Workstation Performance


High End Workstation Performance

High End Workstation Performance

High End Workstation Performance

High End Workstation Performance

High End Workstation Performance

High End Workstation Performance

Boards that are tweaked for best overclocking performance often do poorly in workstation benchmark testing. It is satisfying to see that the DFI nForce4, which is clearly an enthusiast overclocking board, also performs well above average in Workstation benchmarks compared to other nForce boards.


DirectX 8 & OpenGL Gaming Performance Final Words
Comments Locked

114 Comments

View All Comments

  • LordConrad - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link

    It's been a year or two since the last time I researched motherboard features, so maybe I'm out of the loop. Isn't it unusual for a consumer level motherboard to offer RAID-5? This is certainly the first such board I've heard of. I wonder if the RAID-5 support is hardware or software based.
  • ChineseDemocracyGNR - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link

    #17
    "Few questions can you fit say a x1 pci-e card into a x4 pci-e slot??? "

    Yes you can.
  • eetnoyer - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link

    #18 Would you consider a 100m sprinter who broke the old world record by 8% to have demolished the record? What you have to realized, is that these boards are performing at the very edge of what's possible today. While a compact car exceeding the Chevy Cobalt's top speed by 8% would make everybody yawn, a car that exceeds the Bugatti Veyron's top speed (252mph) by 8% would be pretty remarkable.

    Irregardless, this looks to be a very respectable board whether you want to OC or not. For the features that are on the board, $140 for an nforce4 board isn't all that bad. And just like the S754 board, I'm sure the price will come down significantly after a little while.
  • Trente - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link

    Man, I remember we used to laugh at DFI back in year 2000; How was it possible for a low-end maker to became the best brand for all die hard overclockers? someone should write a book about it...
  • Manzelle - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link

    *yawn*

    Where are the AGP/PCIe boards...better yet, where is DFI's nForce3 939 board...
  • arfan - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link

    1. why another board maker don't try to make motherboard likes DFI Ultra have ? Because it's a big oppurtunity to buy Ultra than SLI
    2. What do u think Nvidia do to make this board DFI Ultra not functionally likes SLI ? Just tweak driver or likes AMD in the past, change chipset in their factory ? so people can't do likes anand do.
  • Burbot - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link

    I do not like this phrase from Final Words:

    We reached 318x9 at 1T Command Rate - performance that demolished our previous best of 295 1T with this same memory.

    This is a gain of 8% over old result. Would you consider a car with maximum speed 8% higher than competitor model to be "demolishing" it? I don't think so. I consider this to be a "fair improvement" over previous result, and not a "demolishing" one.
  • 1q3er5 - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link

    Few questions can you fit say a x1 pci-e card into a x4 pci-e slot???

    4 volts for RAM but your going to need active cooling, and how do you manage that.

  • Bozo Galora - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link

    I dont see what all the shouting is about
    Sure its a nice board, but, unless you are an EXTREME overclocker the NF3 is plenty close enough, and the big surprise here is the Epox
  • johnson - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link

    I was hoping for a look at results of other memory as well, besides only the ocz ddr400. Perhaps the upcoming round up will use various memory sticks.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now