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If you are unwilling or afraid to overclock your CPU, there is no reason to annoy other people with your opinion. Just because the CPU manufacturers have an opinion on overclocking does not make it the right one. People who are overclocking their CPUs choose to see it differently and are benefiting from their opinion. As long as there is no sentence against overclocking, we are not doing anything against the law.

It is also fairly questionable if there actually is a difference between Pentium chips with different official clock speeds. The best example of this is the P150 and the P166. Isn't it strange, that all P150s are standard voltage chips and almost all P166s are VRE voltage chips? Doesn't it sound like Intel is using the same chip in both of them, but it only runs stable enough at 166 MHz with VRE voltage. Intel is selling the P150 only to satisfy the market and probably gets a good chuckle at the stupidity of the general public who don't realize this.

There are a lot remarked Pentium chips around, as recently discovered when all over Europe there were several concurrent razzias against criminal organizations that re-marked thousands of P133s to P166. The proud owners of these CPUs are convinced they have a real P166, just because it's written on the chip. Hahaha!! I'm wondering how many people own faked P166s. Did you know that Intel isn't interested in marking their chips reliably via a software readout at all? As long as they sell enough chips, they don't mind the re-marking of Pentiums. They even tried to avoid the publication of the recent events in Europe and I bet hardly anybody in the US ever heard about that.

The main idea behind sensible overclocking is simply to use your brain, which brings me back to my 'car driving' introduction. If you want to successfully overclock your system without any loss in reliability, you will have to take care of proper cooling, do decent testing, and stay within the bounds of common sense. Don't try to overclock a P100 to 200 MHz or anything crazy like that. Just use your brain!

Is smoking immoral? Don’t ask me, ask anyone who smokes!! And yes smoking is much more closely related to morality than overclocking.

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