Well, I'm one of those lucky b*stards with a good motherboard then because I can change the bus speed through BIOS, so now the machine runs at a more respectable MHz.
[ WCPUID Version 3.1a (c) 1996-2002 By H.Oda! ]
Processor #1 : Intel Pentium III / 5733A81F
Platform : Slot 1 (SC242 Connector)
Vendor String : GenuineIntel
CPU Type : Original OEM Processor (0)
Family : 6 (-)
Model : 7 (-)
Stepping ID : 3 (-)
Brand : ----
APIC : ----
HT Log.CPU Cnt : ----
Name String : ----
Internal Clock : 503.95 MHz
System Bus : 111.99 MHz
System Clock : 111.99 MHz
Multiplier : 4.5
L1 I-Cache : 16K Byte
L1 D-Cache : 16K Byte
L1 T-Cache : ----
L1 Cache : ----
L2 Cache : 512K Byte
L2 Speed : 251.97 MHz (Half)
MMX Unit : Supported
SSE Unit : Supported
SSE2 Unit : Not Supported
MMX2 Unit : Not Supported
3DNow! Unit : Not Supported
3DNow!+ Unit : Not Supported
Host Bridge : 1106:0691.02 [VIA Apollo KX133(ASUS)]
South Bridge : 1106:0596.06 [VIA VT82C596x]
VGA Device : 10DE:0111.B2 [NVIDIA GeForce2 MX 100/200]
Memory Size : 256M Byte
Memory Clock : 111.99 MHz
: 68,2,M:C003,D:0321,R:0001
OS Version : Windows 2000 Version 5.00.2195 Service Pack 4
And what? Miss the chance of asking you guys? Wouldn't DREAM of it.
Except I had a fright there, because I upped the bus speed, and the keyboard is sensitive it seems. So instead of upping the bus speed to 112 MHz I upped it to 133 MHZ.
I couldn't even get into BIOS. Luckily, after thinking on my feet, I remember that cold processors work better than warm one, so I had that machine down in the basement in a flash, and put it in front of the freezer with the freezer door wide open. The computer itself was stuck halfway into it. After fifteen minutes it worked! I got the computer cold enough, and got into BIOS and could switch down the bus speed to the present.
Amazing how you think on your feet when you're faced with the prospect of internet abstention for a WHOLE day while you rearrange a whole network. It was a fright.
Cheers,
Microman
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They SAID that given enough time a million monkeys with typewriters could recreate the collected works of William Shakespeare... Internet sure proved them wrong.
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