by Anton Shilov
11/10/2005 | 09:05 PM
Some dealers in <%BANNER[article]%>
“The remarked Pentium M processors that have surfaced in
Usually engineering samples of Intel processors come without certain limitations that do not allow commercial versions of the chips to be overclocked. As a result of that, unfair traders may re-label them and sell at higher value the chips that are shipped to them for validation and testing purposes.
Given that Intel does not ship too many processors for validation, the amount of remarked CPUs should not be high. Nevertheless, sometimes fake chips from
Remarked CPUs may work unstably, malfunction and probably lack any overclocking potential, a capability that is valued by computer enthusiasts.
AMD and Intel not only impose different measures to tackle the relabeled chips, but also advice end-users to buy boxed microprocessors and computers from authorized distributors.