$1255.00 US for the Extreme, should I or shouldn't I...
I know of the OCing potential, but as Baego was pointing out earlier there are games that may detect the default clock speed and not function properly, and he also mentioned that was DESPITE OCing. So what about that conundrum? Imagine Crysis is 1 a dem games.... dat game so bad if yuh get blank like that yuh go HAFFEE buy a 2.4 or thereabouts... I mean come on 300 ain't bad.
Abit Max boards debut i975 for fiddlers, overclockersBy Charlie Demerjian: Monday 21 August 2006, 13:04 DURING COMPUTEX, we told you about the new Abit and it's three lines of boards, standard, Fatality and Max. The first of the new Max boards has just just hit the market, overclockers start your engines.The Max line is split from the Fatality boards, with Max aimed at the high-end stable overclocking set and Fatality at the gamers. The first board in the Max line is the i975 based AW9D-MAX.It differs from the normal AW9D in a few way, the most noticeable are the dual, rather than single heat pipes, and the added ports. Additionally, it has three more SATA ports and 1 e-SATA port as well. Other than that, the boards are fairly similar, although I would bet on a much higher overclocking on the -MAX board due to those little extra touches that are so hard to define.In any case, it looks like the new Abit is going for the top of the OCing world. With its first post-Computex offering of a quad-core-ready i975 board, things are looking up already. µ