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*m25*

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Location: AlbaniaMember since: 04 March 2009

All Feedback (713)

survy2014 (290240)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
Verified purchase
Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
xiaodonglee (2620)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
Verified purchase
Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
maigukej (1028)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
Verified purchase
Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
changu_4457 (1320)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
Verified purchase
Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
arctic-official (25057)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
Verified purchase
A-R-C-T-I-C sagt: schnelle Bezahlung, so macht verkaufen Spaß. 👍
servefrist_0716 (42881)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
Verified purchase
Good buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
Reviews (12)
10 January 2014
A real deal! Would recommend the One S over most $400+ phones of 2013
This is the greatest phone you can find for around $250 today. If you can sleep at night knowing it does not have the smoothest screen or the latest Android version, this beauty has to offer more than most $400+ new phones have today: It has MHL, so you can connect it to a monitor/projector with a $10 adapter, actually the Galaxy S4 and HTC One Minis can't do that. The lower resolution/faster dual core combination makes it snappier than most mid range quad core phones. Many phones today have a 8MP camera, but this is on the high end of the scale and it snaps faster even than big guys like the Galaxy S4. Quality is above average too. It's thinner and lighter than most phones today.
Samsung 8GB 1Rx8 PC4 - DDR4 SODIMM - 2133 MHz (M471A1K43BB0-CPB) RAM
01 August 2017
Great price/performance
This module will not slow down most modern laptops and will add plenty of memory for serious working, especially if you are upgrading from a basic 4GB.
Scheda madre per giochi X79 a 4 canali per computer desktop
10 April 2019
Great workstation board on the cheap...with caveats
Was looking to add some working juice to a home PC originally intended for light work. The price (mine ~$66) was irresistible for a 2011 board and the used e5-2690 v0 for $98 was still about $40 cheaper than a comparable Ryzen 5 1600 I was looking at,... plus 32GB ECC DDR3 for $70 vs ~140 for DDR4. Build quality of no-name Chinese boards has gone up recently and this was no exception,... the design however was a different thing: For starters, the "X79" chipset is in reality a bios-modded consumer chipset,..which is not necessarily any loss, except for the next caveat: It really has 2 channels with 2 dimms each, not 4 channels like erroneously claimed in the specs..but bandwidth is still good in 99.9% of scenarios, so this is not very bad either. The CPU I got was rated at 135W and stress-testing with OCCT revealed instability with crashes after 20-40minutes of full load. Limiting the maximum power to 105W in the bios "fixed" the instability issue and revealed this board's power regulator is probably designed to support up to around 100W CPUs, which the manufacturer has failed to specify. Still talking about the power, the mosfets on the board were not covered by heatsink(s), which is another reason why not to push it. Another minor issue I had was that the ram seems to be fed 1.6V instead of 1.5 or 1.35, which during stressing makes it run near uncomfortable 85°C.... again this made me throttle something back (1333 to 1066MHz) for long term operation. This board only supports SATA 2 (300MBs) instead of sata3, so you might notice a few seconds of delay compared to M.2 or even sata3, mostly in game load times and OS boot. This plus the lack of USB 3.0 means connectivity-wise you will live somehow in 2010 unless you add an USB 3.0 on tat pcie x1 slot. On the plus side, most bios options and parameters actually WORKED, instead of being just parameters that do nothing,... being mostly a workstation bios there's not much for overclocking and tweaking RAM timings (except forcing preset RAM frequencies). Critically, the options for managing CPU power, activating cores etc worked as expected. All-in-all the board works and performs fairly well despite the small surprises. If you're looking for a cheap build with good CPU power and don't mind some caveats and tweaking it a bit, this is a great value paired with depreciated xeons and ECC RAM... everyone else though better look away.