Yep, I can confirm that as well on my Asus P5P800 (865PE).Originally posted by: RussianSensation
Forgot to mention, I think PAT doesn't work once you start overclocking anything outside of 1:1 ratio. In fact, for me once I increase frequency anything above 200FSB, regardless of CPU:RAM ratio, CPU-Z always says PAT is disabled regardless of setting in the BIOS. So that is probably one shortfall of the "hack" as opposed to actual 875 chipset. I am not sure if all 865 boards react this way, but if they do, once you start overclocking, 875 chipset should faster.
Originally posted by: SectorZero
In networking terms, PAT is what your router does to share your internet connection between multiple computers.
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: SectorZero
In networking terms, PAT is what your router does to share your internet connection between multiple computers.
Uh, that would be NAT (Network Address Translation). Please don't confuse anybody any further on this sort of thing!
Originally posted by: nweaver
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: SectorZero
In networking terms, PAT is what your router does to share your internet connection between multiple computers.
Uh, that would be NAT (Network Address Translation). Please don't confuse anybody any further on this sort of thing!
PAT can = Protocol address translation
Port Address Translation (PAT)
Basic Definition:
Similar to NAT, but where data from different IP addresses are altered to share the same source IP address. In order that the data is still distinguishable (and the replies can be routed back correctly) the source port is varied in some defined way
Originally posted by: SectorZero
Here, do some reading.
http://techrepublic.com.com/5100-6265_11-1053789.html#