On Benchmarking the New System
Monday, November 23rd, 2009Okay, I broke down and bought a new computer. First time I’ve built one up from pieces ordered individually. I got a decent new processor from Intel, the i7 line (not i7 Extreme). And I got decent graphics card from EVGA with the NVidia GeForce 9800 GT chipset that will get me through most applications without too much trouble. Nothing jaw dropping, but a decent machine with 4GB of Ram, all coming together around an award-winning Asus motherboard.
So I boot it, install the OS, and before I could even blink… Blue Screen of Death! The error was always something about MEMORY MANAGEMENT. It happened a number of times before I decided to address the issue. Turns out that my two fancy 2GBÂ Corsair XMS3 memory sticks operate at higher voltage than my motherboard’s default. Thankfully, Asus had my back with plenty of BIOS options to adjust the Voltage. For my particular setup, I manually configured the DRAM voltage to 1.65 and the frequency set at DRAM-1600MHz. This solved my problem. No more BSOD, and the system response just felt a whole lot snappier. All that done… it was time to benchmark!
A friend recommended the 3dMark program available from FutureMark. So, I download and run it. And what did I find? Well, words can only say so much…
Game Development Conversations
