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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: MtnMan who wrote (32784)5/18/1998 4:35:00 PM
From: Investor A  Respond to of 1572154
 
Neal,

If you have good RAM, You might want to try to run your K6-200 at 208Mhz (83x2.5) at 2.9 voltage. The 2nd choice is 225Mhz (75x3) @3.2V only when your RAM is not enough to run 83Mhz bus speed.

You might be surprised by the increased performance from this tweak.



To: MtnMan who wrote (32784)5/18/1998 4:45:00 PM
From: Yougang Xiao  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572154
 
CPQ to revamp K6 line tomorrow:

news.com

Compaq plans raft of new
PCs
By Michael Kanellos, Jim Davis, and Kurt Oeler
Staff, CNET NEWS.COM
May 18, 1998, 1:00 p.m. PT

update Compaq Computer will revamp its
consumer K6-based computing line tomorrow
when it releases printers under its own brand name
for the first time in years, along with a new fleet of
Presario PCs.

The printer-PC rollout, set for New York, will be
one of Compaq's major consumer releases this
year, said sources close to the company. The
Houston-based PC manufacturer will release
Presarios that use the K6 from Advanced Micro
Devices, the Celeron processor from Intel, and
Pentium II processors running at 350 MHz and
400 MHz.

Compaq released corporate computers that use the
faster Pentium II last month, but has not yet
unveiled consumer models.

The announcement will also mark the latest stage in
the "bundlemania" that's sweeping the industry. To
entice customers and avoid further PC price cuts,
major manufacturers are offering customers special
deals on PC-monitor-printer deals.

Hewlett-Packard is already offering a consumer
PC bundle for $999 which includes a monitor and a
rebate of $150 with a printer.

Compaq is expected to offer similar deals. The
Houston-based PC giant
is getting low-end ink jet
printers from Lexmark,
according to a Compaq
spokesman, who said
details of the strategy will
be announced tomorrow.
Compaq previously
competed in the high-end
printer market in the early
part of the decade but left because of broad losses.

HP, the printer market's overwhelming leader, has
lately been bundling its consumer Pavilion models
with printers and other devices. The strategy has
helped it become No. 2 in the home PC market.

For example, with the purchase of HP Pavilion
3265 or 8250 consumer PC models, a monitor,
and one peripheral from a selection of printers,
scanners, or multifunction devices, consumers can
get a $100 to $150 rebate. At Circuit City a
system with 233-MHz Pentium MMX, 32MB of
memory, a 2.1GB hard disk drive, a CD-ROM
drive, modem, 14-inch monitor, and color ink jet
printer is being advertised in some areas for $999.

"I think [Compaq has] recognized that HP is in a
unique position in this business," said Jef Holove,
communications manager for Home Products
Division, of HP's peripherals product lineup.
Customers are becoming more interested in going
to just one company for service and support needs,
he said.

Consumers who purchase a Compaq Presario
2254 or 5000 model along with a 14-inch monitor
and a color ink jet printer will be eligible for a $75
rebate, according to reports. The purchase of a
larger monitor will bring a bigger rebate.