Extra Credit Assignment
Overview
You can add up to 10 points to your course average by writing a paper on
the topic of "Overclocking." Your paper will be graded on a ten-point
scale. However many points you earn, that number will be added to your
course average. So even if you "fail miserably," you can add 1-2 points
to your average.
Grading Criteria
All of the following criteria will be used to determine your grade for
the assignment:
- Technical accuracy and thoroughness.
- Organization and clarity of writing.
- English usage (grammar, spelling, and punctuation).
- Neatness!
In addition, you must cite all the sources of information you
used to gather the information you used to write your paper. Your
sources may be books, articles, web pages, manuals, or any other
published source of information you can find. You will get no credit
if you fail to cite all your sources in a form that allows the reader
to access them. That means you have to give publication information
for each source. Publication information may be:
- The author (if known), title, and URL of a Web page.
- The author and title of a magazine article, along with the name of the
magazine and which issue ("December, 1999" for example).
- The author, title, publisher, year of publication, and page or chapter
numbers of a book.
- The vendor (company) name, title, date, and page numbers of a
manual.
How to Proceed
If you decide to do this assignment, proceed as follows:
- Gather Information
Read as much as you can. There are a couple of web pages listed
below to get you started. Search the web and the library to find
additional information. Read it all and think about it.
- Make an Outline
Decide how you are going to organize what you have learned. The
idea is to tell people what overclocking is, why it is important, how
it is done, what problems might be encountered, etc. Decide whether
you are going to write a broad overview of the topic (a survey paper)
or delve deeply into a sub-topic that you found particularly
interesting. Decide on the structure for your paper. There should be
four major sections: an introduction, the main body of the paper, a
brief summary, and a list of references.
- Write Your Paper
Once you have the structure set up write the paper. It is very
important that you use your own words as you write the paper. Just
cutting and pasting from your sources does not contitute "writing a
paper!" It's all right to include brief quotes from your sources,
provided you make the quotes accurate, make it clear that they are
quotes either by putting them inside quotation marks or (for longer
ones) indented from the rest of the text, and indicate which
source you are quoting by putting the number of the source from your
reference list in square brackets at the end of the quote.
Each abbreviation and technical term you use should be defined the
first time you use it in your paper, except for "really obvious"
things, like Hz. For example: "The PCI (Peripheral Component
Interconnect) bus was patented ..."
- Print It!
Be sure the first page has the title of your paper
and your name under that, both centered at the top of the page.
Number the pages either at the top or bottom of each page.
Do not produce a web page for this; write the paper using a word
processor and give me a printed copy.
Initial References
These are all web sites you can use to start your search for information
about overclocking. Note that the last two are CPU vendor sites; look
for information on "chipsets" there.
- "Ars Technica: CPU and Chipset Guide."
http://www.arstechnica.com/cpu/index.html
- http://slashdot.org (Surf from here to find discussions on
articles like the next one.)
- "'Overclockers' turn PCs into hot rods."
http://www.zdnet.com.au/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2524416,00.html
- "Intel 840 Chipset Product Overview."
http://developer.intel.com/design/chipsets/840/index.htm
- "AMD Athlon Technical Documentation."
http://www.amd.com/products/cpg/athlon/techdocs/index.html