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Ocz vertex 3 firmware 2.02
Ocz vertex 3 firmware 2.02









  1. #Ocz vertex 3 firmware 2.02 upgrade
  2. #Ocz vertex 3 firmware 2.02 pro

Sorry, I think I was using one from the other request thread, looks like it works, although it lacks -lvl and -xp, which makes it fairly useless, this map NEEDS those commands, every level you get 5 stat points to spend, but the way these points are added is unique, and the effect on spending them is all different for putting points into reflexes, it increases your evasion and critical rate, and agility by 0.15, while putting points into quickness would increase your agility by 0.45 and attack power. Well, firstly, is the map playable? Secondly, does singleplayer and the cheats work? Thirdly, if the before two questions are both yes, then what happens when you do a cheat? Anyone who moves this back to requests and goes through this, whether out of curiosity, generosity or otherwise, I owe 9 internets.

ocz vertex 3 firmware 2.02

I've been trying to do this myself but I have no knowledge of JASS, so I need help. Shamanno made a fast exp version, but it only worked up to level 6, I've also noticed that an exp glitch only worked up to level 6, so there may be some sort of trigger activating at that level. It will take an experienced user to do this, which is why I've added as much information as I could, please move this back to requests until a map has actually been tested to work. However, while both these drives will work fine over a SATA 3Gbps port, you’ll need to get a decent SATA 6Gbps add-in card such as the HighPoint Rocket 620 to unlock all the performance of the Crucial drives.Thanks for trying, guys, but this still isn't fulfilled, every previously hacked version of this has been unplayable (game not found, likely a jass script corruption or something) There are 3 requests of this that have all been moved to fulfilled requests when the maps uploaded don't work. In comparison the 256GB Crucial C300 comes in at only £2.05/GB and the 64GB C300 at £2.02/GB.

#Ocz vertex 3 firmware 2.02 pro

This still makes the Phoenix Pro pretty expensive in a price-to-capacity comparison though, tipping the scales at a hefty £2.57/GB (using the formatted capacity). There are 16 Intel 8GB NAND flash modules (eight on each side of the PCB) arrayed around the central SandForce drive controller – this is the same layout as the 100GB drive.Īs there’s physically nothing different, it’s pleasing to see that G.Skill has kept the pricing of the Phoenix Pro very similar to that of the 100GB Phoenix – in fact it’s a tidy £5 cheaper at £288 despite the extra capacity. As we said in our original SandForce coverage though, the difference between a 50MB/sec and a 75MB/sec random write speed is negligible for typical desktop PCs – while it’s nice to have, you’ll never notice the improvement in comparison to a standard SF-1200 based SSD.Ĭracking open the Phoenix Pro shows that it really is identical to the 100GB Phoenix. While the Phoenix Pro lacks the expensive power backup circuitry of an SF-1500 drive, the firmware boosts its random write performance considerably. This a tweaked version of the standard SandForce firmware originally intended for server-level drives with the SF-1500 controller chip.

#Ocz vertex 3 firmware 2.02 upgrade

The firmware upgrade has also seen the Phoenix Pro receive the special ‘Max IOPs’ firmware, previously reserved for the OCZ Vertex 2. While this is still less than non-SandForce drives fitted with 128GB of NAND, which typically offer 120GB of formatted capacity, it’s a serious improvement for a SandForce SSD.

ocz vertex 3 firmware 2.02

This results in a formatted capacity of 111.69GB – a 19 per cent increase. While it’s physically identical to the G.Skill Phoenix 100GB we reviewed in June, the firmware has been upgraded, cutting the amount of spare area from 35GB to just 15GB. We’ve got our hands on one of the new SandForce drives now, in the form of the G.Skill Phoenix Pro 120GB. The first wave of SandForce drives –such as the 100GB versions of the OCZ Vertex 2, G.Skill Phoenix and Patriot Inferno – which still use the old firmware are therefore much less attractive purchases.

ocz vertex 3 firmware 2.02

This allowed drive capacities to increase practically overnight, and without any difference in pricing (the physical hardware was unchanged, after all). Furthermore, the company realised it could do this with a firmware update. Shortly after the release of the first wave of 50GB, 100GB and 200GB drives SandForce discovered that the spare area required for the drives to run efficiently in consumer-level systems could be slashed with no detrimental effect on performance.











Ocz vertex 3 firmware 2.02