* [gentoo-amd64] hardware choice @ 2008-12-14 21:49 Daniel Iliev 2008-12-14 22:57 ` Branko Badrljica ` (3 more replies) 0 siblings, 4 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Daniel Iliev @ 2008-12-14 21:49 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Hi, guys! I've decided to get an Intel based box, but I've not been following closely the hardware development for more than 5 years. Another trouble is that most of the people I can ask don't use Gentoo and they miss the point of "much compiling". So, I need your help. 1) CPU: model,CPU Freq,FSB Freq,cache,technology E8400, 3.00GHz, 1333MHz, 6MB, 45nm Q8200, 2.33GHz, 1333MHz, 4MB, 45nm Q6600, 2.40GHz, 1066MHz, 8MB, 65nm Which one? (please, consider overclocking). On the local market those are in the same price range and I'm going to take Q6600 for the bigger cache (8MB). Is that the correct choice? 2) Main board. I was advised to get Asus P5K Premium (P35, ICH9) for Q6600. The thing is there are models from the P5Q series (like P5Q3) which have a newer chipset (P45, ICH10) but the same price. I can't understand why should I choose the premium mobo even it's an older model. Please, advise. 3) DDR2 600,800 or 1066? The thing confusing me is that the newer CPUs run at 1333MHz and the older (Q6600) at 1066. So, which DDR2? 4) Overclock I intend to overclock the system but not extremely. I've been told Q6600 would go up to 3GHz w/o any trouble. Is that true? How high would the other two CPUs go w/o additional cooling and compromising the stability? Thanks in advance! -- Best regards, Daniel ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] hardware choice 2008-12-14 21:49 [gentoo-amd64] hardware choice Daniel Iliev @ 2008-12-14 22:57 ` Branko Badrljica 2008-12-14 22:58 ` Branko Badrljica 2008-12-15 0:30 ` Daniel Iliev ` (2 subsequent siblings) 3 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread From: Branko Badrljica @ 2008-12-14 22:57 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Given your CPU choices, it is obvious that you are ignoring i7, I suspect beacise the price. In that case, I think you should reconsider AMD. I have a couple of Phenoms, which work really fine with Gentoo. However, if its lower frequency and smaller cache of 9850 and 9950 is what bothers you, you should consider Deneb, which is to come out any day now. 3GHz model should be quite cheap, it has 6MB of L3 which is not far from Intel's 8Mb and it also allegedly overclocks very well. People are getting to 4.4GHz on aircooling, which means machine should behave rock stable at 3.5GHz+ with really good cooler, like Thermalright IFX-14. Boards are relatively good and inexpensive, as well as DDR-II RAM is these days. I have stuffed 8GB in my box for something like €150. I have Foxcon A7DA-S, but Biostar models seem to be cheaper and record OC was done on such board ( 6.3 GHz on LN2), so it should perform well. Also, having a true QC can mean something with optimised multithread code. Intel's i7 is fine, but quite expensive and its smaller i5 won't be on the market for some time, and getting old C2D or Q2D seems a bit of waste these days... Daniel Iliev wrote: > Hi, guys! > > > I've decided to get an Intel based box, but I've not been following > closely the hardware development for more than 5 years. Another > trouble is that most of the people I can ask don't use Gentoo and they > miss the point of "much compiling". So, I need your help. > > > 1) CPU: > > model,CPU Freq,FSB Freq,cache,technology > > E8400, 3.00GHz, 1333MHz, 6MB, 45nm > Q8200, 2.33GHz, 1333MHz, 4MB, 45nm > Q6600, 2.40GHz, 1066MHz, 8MB, 65nm > > Which one? (please, consider overclocking). > > On the local market those are in the same price range and I'm going to > take Q6600 for the bigger cache (8MB). Is that the correct choice? > > > > 2) Main board. > > I was advised to get Asus P5K Premium (P35, ICH9) for Q6600. The thing > is there are models from the P5Q series (like P5Q3) which have a newer > chipset (P45, ICH10) but the same price. I can't understand why should > I choose the premium mobo even it's an older model. Please, advise. > > > 3) DDR2 > > 600,800 or 1066? The thing confusing me is that the newer CPUs run at > 1333MHz and the older (Q6600) at 1066. So, which DDR2? > > > 4) Overclock > > I intend to overclock the system but not extremely. I've been told > Q6600 would go up to 3GHz w/o any trouble. Is that true? How high > would the other two CPUs go w/o additional cooling and compromising > the stability? > > > Thanks in advance! > > > -- > Best regards, > Daniel > > > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] hardware choice 2008-12-14 22:57 ` Branko Badrljica @ 2008-12-14 22:58 ` Branko Badrljica 0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Branko Badrljica @ 2008-12-14 22:58 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Branko Badrljica wrote: <SNIP> Ooops. Sorry for top-post ;o/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] hardware choice 2008-12-14 21:49 [gentoo-amd64] hardware choice Daniel Iliev 2008-12-14 22:57 ` Branko Badrljica @ 2008-12-15 0:30 ` Daniel Iliev 2008-12-15 0:50 ` Wil Reichert 2008-12-15 4:47 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Nikos Chantziaras 2008-12-15 19:36 ` [gentoo-amd64] [SOLVED] " Daniel Iliev 3 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread From: Daniel Iliev @ 2008-12-15 0:30 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Sun, 14 Dec 2008 23:57:00 +0100 Branko Badrljica <brankob@avtomatika.com> wrote: > Given your CPU choices, it is obvious that you are ignoring i7, I > suspect beacise the price. > Correct. After all even the platform I'm targeting at is an overkill for my Home desktop needs. > In that case, I think you should reconsider AMD. I have a couple of > Phenoms, which work really fine with Gentoo. > > However, if its lower frequency and smaller cache of 9850 and 9950 is > what bothers you, you should consider Deneb, which is to come out any > day now. I was told to wait for "the new Phenom", though the guy said rumor has it the release will be in Jan or Feb next year. Anyways, it doesn't matter for me. I had Athlon-XP, now I'm with a Sempron. It's time to get an Intel for a change. I hope a CPU like those I target at will be more than enough for my computing needs for the next 2 or 3 years. So, my questions still remain: - q6600, e8400 or q8200? Which is faster after overclock with plain air cooling and plain mid-tower box? - what mobo should I take for it - what kind of ddr2 should I get -- Best regards, Daniel ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] hardware choice 2008-12-15 0:30 ` Daniel Iliev @ 2008-12-15 0:50 ` Wil Reichert 0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Wil Reichert @ 2008-12-15 0:50 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Sun, Dec 14, 2008 at 4:30 PM, Daniel Iliev <daniel.iliev@gmail.com> wrote: > On Sun, 14 Dec 2008 23:57:00 +0100 > Branko Badrljica <brankob@avtomatika.com> wrote: > >> Given your CPU choices, it is obvious that you are ignoring i7, I >> suspect beacise the price. >> > > Correct. After all even the platform I'm targeting at is an overkill > for my Home desktop needs. > >> In that case, I think you should reconsider AMD. I have a couple of >> Phenoms, which work really fine with Gentoo. >> >> However, if its lower frequency and smaller cache of 9850 and 9950 is >> what bothers you, you should consider Deneb, which is to come out any >> day now. > > I was told to wait for "the new Phenom", though the guy said rumor has > it the release will be in Jan or Feb next year. Anyways, it doesn't > matter for me. I had Athlon-XP, now I'm with a Sempron. It's time to > get an Intel for a change. I hope a CPU like those I target at will be > more than enough for my computing needs for the next 2 or 3 > years. > > So, my questions still remain: > - q6600, e8400 or q8200? Which is faster after overclock with plain > air cooling and plain mid-tower box? > - what mobo should I take for it > - what kind of ddr2 should I get I personally run an Asus Maximus board with a Q6600 OC'd to 3.4G & 8 gigs of DDR2 800. That said theres little reason to run a quad core for just desktop type stuff so my suggestion would be to go with the E8400 & some low latency DDR2 1066 or 1200. 4 GHz is typically obtainable with that CPU so you don't want the RAM to be your limiting factor. The P5K series is based on the older P35 chipset, you should prolly go with the P45 based series - P5Q. The only differences between Pro, -E, Deluxe, etc models are extra ports & bling. Just figure out if you need extra wifi or sata ports or esata then go with the cheapest model that meets your needs. A lot of people on this list (myself included) use a tmpfs to speed up compilations, a good motivator for 4 gigs of RAM if you can handle it. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-amd64] Re: hardware choice 2008-12-14 21:49 [gentoo-amd64] hardware choice Daniel Iliev 2008-12-14 22:57 ` Branko Badrljica 2008-12-15 0:30 ` Daniel Iliev @ 2008-12-15 4:47 ` Nikos Chantziaras 2008-12-15 7:04 ` Martin Herrman 2008-12-15 8:40 ` Duncan 2008-12-15 19:36 ` [gentoo-amd64] [SOLVED] " Daniel Iliev 3 siblings, 2 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Nikos Chantziaras @ 2008-12-15 4:47 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Daniel Iliev wrote: > I've decided to get an Intel based box, but I've not been following > closely the hardware development for more than 5 years. Another > trouble is that most of the people I can ask don't use Gentoo and they > miss the point of "much compiling". So, I need your help. > > 1) CPU: > > model,CPU Freq,FSB Freq,cache,technology > > E8400, 3.00GHz, 1333MHz, 6MB, 45nm > Q8200, 2.33GHz, 1333MHz, 4MB, 45nm > Q6600, 2.40GHz, 1066MHz, 8MB, 65nm > > Which one? (please, consider overclocking). I would get the E8400 because it overclocks good. Upping the FSB from 333 to 400 will give you 3.6GHz (the CPU has a multiplier of x9). That means you can get DDR2 800MHz RAM and run it with an FSB:DRAM ratio of 1:1 (400 FSB = 800 DDR). 1:1 FSB:DRAM is the fastest configuration for Intel systems. If you get DDR2 1066 RAM, then you can up the FSB even more while retaining the 1:1 FSB:DRAM ratio. The E8400 can go up to about 4.4GHz with a good aftermarket cooler. Don't overclock it at all though with the stock cooler. > On the local market those are in the same price range and I'm going to > take Q6600 for the bigger cache (8MB). Is that the correct choice? The Q6600 has *less* cache per core than the E8400. The E8400 has 3MB per core while the Q6600 has 2MB per core. Yes, it's shared cache, but for emerges all the core will be used. The reason I recommend the dual core over the quad core is that compiling isn't the primary use of a desktop PC. Application performance is, that's why the higher speed per core of the E8400 is IMO better. > 2) Main board. > > I was advised to get Asus P5K Premium (P35, ICH9) for Q6600. The thing > is there are models from the P5Q series (like P5Q3) which have a newer > chipset (P45, ICH10) but the same price. I can't understand why should > I choose the premium mobo even it's an older model. Please, advise. I'd recommend the Asus P5E is you can find it. It's X38 based (slightly more overclockable then P35 and P45, supports crossfire PCIe x16 while P35 and P45 only have PCIe x8 in crossfire) with FSB1600 and its price is very good (130€ here). > 3) DDR2 > > 600,800 or 1066? The thing confusing me is that the newer CPUs run at > 1333MHz and the older (Q6600) at 1066. So, which DDR2? It doesn't matter if the CPU is FSB1333 or FSB1066 because you can run the RAM at whatever speed you want. But as I mentioned earlier, the fastest FSB:DRAM configuration on Intel chips is 1:1, so to up the FSB above 400 while retaining this 1:1 ratio, you'll need 1066 RAM. The timings don't matter that much on Intel, so 5-5-5-15 RAM will perform virtually just as well as 4-4-4-12 RAM. > 4) Overclock > > I intend to overclock the system but not extremely. I've been told > Q6600 would go up to 3GHz w/o any trouble. Is that true? Depends on the CPU (not all Q6600 are equal) and motherboard. But in general, 3GHz is easy to get with that CPU. Note: only with a good aftermarket cooler! Don't try with the stock one. > How high > would the other two CPUs go w/o additional cooling and compromising > the stability? You don't overclock with the stock cooler. Unless you consider an overclock of, say, 200MHz as overclocking (the Q6600 for example can go from 2.4GHz to 2.6GHz with the stock cooler). Higher than that may be stable at the beginning, but the life of the CPU is greatly diminished. It won't live for long if it runs at 70C while with a better cooler it would run at 50C. If you intend to only "overclock" that much, then there's no point in going Intel at all. I'd recommend AMD in that case. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] Re: hardware choice 2008-12-15 4:47 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Nikos Chantziaras @ 2008-12-15 7:04 ` Martin Herrman 2008-12-15 8:40 ` Duncan 1 sibling, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Martin Herrman @ 2008-12-15 7:04 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 5:47 AM, Nikos Chantziaras <realnc@arcor.de> wrote: >> 2) Main board. >> >> I was advised to get Asus P5K Premium (P35, ICH9) for Q6600. The thing >> is there are models from the P5Q series (like P5Q3) which have a newer >> chipset (P45, ICH10) but the same price. I can't understand why should >> I choose the premium mobo even it's an older model. Please, advise. > > I'd recommend the Asus P5E is you can find it. It's X38 based (slightly > more overclockable then P35 and P45, supports crossfire PCIe x16 while P35 > and P45 only have PCIe x8 in crossfire) with FSB1600 and its price is very > good (130€ here). Since about 2 months I have a new system. I was also looking into the Asus P5Q series, but noticed that it has a harddisk controller that was not fully supported by the kernel at that time. Eventually I have bought a Gigabyte GA-EP45-DS3R, which runs fine. I want to use this new machine for about 5 years. I expect that even on the desktop, multi-threading and parallel execution will become the standard, so I chose a quad-core instead of a dual core (if you play games, you might want to look for dual core with higher MHz). This board has extra cooling features that only work with 45 Nm CPU, so I bought a Q9300 instead of Q6600 (which had better value for money). The memory I used: OCZ2RPR10664GK (OCZ, Reaper edition, PC2-8500 @ 1066 MHz, 4 GB Kit). Twice: so a total of 8 GB, /var/tmp/portage and /tmp are mounted as tmpfs.. Regards, Martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-amd64] Re: hardware choice 2008-12-15 4:47 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Nikos Chantziaras 2008-12-15 7:04 ` Martin Herrman @ 2008-12-15 8:40 ` Duncan 1 sibling, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Duncan @ 2008-12-15 8:40 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Nikos Chantziaras <realnc@arcor.de> posted gi4ng7$6qp$1@ger.gmane.org, excerpted below, on Mon, 15 Dec 2008 06:47:06 +0200: > The reason I recommend the dual core over the quad core is that > compiling isn't the primary use of a desktop PC. Application > performance is, that's why the higher speed per core of the E8400 is IMO > better. I won't disagree with you, but I will throw in my own experience going from single CPU to dual socket (before the dual-cores), now to dual dual- core socket (so four cores, total), and add another factor to think about. While it doesn't match your recommendation, it fails to match due to one specific aspect, that may or may not be a factor for the OP. A bit of history, first, going back some years to establish the foundation. The upgrade to my first Athlon, the lowest speed they offered IIRC, 500 MHz, was a very good one for me. I was extremely happy with that machine, because for the first time I could run intensive streaming, etc, say (keep in mind the era) a 300 kbps Real Video stream, and keep up both with playing the video and handling the network video stream, without a hitch! I could even drag the playing window around with the mouse (in Windows 98, IIRC), and the thing would keep playing, not a hitch! That 500 MHz Athlon was good stuff! A few years later, I upgraded, way more than doubling the CPU and with other efficiencies as well, to 1.33 GHz. I was quite disappointed with that upgrade, particularly after the great experience I'd had with the 500 MHz Athlon. I thought, way more than double the speed, it should be able to handle two of the things well that the 500 MHz machine could handle one of so well, or handle one intensive one while being able to keep up with several less intensive background tasks, say encoding a video (or now, doing the latest emerge -uDN @world) while continuing to do normal stuff on the desktop. I was wrong, it could still do only one thing at a time well. Trying to get it to do something heavy in the background while continuing to web browse or whatever in the foreground didn't really work so well, and I ended up rather disappointed in that upgrade. Living with that for a few years, I realized what I had done wrong. Yes, the thing was faster, but it was just a single CPU. I would have been better off getting a dual CPU machine, even at just a GHz or likely even at 800 MHz, than I was with the 1.33 GHz single CPU. I determined that I wasn't going to make /that/ mistake again. It was during this time that I switched from MSWindows (98) to Linux, rather than upgrading to what I quickly labeled eXPrivacy, which was a very bitter disappointment to me as I had to that point been a loyal MS user (even running the IE 4, 5, and 5.5 betas). But eXPrivacy crossed a line I simply was not going to cross, and MS very literally gave me little choice BUT Linux. Of course, now, I'm glad they gave me that push (can't thank them enough for it, actually!), but without it, I'd have likely still been an MS user today. Unfortunately, the problem was NOT just the W98 scheduler, as Linux was bumpy trying to do multiple things at once too. I really DID need a multi-CPU solution, and determined that was what my next one would be. As it turned out, my next upgrade was from ia32 to amd64, as well as from single CPU to dual CPU. I purchased a dual socket Opteron box, originally dual Opteron 242s. And yes, I had been correct in my guess. The dual Opteron, even tho I just upped the speed from my previous 1.33 GHz to the 1.6 GHz of the Opteron 242s, and only had a gig of RAM, was everything I had dreamed about in terms of properly multitasking. Even if I let the heavy multi-threaded task use all the scheduler would give it of both CPUs, it was STILL WAY WAY WAY smoother and more pleasant to work with than the single CPU. But, I DID notice one nagging problem. If for some reason something got in an infinite loop, hogging one of the CPUs, while it didn't mean no hope, reboot and get it over with, like could have with a single CPU, that old jerkiness of running the rest of the system on a single CPU came back. Having actually experienced the smoothness a dual CPU could give, the experience both under runaway thread conditions and under extreme CPU load still left something to be desired. Well, as it happens, I still have that same mobo, but I've upgraded pretty much everything else around it. I'm now running 4-way md/kernel RAID-6 for my main system (with some parts I don't need redundancy on RAID-0, for speed), and upgraded the memory to a full 8 gigs, which was nice. But the upgrade to dual dual-cores, for four cores total across two CPU sockets, was what really surprised me. Like you I /had/ thought dual- core was pretty much enough for me. After all, I run pretty much a desktop system, altho as probably all of us here it's Gentoo, which does put us in the upper 20% of the demand profile for those with desktop systems. BUT, what I found out, was that actual usability VASTLY improved! In fact, I haven't been as happy with an upgrade since that upgrade to my first 500 MHz Athlon that I started this story with! The four cores really DO make a difference, and it's MUCH MUCH bigger a difference that I would have ever expected. Now, running Gentoo, I'm sure you're familiar with compiling stuff, and possibly with trying to do something else while you do. On a single CPU single-core, yeah, there are things you can do to mitigate the effects and make it sort of work, but you definitely still notice it. On a dual- core or a dual-socket single-core, you can actually do stuff while compiling without too much of a problem, but, you do still notice it a bit. What amazes me is that with the four cores, as long as I keep memory usage under control, I can run utterly ridiculous load averages, say several hundred, while compiling the kernel, a load average of 100 per core. Yet properly tuned, /you/ /pretty/ /much/ /don't/ /even/ /notice/ /it/! Keep in mind that it's NOT the memory, as I had upgraded to the the 8 gigs RAM before I upgraded to the dual dual-cores, and it's NOT the RAID, for the same reason. Neither is it the fact that I have PORTAGE_TMPDIR pointing at tmpfs, again, because once I got the 8 gigs RAM, I was doing that back with the dual-cores too. Now, the kernel is nice to run lots of build jobs on, because those jobs do use relatively little memory. In practice, I normally run -j -l21, limiting to 21 load not because of the CPU load directly, but because of the memory most compiles require. But as I said, as long as memory usage stays reasonable (which with the 4-way striped swap, means say half a gig or less into swap, the same effect on a single-disk machine would be probably 100 MB or so into swap, maybe less), once I upgraded from a total of two cores to four, load average basically /does/ /not/ /matter/ any more. It literally ceases to be an issue. A load average of one (0.25 per core), 2 per core, 10 per core, 100 per core, doesn't matter, the desktop is still very close to as responsive as it always is. The same goes for those runaway processes I mentioned. With a single core, it was pretty much game over. You could usually quit programs and shutdown safely if you tried, but it was an exercise in patience to do so. With dual cores (either as two sockets single-core each, as I originally had on this board here, or the single socket dual-cores so common now), it's better. You can still run your stuff, sort of, and the system continues functioning well enough to shut down without too much trouble. With the four cores, a few days ago I noticed a runaway process (a kernel process, no less, inotify or whatever, watching for a changed file, only something went wrong when I deleted the file, likely because I'm running directly off of Linus' git kernels and that code likely hit a bug) on my ksysguard graph, and wondered to myself how long it had been pegging 100% on that core, since I hadn't noticed any difference in performance at all. Well, I wasn't ready to reboot at the time, and I let it run. The thing ran for well over 24-hours, unkillable because it's a kernel thread, pegging 100% on one or another of the cores (it would switch cores once in awhile), while I did my thing, uninterrupted. I eventually did reboot when I came to a convenient point to do so, mainly because I was tired of seeing that thing spiking 100% all the time, not because it affected performance. If I'd have not had the ksysguard graphing it, I'd have literally never even known! Of course, once you've seen the system handle 100 load per core without a sweat, it's little surprise that it could handle a single-thread runaway process keeping a single core pegged to 100, with the others effectively idling most of the time, or even if they had a bit of work to do some of the time. It's that experience that has me recommending something different than you. Yes, it's a desktop machine. But we DO run Gentoo, so DO put it to use once in awhile. And, having at least three cores does make a big difference over two. With two, if one drops out, either because of a runaway process or because you're compiling in the background (at -j1 so it only affects the one CPU), the remaining single core is left having to multitask everything else, and it really does show up in lowered system usability. That third core (tri-core Phenom) or go for four, really DOES make a difference, at least the way I use my machine, and the way I expect most Gentoo users will want to use it, if they can. There's desktop, and there's Gentoo desktop, and at least for a Gentoo user, that third core DOES make a difference. OTOH, I really can't see what I'd do with >4 cores ATM. As the experience above demonstrated, with four, a single core can drop out and I don't notice it. What would I do with eight, or even six? Maybe decrease the compile-time where I'm merging stuff that can parallelize sufficiently? Sure, but is it worth it? At this point, four cores is I'd say the sweat spot. Then there's memory. Seriously. make it 4 gig. You'll use it. 8 gig is nice, but honestly, the last couple gig, or even the last four, run empty a lot of the time. So 8 gig memory if you can afford it, at least for a quad-core (4 for a dual-core is almost the same as 8 for a quad-core, for a dual-core, I'd say 2 gig minimum), but do plan on getting four, or you'll be crimping the efficiency of those cores. Then there's disk. Honestly, I'd say go for a 4-spindle SATA array you can run kernel RAID on, before upping from 4 to 8 gigs RAM. A quad-core (or minimum tri-core for those going AMD who can therefore get it), 4 gig RAM, 4-way-SATA-in-kernel-RAID system, is going to be a very well balanced system, remarkably free of bottlenecks. The learning curve on kernel RAID can be a bit steep, certainly, but get a system that well balanced tuned to make use of all components well, and you /will/ notice the difference! You /will/ wonder how you ever got along without it. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-amd64] [SOLVED] Re: hardware choice 2008-12-14 21:49 [gentoo-amd64] hardware choice Daniel Iliev ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2008-12-15 4:47 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Nikos Chantziaras @ 2008-12-15 19:36 ` Daniel Iliev 3 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread From: Daniel Iliev @ 2008-12-15 19:36 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-amd64 Duncan, if we meet one day the beer is on me! :) I ordered Q6600, 4G DDR2-1066, Asus P5Q3. Thanks, everyone! -- Best regards, Daniel ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2008-12-15 19:40 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 9+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2008-12-14 21:49 [gentoo-amd64] hardware choice Daniel Iliev 2008-12-14 22:57 ` Branko Badrljica 2008-12-14 22:58 ` Branko Badrljica 2008-12-15 0:30 ` Daniel Iliev 2008-12-15 0:50 ` Wil Reichert 2008-12-15 4:47 ` [gentoo-amd64] " Nikos Chantziaras 2008-12-15 7:04 ` Martin Herrman 2008-12-15 8:40 ` Duncan 2008-12-15 19:36 ` [gentoo-amd64] [SOLVED] " Daniel Iliev
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