Nah I use all of them intermittently for gaming/ media server/ encoding.
I run HCC, HFCC and HCMD.
Nah I use all of them intermittently for gaming/ media server/ encoding.
I run HCC, HFCC and HCMD.
Samsung 42" LCD/Antec 1200 Case/Corsair 1000W PS/ Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD7 / Intel I7 990X 3.47 @ 4.5 / 3 x RX360 rad /Apogee Xt /2 x 128gb Patriot Torqx M28's @ Raid 0/ WD 600Gb VelociRaptor / Kingston Hyper X 12Gb (6x2) DDR3 2000/ XFX DD HD 7970
could someone please tell me how to change the name of the device
or give it a custom name?like what i circled in red in the pic below.
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_________________________________________________
............................ImAcOmPuTeRsPoNgE............................
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
MY HEATWARE 76-0-0
The names listed are the computer names as you have assigned them via the os, I am unsure if there is a way to change the way WCG displays them but you could just rename the pc![]()
Last edited by sRHunt3r; 05-11-2010 at 06:24 PM.
Samsung 42" LCD/Antec 1200 Case/Corsair 1000W PS/ Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD7 / Intel I7 990X 3.47 @ 4.5 / 3 x RX360 rad /Apogee Xt /2 x 128gb Patriot Torqx M28's @ Raid 0/ WD 600Gb VelociRaptor / Kingston Hyper X 12Gb (6x2) DDR3 2000/ XFX DD HD 7970
ok thats what i thought but,was just curious when i saw these cool names.
i guess i have to be more creative when i do my installs.but also mine always
has the name of my computer and the PC,like this bigtop-PC.and thats what
im trying to get rid of,the PC part
_________________________________________________
............................ImAcOmPuTeRsPoNgE............................
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
MY HEATWARE 76-0-0
Last edited by ACEkombatkiwi; 05-15-2010 at 12:31 AM.
Main Gamer
HW: Gigabyte Sniper 2-i7 2600k@4.6GHz-8GB Corsair Dominator GT 1866MHz 8-8-8-24 1T-2x Sapphire Toxic 6950 2GB CF@925/1425-Enermax85+ 850w-2x Crucial M4 64GB raid 0-Silverstone TJ07 Black Inverted ATX-2x Viewsonic 24" 1920x1080
Cooling:EK HF Supreme EN Nickel-XSPC RX480-Swiftech MCP355-Koolance 240mm Tube Res-PrimoFlex Pro LRT UV Green Tubing - 7/16" ID X 5/8" OD-Bits power 1/2" fittings-Distilled water with silver kill coil
Spare Gamer
HW: Giga-byte P55 UD3R-i5 750@3.6Ghz-4GB Corsair 1333Mhz 8-8-8-24 1T-Sapphire HD4890 1GB@925/1200-Cooler Master eXtreme Power Plus 550w-Hitachi Deskstar 320GB 7K1000.C-Cooler Master Elite 330 custom window-Viewsonic 22" 1920x1028
Cooling: Aywun Radi V10 120mm LED fan-2x 120mm LED fans
HTPC
HW: Asus M4A78L-M-AMD Athlon II x4 630@3.2Ghz-4GB Corsair XMS2 Xtreme 800Mhz 4-4-4-12 2T-Sapphire HD4650 1GB-Enermax Liberty 500w-2x WD 500GB Raid 0-3x WD 1TB-Silverstone GD01B-MXR-Sony 52" 1920x1080
Cooling: Aywun Radi V6- 2x Noctua 80mm fans
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ACEkombatkiwi,thanks now i can change the i7-920 rig.
_________________________________________________
............................ImAcOmPuTeRsPoNgE............................
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
MY HEATWARE 76-0-0
mind the question, though, why not simply taking few days in a row from the points statistics, to see how the PPD goes,
the PPD per MHz is a nice gimmick, though it would be interesting to see how many point each system does usually..
it seems some were posting BOINC points and some were posting WCG points,
it is quite misleading.
What's so gimmicky about PPD/MHz?
Take any of the numbers in my chart, multiply by system MHz, and it's a good estimate of what to expect from that machine for PPD.
Tracking PPD of systems and having a database of it is something we (almost) all want to do, but considering all the different settings we all run (hardware level and software level), the easiest way to distill the PPD numbers into usable information is to take systems with similar software settings (i.e., dedicated and OS/BOINC intalls) and divide by MHz so anyone can 'reconstitute' it into usable numbers for their own system
And it looks to me like everyone in this thread has been posting WCG points...and I know for certain that no BOINC points were used in my calculation for my chart.![]()
as an idea, a nice idea, (maybe better said?).What's so gimmicky about PPD/MHz?
hrm,Dual X5450 (8 Threads) @ 3,6Ghz; WinXP x64; 3:273:00:01:42 6,422,064 9,326
so what is that?
even at BOINC points it's unreasonable that these processors do so much,
at WCG points, it is extremely low...
**o.k,
so this is the results returned**,
newcomers would have a great deal of confusion, trying to understand it..
and:maybe i'm confusing something here, yet it seems quite hard to understandFor example, this is my HTPC's data blurb from the Device Statistics page:
0:043:07:56:30 226,691
It's an i5 750 at 3500MHz running Win7 x64 and BOINC 6.10.43.
With this info, I can see I'm doing 20926 PPD at 3500MHz. That works out to 6PPD per MHz....
how did you get 20926 a day, from this number?
0:043:07:56:30 226,691?
yeah,Take any of the numbers in my chart, multiply by system MHz, and it's a good estimate of what to expect from that machine for PPD.
the issue, is Westmere, can be a lot of processors.., different cache, and gainstown too, and any other family..,
you see..?
yeah, of course, this is understandable,Ok, that number translates to:
0 years, 43 days, 7 hours, 56 minutes and 30 seconds
and
226,691 points
yet, where does the 20926 number (PPD) is coming from?
if you divide 226,691 by (even) 11 days, it still comes out 20608...
E:
huh,
got a new title![]()
Last edited by onex; 05-23-2010 at 08:30 AM.
226691 (points) / 43.33 (wcg days (don't forget to convert to decimal)) * 4 (cores or threads) = 20926 PPD (average points per real day)
Vapor's i5-750 is at 3500MHz, so 20926 PPD / 3500MHz = 5,98 PPM (average points per megahertz)
From here, if you have an i5-750 you can make an educated guess at what will be your estimated average PPD by multiplying the 6 PPM by the speed of the processor.
Last edited by pfm3136; 05-23-2010 at 09:16 AM.
pff,226691 (points) / 43.33 (wcg days (don't forget to convert to decimal) * 4 (cores or threads) = 20926 PPD
fine, that makes it simple.
it isn't that obvious from the posts, Vapor..,
newbies would have a very hard time figuring that out.
after that,
the graph makes much more sense now, (though it would been nice to get a clue about the differences between westmere different L2 cache sizes).
dual Harpertown seems to give only ~27736 for dual E5430, which is only about 18% more then a Bloomfield 920 at ~23408,
2*6MB L2 cache vs 4*256KB L2 and 8MB L3.
so maybe WCG is more L3 cache dependent,
yet why would it be..,
HT, should not give any CPU such a close productivity to native cores, these are quite odd results :head scratching:.
Last edited by onex; 05-23-2010 at 12:05 PM.
How much boost you get from HTT varies enormously, I'd guess depending on how much cache each thread is using and how often each thread gets blocked waiting for IO or something. A whole bunch of IO bound threads, with low cache usage, would benefit enormously while CPU bound threads would get less benefit.
In this case, what I mean by "low cache usage" is that the cache doesn't need to be refreshed massively every time the CPU changes the thread it's working on. You'd probably find there's a benefit to running a HTT enabled system on a single project (like HCC or FAAH) rather than several different projects.
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
it should be project related,
maybe 25%-60?
rough estimate.
no, it's his fault,All newbies are recommended to read the whole thread
i insist :P.
j/k,
totally missed it.
though it is worth mentioning through the OP as well.
Last edited by onex; 09-02-2010 at 06:25 AM.
I have a Clarkdale I3-540 now and it is doing better than the 3.8 PPD/MHz that is on the chart now.
Not sure what it is doing exactly, because it is only running for 3 days now. And I'm still playing with the OC.
But the 2 full days that it has been running almost full time it did 4.4 PPD/MHz.
I will leave it like it is now for a few days and post the results here.
Looks like that 4.4 was a little high. The first few days when I had this PC running I had been playing a little with OCing and maybe that messed up the numbers a bit.
So after 2 days running at the same speed I didn't touch the PC and let it do it's job.
This is what I got over 6 full days running all projects.
Clarkdale i3-540 @ 3533 MHz. HT on. Windows 7 x64. 24/7 cruncher.
05/06/10 0:003:12:28:55 12,855
06/06/10 0:004:09:22:58 15,972
07/06/10 0:004:17:53:36 16,259
08/06/10 0:003:06:48:50 11,679
09/06/10 0:004:19:40:40 18,183
10/06/10 0:003:08:00:24 12,418
That is 4.1 PPD/MHz over 6 days crunching. Not to bad for a PC that only uses 85 watt.
Now I let it finish all the WU that are downloaded and try it again with Ubuntu.
Last edited by Rob_B; 06-11-2010 at 08:41 AM.
My average for my i3-540 is about 4.125 PPD/Mhz, and i also do some gaming/browsing/whatch movies.
Rob_B you might overclock it easily to 4000 Mhz, just stay below 1.3V and it will be energy efficient.
I choose that speed after reading this article on cpu overcloking vs Power consumption.
Last edited by pfm3136; 06-11-2010 at 08:30 AM.
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