
You will only be charged the $12.95 ground rate but you will still be responsible for making sure a person will be available at the delivery address to inspect and sign for the delivery. **Depending upon the quantity of items on your order and/or the order's overall weight, we may choose to send the entire order via truck freight. Ground Shipping: $12.95 + applicable oversize fees - If there are no items in the cart that require shipment via truck freight, the entire order will ship for $12.95 + applicable oversize fees. Truck freight deliveries require that a person be available to inspect and sign for the delivery. Truck Freight: Cost varies by region - If there is at least one or more item(s) in the cart that require(s) shipment via truck freight, the entire order will ship for a flat fee based on the delivery region. will have two simple shipping charges depending on items in their cart: Retail customers who place their orders on our website with shipping addresses anywhere in the contiguous U.S. Simple Retail Shipping Charges (Internet Orders Only) All shipping charges should be quoted at time of order although there may be times when we have to call you back to give you a price. Expedited shipping options are available for additional charges - ask your salesperson for details. Large and/or heavy products will be shipped via truck freight. We use FedEx to ship small to medium size parts.

Additionally, we take great pride in our Home Office section, as well as the best VPN one, so be sure to check them out as well.Our products range in size from small to large and require different shipping methods. There you can find the latest technology news and much more. Webmaster’s note: You have stumbled on one of the old articles from our archive, for the latest articles we would recommend a click to our tech news category. This is a far cry from the times when both manufacturers sanctioned overclocking with canceling out warranties and even punishing system integrators that offered overclocked processors in their respective line-ups.

In fact, we might argue that AMD is mostly targeting overclockers now – if you take a look at the whole Athlon II and Phenom II line-up, you’ll see that the percentage of Black Edition processors is unusually high.
2009 amd k10 series#
To make matters more interesting, it looks like AMD decided to battle Intel with legalized overclocking – given that the Phenom II 900 series mostly consists out of Black Edition CPUs.

With advancements in process technology, a 162W TDP would now fit a quad-core processor at 4+GHz, instead of dual-core at 3.73 GHz – can anyone say that technology is not moving ahead? Mono-cores didn’t went much beyond that – Pentium 4 670 and 672 were clocked at 3.8 GHz respectively. Barcelona/Agena, it is good to see AMD improving on the CPU core and releasing faster clocked products and keeping roughly the same thermal levels just like they did with Athlon and Athlon 64.Īlso worth noting is that we might see AMD or Intel releasing the fastest clocked x86 processor of all times in 2010 – the current record for multi-cores lies with Pentium Extreme Edition 965 clocked at 3.73 GHz, featuring a “lovely” real-world TDP of 162W. After the unhappy break that was K10 e.g. In only ten days time, AMD will release the Phenom II 965 Black Edition, a multiplier-unlocked processor ticking at 3.4 GHz with the expected power consumption. Six years after the debut of original K8 architecture, its modified version is finally passing the thermal-imposed barrier of 3.2 GHz.

K10.5 architecture is the best one to date. There is little or no doubt that AMD’s Shanghai e.g.
