The bigger brother of the PX5 in ATX form factor is suffering from the same problem as its sibling, it is quite touchy about the SDRAM that’s used with it. Unlike the VX chipset predecessor of this ...
you have a super socket 7 board--you can't run a k6-2 450 in a regular socket 7 board either. I'd suggest you check your BIOS to make sure it doesn't need upgrading to support the 550. I know my SS7 ...
Some people look at specifications as a requirement, and others look at them as a challenge. You’re reading this on Hackaday, so you know where [Necroware] falls. In the video below the break, you’ll ...
It was taking quite a while from VIA’s announcement of the Apollo VP3 chipset until this first board arrived here for testing. FIC as well as VIA had to find out that it’s not exactly easy building an ...
Did you know, there was a CPU socket that accepted both Intel and AMD chips? Released in March 1994, Socket 5 was primarily designed for second-gen Intel P5 Pentium processors. However, it was also ...
Some people look at specifications as a requirement, and others look at them as a challenge. You’re reading this on Hackaday, so you know where [Necroware] falls. In the video below the break, you’ll ...
Hi all, I don't normally post here but finally I have a question I can put in the hardware section. I have a socket 7 and a socket 5 motherboard (one of each). I was wondering what the major ...
The motherboard receptacle that holds a Pentium CPU chip. It is also used to hold Pentium-compatible chips such as AMD's K5 and K6 CPUs. See Slot 1 and Super7. THIS DEFINITION IS FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY ...