- Joined
- Oct 1, 2010
- Messages
- 2,361 (0.48/day)
- Location
- Marlow, ENGLAND
System Name | Chachamaru-IV | Retro Battlestation |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 9 5900X | Intel Pentium II 450MHz |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG STRIX X570-F Gaming | MSI MS-6116 (Intel 440BX chipset) |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15 SE-AM4 |
Memory | 32GB Corsair DDR4-3000 (16-20-20-38) | 512MB PC133 SDRAM |
Video Card(s) | nVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 FE | 3dfx Voodoo3 3000 |
Storage | 1TB WD_Black SN850 NVME SSD (OS), Toshiba 3TB (Storage), Toshiba 3TB (Steam) |
Display(s) | Samsung Odyssey G5 27" @ 1440p144 & Dell P2312H @ 1080p60 |
Case | SilverStone Seta A1 | Beige box |
Audio Device(s) | Creative Sound Blaster AE-7 (Speakers), Creative Zen Hybrid headset | Sound Blaster AWE64 |
Power Supply | EVGA Supernova 750 G2 | 250W ASETEC |
Mouse | Roccat Kone Air| Microsoft Serial Mouse v2.0A |
Keyboard | Vortex Race3 | Dell AT102W |
Software | Microsoft Windows 11 Pro | Microsoft Windows 98SE |
At my previous company, we used a commercial system stability/stress testing software. I can't remember the name, but I do remember that it tested everything at pretty much the same time. Multiple windows would pop up and it would play a video with horses (with sound), test the CPU in another window, RAM in another, and even have a window open that tested the GPU with a 3D scene. I believe it was paid-for software. Anyone have an idea?