Hi all:
Most people who visit this site, and especially this forum, are overclockers. Some take it a little more seriously than others, but for the most part, I think we can all agree that overclocking serves a real purpose. Purchasing a $100 CPU and pushing it to $500 CPU speeds isn't just for fun, but for necessity.
As long as computing has been around, so has overclocking. But it wasn't until just recently that some companies began to shift focus towards it, and as we've seen, some are even using it to their advantage for marketing purposes. I believe ASUS was the first company to prove that with their overclocking championship, but Gigabyte shortly followed with their GO OC competition, which is still running to this day.
Then there's companies like MSI, who aren't even known for extreme overclocking. Yet, they themselves are holding their own overclocking competition. I've also recently learned that ASUS has again been "bit" by the overclocking bug, so I'd expect to see the fruits of that come about within a month or two. Whether it will be in the form of an overclocking event or simply the company bringing overclockers on board for the sake of marketing, I have no idea.
My question to you guys is... do you care about these overclocking events, or the results of extreme overclocking in general? Do events like these help you decide where you put your money and which products to purchase? Are these events more important to you than product reviews, like we have on our website?
The reason I ask, is because it's becoming clear that manufacturers are beginning to care a lot about overclocking, and overclockers. I've been talking to Nate from Legit Reviews quite a bit about this, and neither of us can understand the reasoning behind it, although it's hard to ignore. Overclockers are the ones who are receiving product first (you wouldn't believe how many overclockers have six-core AMD chips), rather than the people who are delivering content around it.
I have nothing at all against overclocking or the overclockers, but I am curious about these manufacturer's goals. There has to be a reason for such an intense push towards overclocking. From my point of view, I'm having a difficult time understanding the benefit in it. Do these overclocking events actually sell product? I'm confident that they sell nowhere near as much as reviews on tech sites, so that's where I'm stumped.
I talked to a few people about this over the past week, and the most common response I've heard has been, "The only people who care about these overclocking events are the overclockers themselves", and I'm wondering if that's true. I'm not sure the numbers on Overclockers vs. Regular User, but I'd have to assume it'd be around 1%, and even less for the extreme overclockers. Is there something I'm missing?
I'd love to hear input from you guys.
Thanks!
Most people who visit this site, and especially this forum, are overclockers. Some take it a little more seriously than others, but for the most part, I think we can all agree that overclocking serves a real purpose. Purchasing a $100 CPU and pushing it to $500 CPU speeds isn't just for fun, but for necessity.
As long as computing has been around, so has overclocking. But it wasn't until just recently that some companies began to shift focus towards it, and as we've seen, some are even using it to their advantage for marketing purposes. I believe ASUS was the first company to prove that with their overclocking championship, but Gigabyte shortly followed with their GO OC competition, which is still running to this day.
Then there's companies like MSI, who aren't even known for extreme overclocking. Yet, they themselves are holding their own overclocking competition. I've also recently learned that ASUS has again been "bit" by the overclocking bug, so I'd expect to see the fruits of that come about within a month or two. Whether it will be in the form of an overclocking event or simply the company bringing overclockers on board for the sake of marketing, I have no idea.
My question to you guys is... do you care about these overclocking events, or the results of extreme overclocking in general? Do events like these help you decide where you put your money and which products to purchase? Are these events more important to you than product reviews, like we have on our website?
The reason I ask, is because it's becoming clear that manufacturers are beginning to care a lot about overclocking, and overclockers. I've been talking to Nate from Legit Reviews quite a bit about this, and neither of us can understand the reasoning behind it, although it's hard to ignore. Overclockers are the ones who are receiving product first (you wouldn't believe how many overclockers have six-core AMD chips), rather than the people who are delivering content around it.
I have nothing at all against overclocking or the overclockers, but I am curious about these manufacturer's goals. There has to be a reason for such an intense push towards overclocking. From my point of view, I'm having a difficult time understanding the benefit in it. Do these overclocking events actually sell product? I'm confident that they sell nowhere near as much as reviews on tech sites, so that's where I'm stumped.
I talked to a few people about this over the past week, and the most common response I've heard has been, "The only people who care about these overclocking events are the overclockers themselves", and I'm wondering if that's true. I'm not sure the numbers on Overclockers vs. Regular User, but I'd have to assume it'd be around 1%, and even less for the extreme overclockers. Is there something I'm missing?
I'd love to hear input from you guys.
Thanks!