Hi, Wild guess - Kreacher maybe? Cheers Tom <t.danus@xxxxxxxxx> On 16 July 2011 01:12, adam k <aak1946@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi, > Am to presume that no one knows what is changing my > brightness/contrast settings during reboot? > Common guys take guess as I'm out of clues. > Thanks! > > Sent from iPhone 4 > > On Jul 15, 2011, at 11:18 AM, "János, Tóth F." <janos666@xxxxxxxxxx> > wrote: > > > Use google: > > Intel Burn Test (not an Intel soft, it's only a name...) > > Or > > Prime95 > > > > Don't be stupid. Every CPU is unique when it comes to overclocking. > > They can work at different frequencies at different voltages and other > > BIOS settings. It can be very very complicated when you try to max it > > out!!! > > > > Always check your overclock with stress tests. > > > > > > > > 2011/7/15, adam k <aak1946@xxxxxxxxx>: > >> I just used MSI Control software and chose 4500 for frequency. Some > >> people run it at over 5 Ghz. > >> It was okay until couple of days ago. > >> Where can I get Intel software? > >> > >> Sent from iPhone 4 > >> > >> On Jul 15, 2011, at 10:28 AM, János, Tóth F. <janos666@xxxxxxxxxx> > wrote: > >> > >>> How do you overclock that poor CPU? > >>> Did you use a stress test software to check if it's stable or not? > >>> > >>> Always use something like Prime95 or Intel Burn Test (I recommend > >>> this) after oveclocking. Run it on every cores and 1/2 or 3/4 of your > >>> system RAM for at least 20 min. > >>> > >>> A semmingly successfull bootup is nothing. > >>> > >>> Sent from a Nokia 5800 :) > >>> > >>> 2011/7/15, adam k <aak1946@xxxxxxxxx>: > >>>> Hi, > >>>> Now that I lowered overclocking to 4.2 background and other images > >>>> display > >>>> OK, but I think that I'll re-check and possibly exchange my card. > >>>> Thank you! > >>>> > >>>> Sent from iPhone 4 > >>>> > >>>> On Jul 15, 2011, at 9:40 AM, Nikolay Pokhilchenko <nikolay_po@xxxxxxx > > > >>>> wrote: > >>>> > >>>> Adam, You've wrote: > >>>> > >>>> ...Also, images with a solid color background show white dots in solid > >>>> color > >>>> area. > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> If the white dots are on true solid background (when color picker in > >>>> Photoshop shows the same RGB numbers in any point of background, even > on > >>>> white dots), it lkely can be a hardware glitch or mailfunction. Try to > >>>> run > >>>> Your hardware at normal frequencies and voltages. Check the coolers > and > >>>> heatsinks. > >>>> Did You check the display for bad/hot pixels? > >>>> > >>> > >> > >> > > > >