slower, the ambient air temperature will
> rise to a higher level compared to if the fan was faster. No matter
> how badly or how slightly the mounting is off, higher ambient
> temperature will make things worse no? Whether it's core to ambient
> air, or heatsink to ambient air, since the temperature difference is
> one of the key parameter for heat transfer right?

You are right that temperature diference is a major factor, heat flow is
delta temp over resistivity (why home insulation has an "R value"). But
in any decent case, particularly ATX type, it's flow through the case
which most affects case temp.

Also note that if you have multiple drives and mount them low (in a
tower) with a fan pulling air out next to tehm, their heat goes out the
front, not over the CPU. If you then have one of the cases with the
glass side and side fan, pulling air in, you move the coolest air
available over the CPU. People laugh at my ugly blue neon fan, but it is
FUNCTIONAL!

Oh, and while giving advice, I use dual 80mm back fans instead of a
single 120mm, so that if one fails the CPU stays cooler. That may be
paranoia.

--
bill davidsen (davidsen@darkstar.prodigy.com)
SBC/Prodigy Yorktown Heights NY data center
Project Leader, USENET news
http://newsgroups.news.prodigy.com
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

Yousuf Khan wrote:
> George Macdonald wrote:
>
>> On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 03:19:02 GMT, Johannes H Andersen
>> <johs@sizefitter.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> I run a Northwood 2.8 P4 overclocked to 3GHz with a Tagan 380W PSU.
>>> CPU cooler
>>> is a Zalman duct HS fan, speed is 2000 rpm. Prime95 no problems
>>> whatsoever.
>>
>>
>>
>> Huh? You overclock? I thought your work was "valuable"? Don't tell me
>> this is a new approach to Stochastic Programming!🙂
>
>
> Let me guess, he was one of those "my work is too important and valuable
> to trust to AMD processors" types? %^)

A fair bit of my work is too I&V to run on non-ECC memory. Server boards
and memory add about $200 to system price, typically. However, memory is
far better than it was a few years ago, and running a good memory test
at boot is enough for non-critical use in many cases.

--
bill davidsen (davidsen@darkstar.prodigy.com)
SBC/Prodigy Yorktown Heights NY data center
Project Leader, USENET news
http://newsgroups.news.prodigy.com
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

On Wed, 05 Jan 2005 03:52:37 +0000, Bill Davidsen wrote:

> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>> George Macdonald wrote:
>>
>>> On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 03:19:02 GMT, Johannes H Andersen
>>> <johs@sizefitter.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I run a Northwood 2.8 P4 overclocked to 3GHz with a Tagan 380W PSU.
>>>> CPU cooler
>>>> is a Zalman duct HS fan, speed is 2000 rpm. Prime95 no problems
>>>> whatsoever.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Huh? You overclock? I thought your work was "valuable"? Don't tell me
>>> this is a new approach to Stochastic Programming!🙂
>>
>>
>> Let me guess, he was one of those "my work is too important and valuable
>> to trust to AMD processors" types? %^)
>
> A fair bit of my work is too I&V to run on non-ECC memory. Server boards
> and memory add about $200 to system price, typically. However, memory is
> far better than it was a few years ago, and running a good memory test
> at boot is enough for non-critical use in many cases.

That begs the questio "how much memory". Santa brough a couple of sticks
of crucial 512MB registered/ECC PC3200 memory for my K8WS at about $120
per. That's not *that* much of a premium over their
unbuffered/non-parity. In fact I've found over the past five years or so
(my 5yo Tyan 1598 has all ECC memory in it), that generally ECC memory has
the expected 11% premium over non-parity (sometimes less). $200 may be a
little high.

--
Keith
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

keith wrote:
> On Wed, 05 Jan 2005 03:52:37 +0000, Bill Davidsen wrote:
>
>
>>Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>
>>>George Macdonald wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 03:19:02 GMT, Johannes H Andersen
>>>><johs@sizefitter.com>
>>>>wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>I run a Northwood 2.8 P4 overclocked to 3GHz with a Tagan 380W PSU.
>>>>>CPU cooler
>>>>>is a Zalman duct HS fan, speed is 2000 rpm. Prime95 no problems
>>>>>whatsoever.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Huh? You overclock? I thought your work was "valuable"? Don't tell me
>>>>this is a new approach to Stochastic Programming!🙂
>>>
>>>
>>>Let me guess, he was one of those "my work is too important and valuable
>>>to trust to AMD processors" types? %^)
>>
>>A fair bit of my work is too I&V to run on non-ECC memory. Server boards
>>and memory add about $200 to system price, typically. However, memory is
>>far better than it was a few years ago, and running a good memory test
>>at boot is enough for non-critical use in many cases.
>
>
> That begs the questio "how much memory". Santa brough a couple of sticks
> of crucial 512MB registered/ECC PC3200 memory for my K8WS at about $120
> per. That's not *that* much of a premium over their
> unbuffered/non-parity. In fact I've found over the past five years or so
> (my 5yo Tyan 1598 has all ECC memory in it), that generally ECC memory has
> the expected 11% premium over non-parity (sometimes less). $200 may be a
> little high.
>
I fail to see an option to enable ECC on many budget boards, so there's
some cost there as well. The last SuperMicro board I had gave me the
choice of nothing, parity, ECC and 2-way, 2+4way or no interleave. Don't
know if my current common board lack the option or the capability.

I ran all ECC memory for a while, but building to a price point I don't
see the option.

--
bill davidsen (davidsen@darkstar.prodigy.com)
SBC/Prodigy Yorktown Heights NY data center
Project Leader, USENET news
http://newsgroups.news.prodigy.com
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

What does running a good memory test at boot have to do with anything?

Transistors can burn out at any time.


"Bill Davidsen" <davidsen@darkstar.prodigy.com> wrote in message
news:9wJCd.5023$8U5.1515@newssvr31.news.prodigy.com...
> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>> George Macdonald wrote:
>>
>>> On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 03:19:02 GMT, Johannes H Andersen
>>> <johs@sizefitter.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I run a Northwood 2.8 P4 overclocked to 3GHz with a Tagan 380W PSU. CPU
>>>> cooler
>>>> is a Zalman duct HS fan, speed is 2000 rpm. Prime95 no problems
>>>> whatsoever.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Huh? You overclock? I thought your work was "valuable"? Don't tell me
>>> this is a new approach to Stochastic Programming!🙂
>>
>>
>> Let me guess, he was one of those "my work is too important and valuable
>> to trust to AMD processors" types? %^)
>
> A fair bit of my work is too I&V to run on non-ECC memory. Server boards
> and memory add about $200 to system price, typically. However, memory is
> far better than it was a few years ago, and running a good memory test at
> boot is enough for non-critical use in many cases.
>
> --
> bill davidsen (davidsen@darkstar.prodigy.com)
> SBC/Prodigy Yorktown Heights NY data center
> Project Leader, USENET news
> http://newsgroups.news.prodigy.com
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 20:46:39 -0800, "e" <DoNotRespond@fake.net> wrote:

>What does running a good memory test at boot have to do with anything?

I dunno whether he meant build time but running memory stress tests is an
essential part of a system build; with a repeat of this at regular
intervals it gives some confidence level. Given a reasonable operating
environment, I've rarely seen any memory chips/modules degrade with time &
use... and certainly not in the past 10 years or so.

>Transistors can burn out at any time.

Detecting that is not the main purpose of ECC memory though.

>"Bill Davidsen" <davidsen@darkstar.prodigy.com> wrote in message
>news:9wJCd.5023$8U5.1515@newssvr31.news.prodigy.com...

>> A fair bit of my work is too I&V to run on non-ECC memory. Server boards
>> and memory add about $200 to system price, typically. However, memory is
>> far better than it was a few years ago, and running a good memory test at
>> boot is enough for non-critical use in many cases.
>>
>> --
>> bill davidsen (davidsen@darkstar.prodigy.com)
>> SBC/Prodigy Yorktown Heights NY data center
>> Project Leader, USENET news
>> http://newsgroups.news.prodigy.com

--
Rgds, George Macdonald
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

e wrote:
> What does running a good memory test at boot have to do with anything?
>
> Transistors can burn out at any time.

While that statement is true, the implication that failure is equally
likely at all times isn't. Like lightbulbs, failure on power cycle is
more likely because the system is subject to both electrical and thermal
transients not present at other times. So unless you run a memory test
all the time (you could think of ECC that way), right after power on is
a good time to do the test.

And I'm told that memory failure in dynamic memory is usually a
breakdown in the little capacitors, not the transistor. Random failures
are often one-time alpha particle hits, modern memory is far better in
that regard as well, due to smaller structure and better substrates.

Nothing is perfect, the question is how reliable can you afford to be?

>
>
> "Bill Davidsen" <davidsen@darkstar.prodigy.com> wrote in message
> news:9wJCd.5023$8U5.1515@newssvr31.news.prodigy.com...
>
>>Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>
>>>George Macdonald wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 03:19:02 GMT, Johannes H Andersen
>>>><johs@sizefitter.com>
>>>>wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>I run a Northwood 2.8 P4 overclocked to 3GHz with a Tagan 380W PSU. CPU
>>>>>cooler
>>>>>is a Zalman duct HS fan, speed is 2000 rpm. Prime95 no problems
>>>>>whatsoever.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Huh? You overclock? I thought your work was "valuable"? Don't tell me
>>>>this is a new approach to Stochastic Programming!🙂
>>>
>>>
>>>Let me guess, he was one of those "my work is too important and valuable
>>>to trust to AMD processors" types? %^)
>>
>>A fair bit of my work is too I&V to run on non-ECC memory. Server boards
>>and memory add about $200 to system price, typically. However, memory is
>>far better than it was a few years ago, and running a good memory test at
>>boot is enough for non-critical use in many cases.


--
bill davidsen (davidsen@darkstar.prodigy.com)
SBC/Prodigy Yorktown Heights NY data center
Project Leader, USENET news
http://newsgroups.news.prodigy.com
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips e <DoNotRespond@fake.net> top-posted:
> Transistors can burn out at any time.

They're _not_ lightbulbs. Look up the bathtub failure curve.

Another datum for the correlation: top-poster=ignoramus.

-- Robert
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

On Thu, 06 Jan 2005 22:33:25 -0500, keith <krw@att.bizzzz> wrote:

>On Fri, 07 Jan 2005 03:03:31 +0000, Robert Redelmeier wrote:
>
>> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips keith <krw@att.bizzzz> wrote:
>>> Well, to be fair... Lightbulbs fail in a bathtub fashion too.
>>> They fail even faster in a bathtub. ;-)
>>
>> Doh! <smacks forehead> Quite correct. I guess the phrase
>> "transistor burnout" just makes me see red. I think most
>> electronics fails from electrolytic capacitor leak/dry-out.
>>
>> We have some 486s and RS4000s that have been in continuous
>> use for 15 years. What is that, 125,000 hrs? You're lucky
>> to get 1-2000 hr from a lightbulb.
>
>Ok, but one's forced to ask; What's an RS4000?

A now elderly MIPS RISC system, perhaps?

/daytripper
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

keith wrote:

>> We have some 486s and RS4000s that have been in continuous
>> use for 15 years. What is that, 125,000 hrs? You're lucky
>> to get 1-2000 hr from a lightbulb.
>
>Ok, but one's forced to ask; What's an RS4000?

I think it's on old IBM Power-based computer, usually running AIX.
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips keith <krw@att.bizzzz> wrote:
> Ok, but one's forced to ask; What's an RS4000?

Sorry, RS6000 - 60 MHz Power2

> That works. Its surprising how the more one learns,
> the less one knows.

Precisely true, and a mini-intelligence test.

-- Robert
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips Stuart <xyz@hotmail.com> wrote:
> In fact the life of a light bulb depends

Of course.

> In unusual conditions such as a 135 volt lamp burning
> continuously at 115 to 120 volts several years is not unusual.

20,000 hrs? I would have thought tungsten sublimation
would have killed a std 135V/2000h bulb long before then.
Unusual conditions like halogen fill for redeposition?

> In more extreme circumstances such as a 230 volt lamp operated
> at 125 volts for use as an indicator (as opposed to providing
> illumination) with a limited number (less than 5) of on/off
> cycles per year the life is in the twenty to thirty year range.

I've run Euro bulbs. They hardly give off enough light at
115V to qualify as indicators except in darkened surroundings.

I didn't think cycles mattered that much on tungsten-filament
bulbs with good design for thermal expansion & filament
support. Las Vegas signage certainly gets hammered.

> In contrast a photo flood lamp under normal use is
> rated in tens of hours.

Of course. So do Japanese 100V bulbs at 115V. Voltage ratings
are a bit of a farce. Filaments have a resistance curve and
reach a particular temperature at a given voltage.

-- Robert
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

On Fri, 07 Jan 2005 19:24:49 +0000, Robert Redelmeier wrote:

> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips keith <krw@att.bizzzz> wrote:
>> Ok, but one's forced to ask; What's an RS4000?
>
> Sorry, RS6000 - 60 MHz Power2

Ok. ;-) ...but I didn't think the Power2 was quite *that* old. Dunno,
before "my" time. ;-)


>> That works. Its surprising how the more one learns, the less one
>> knows.
>
> Precisely true, and a mini-intelligence test.

OTOH, don't confuse mastery of trivia for "learning". ...either way.

--
Keith
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

keith <krw@att.bizzzz> writes:

> On Fri, 07 Jan 2005 19:24:49 +0000, Robert Redelmeier wrote:
>
> > In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips keith <krw@att.bizzzz> wrote:
> >> Ok, but one's forced to ask; What's an RS4000?
> >
> > Sorry, RS6000 - 60 MHz Power2
>
> Ok. ;-) ...but I didn't think the Power2 was quite *that* old. Dunno,
> before "my" time. ;-)

Thre may have been an RS6000 based on Power2, but I never heard about
it -- the original RS6000 was a POWER.
>
--
Joseph J. Pfeiffer, Jr., Ph.D. Phone -- (505) 646-1605
Department of Computer Science FAX -- (505) 646-1002
New Mexico State University http://www.cs.nmsu.edu/~pfeiffer
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips keith <krw@att.bizzzz> wrote:
> OTOH, don't confuse mastery of trivia for "learning".
> ...either way.

"Never confuse ignorance with stupidity.
The former can be cured.
The latter is forever."

-- Robert
 
Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.intel (More info?)

On Fri, 07 Jan 2005 23:25:55 -0700, Joe Pfeiffer wrote:

> keith <krw@att.bizzzz> writes:
>
>> On Fri, 07 Jan 2005 19:24:49 +0000, Robert Redelmeier wrote:
>>
>> > In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips keith <krw@att.bizzzz> wrote:
>> >> Ok, but one's forced to ask; What's an RS4000?
>> >
>> > Sorry, RS6000 - 60 MHz Power2
>>
>> Ok. ;-) ...but I didn't think the Power2 was quite *that* old. Dunno,
>> before "my" time. ;-)
>
> Thre may have been an RS6000 based on Power2, but I never heard about
> it -- the original RS6000 was a POWER.

Sure. I had a 590 under my desk in '94.
http://www-1.ibm.com/servers/eserver/pseries/hardware/whitepapers/power2_models.html

--
Keith