In this guide you can find all information for the upcoming HWBOT World Tour 2015 - North America Lan ETS event in Montreal, Canada on March 6 - 8.
See you all there!
The document reports on the results of the Rookie Rumble #9 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. Zwitterion93 from France won the overall competition with 141 points. The top submissions and overclocks are listed for each of the three stages. A total of 819 submissions were made by 295 participants, generating nearly 22,000 impressions on the competition page. The document provides detailed analysis of the hardware, overclocking results, exposure, and timeline of the competition.
Introducing OC Esports, The Next Generation Competitive Overclocking PlatformHWBOT
Introducting OC Esports (http://oc-esports.io), a new platform for competitive overclocking by the HWBOT team. This new platform brings overclocking to the next level by establishing the first concept of OC Season and an all-encompassing structure for online and live competitions.
This document summarizes the Rookie Rumble #14 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and results for the 303 participants and 771 submissions across multiple stages and categories. The top submissions achieved world record frequencies up to 5.3GHz. Analysis of the hardware used found most common were Core i7 4790K CPUs, ASUS motherboards, and Corsair memory. Exposure for the competition included nearly 10,500 impressions on the HWBOT website.
HWBOT compiled an infographic on the overclocking activities at the 2014 Computex tradeshow. It includes figures on the events, LN2 usage, world records, livestream and more.
Overclockers from 143 countries submitted results to HWBOT in 2014, representing 73% of the world's countries. There were over 242,000 score submissions in total, a significant increase from 2011. The benchmark most used was XTU, accounting for over 93,000 submissions over 32 days of running time. 59 teams competed in the team cup, with Overclock.net having the most submissions at over 7,600. The most viewed individual result was an overclocker's 3DMark Fire Strike score that received 11,000 views.
The document provides a report on the Rookie Rumble #11 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It summarizes the competition details and rankings, top performers in each stage, hardware specifications of participants, and analytics on exposure and participation. The overall winner was DaNE from France, who won stages 1 and 3, while IOWA from Italy won stage 2. Over 250 participants used a variety of processors, motherboards, memory, and cooling solutions.
The document discusses starting an overclocking community for mobile devices by establishing the pillars of an overclocking ecosystem. It notes that overclocking on desktop PCs is driven by dedicated benchmarks, competitions, hardware designed for overclocking, and unlocked BIOS/tools, while mobile overclocking lacks structure and industry support. The author proposes that Hackerspace Taipei help kick off a mobile overclocking ecosystem by preparing the HWBOT Prime benchmark for Android, developing unlocked kernels for devices like Raspberry Pi and Odroid to enable overclocking, and building custom ROMs that integrate overclocking tools. Challenges are outlined for each of these projects.
Report of the HWBOT Rookie Rumble #19 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 350 overclockers during a three week period in June.
More info: http://oc-esports.io/#!/round/rookie_rumble_19
The document reports on the results of the Rookie Rumble #9 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. Zwitterion93 from France won the overall competition with 141 points. The top submissions and overclocks are listed for each of the three stages. A total of 819 submissions were made by 295 participants, generating nearly 22,000 impressions on the competition page. The document provides detailed analysis of the hardware, overclocking results, exposure, and timeline of the competition.
Introducing OC Esports, The Next Generation Competitive Overclocking PlatformHWBOT
Introducting OC Esports (http://oc-esports.io), a new platform for competitive overclocking by the HWBOT team. This new platform brings overclocking to the next level by establishing the first concept of OC Season and an all-encompassing structure for online and live competitions.
This document summarizes the Rookie Rumble #14 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and results for the 303 participants and 771 submissions across multiple stages and categories. The top submissions achieved world record frequencies up to 5.3GHz. Analysis of the hardware used found most common were Core i7 4790K CPUs, ASUS motherboards, and Corsair memory. Exposure for the competition included nearly 10,500 impressions on the HWBOT website.
HWBOT compiled an infographic on the overclocking activities at the 2014 Computex tradeshow. It includes figures on the events, LN2 usage, world records, livestream and more.
Overclockers from 143 countries submitted results to HWBOT in 2014, representing 73% of the world's countries. There were over 242,000 score submissions in total, a significant increase from 2011. The benchmark most used was XTU, accounting for over 93,000 submissions over 32 days of running time. 59 teams competed in the team cup, with Overclock.net having the most submissions at over 7,600. The most viewed individual result was an overclocker's 3DMark Fire Strike score that received 11,000 views.
The document provides a report on the Rookie Rumble #11 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It summarizes the competition details and rankings, top performers in each stage, hardware specifications of participants, and analytics on exposure and participation. The overall winner was DaNE from France, who won stages 1 and 3, while IOWA from Italy won stage 2. Over 250 participants used a variety of processors, motherboards, memory, and cooling solutions.
The document discusses starting an overclocking community for mobile devices by establishing the pillars of an overclocking ecosystem. It notes that overclocking on desktop PCs is driven by dedicated benchmarks, competitions, hardware designed for overclocking, and unlocked BIOS/tools, while mobile overclocking lacks structure and industry support. The author proposes that Hackerspace Taipei help kick off a mobile overclocking ecosystem by preparing the HWBOT Prime benchmark for Android, developing unlocked kernels for devices like Raspberry Pi and Odroid to enable overclocking, and building custom ROMs that integrate overclocking tools. Challenges are outlined for each of these projects.
Report of the HWBOT Rookie Rumble #19 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 350 overclockers during a three week period in June.
More info: http://oc-esports.io/#!/round/rookie_rumble_19
This document summarizes the results of the Rookie Rumble #12 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and statistics on the 269 participants and their 490 submissions. The highest CPU overclock was 5.15GHz. Most common hardware used included Intel Core i7-4790K and Core i5-4690K CPUs as well as MSI and ASUS motherboards. The competition generated over 7,000 page views on the HWBOT website.
Report of the HWBOT Novice Nimble #1 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 21 teams during a six week period in January, February, and March.
http://oc-esports.io/#!/round/novice_nimble_1
This document summarizes the results of the Rookie Rumble #18 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and analyses of the 373 participants and over 1,000 submissions. The top performers achieved frequencies up to 5.3GHz and hardware records in categories like the Xeon E5 2698 V3. Outreach efforts included pop-up invites, newsletters, social media posts, and articles to promote the event.
PAX Australia 2016 Panel "Pushing Limits: Going Beyond 8 GHz"HWBOT
The simplest and easiest way to understand a very general concept of overclocking is that of increasing the processor frequency to improve performance. The lucky few among you may have a system that runs at 5GHz or above. Extreme overclockers however, go well beyond that limit.
On November 4th 2016, Australian Overclockers held a public panel at the PAX AUS 2016 event at the Melbourne Convention center. Hosted at the Wombat Theater the panel will discuss the difficulties encountered when overclocking beyond 8GHz and will include an impressive live demo of an LN2 cooled overclocked system running at 8GHz!
http://x.hwbot.org/event/pax-aus-2016-panel-pushing-limits-overclocking-beyond-8-ghz/
This document provides an overview and safety information for liquid nitrogen certification Level 1. It discusses HWBOT's mission to evangelize and professionalize overclocking. It outlines risks of working with liquid nitrogen like cold burns and frostbite. Safety requirements are explained such as training, personal protective equipment. Procedures for various incidents are described, including calling for help, evaluating risk, and seeking medical assistance. The document aims to educate on safe liquid nitrogen practices.
This report summarizes GPUPI benchmarking statistics and hardware usage trends among overclockers from November 2014 to August 2016. It finds that the Core i7 4790K and GeForce GTX 980 Ti are the most commonly used CPU and GPU. The report also analyzes benchmark submissions, user leagues, web traffic, benchmark versions, cooling methods, frequencies, motherboard brands and models. The data comes from the thousands of submissions made to the HWBOT GPUPI benchmarks over this time period.
This session provides an architectural introduction of Intel’s enthusiast system solutions, with an emphasis on performance tuning for gaming and content creation. The discussion will include key overclocking ecosystem ingredients such as Intel® Extreme Memory Profile (Intel® XMP) technology. Live demos will accompany our discussion. Attendees will leave with a good understanding of the overclocking capabilities of Intel’s latest processors.
http://myeventagenda.com/sessions/0B9F4191-1C29-408A-8B61-65D7520025A8/7/5
It’s that time of the year again when overclocking teams on HWBOT start eyeing the HWBOT Team Cup, the ultimate prize in team-oriented overlocking. It’s a contest that pits dozens of teams of overclockers against each other with a total of thirty stages that covers virtually every hardware category imaginable.
Running throughout the months of July, August and September, the HWBOT Team Cup is surely the truest test of competitive team overclocking, requiring the broadest possible array of skill sets with overlockers invited to bench on everything from the latest Skylake and Haswell-E platforms to legacy Intel and AMD platforms including stages devoted to DDR2 and DDR tweaking as well as two newly devised ‘Dogpile’ stages that require you to make as many submission as possible on as many CPUs as possible.
This year’s contest involves five separate challenges or sub-competitions as we refer to them, each with an historical epoch in mind. Contest categories include Current Generation, Modern, Legacy, Vintage and Dogpile. Let’s look at the stages in more detail regarding specific hardware limitations and benchmarks.
This document provides an overview of overclocking innovations for 2016, including:
- A live demonstration of overclocking Intel's first 10-core desktop processor using the Intel X99 chipset.
- A discussion of new overclocking capabilities for Intel Core processors like per-core overclocking and AVX ratio offset.
- Details on motherboard technologies from ASUS that enhance overclocking, like the ROG OC Panel and microcontrollers.
- An explanation of overclocking options for Intel 6th generation Core processors using the Intel Z170 chipset, including unlocked ratios and memory overclocking.
The document discusses tools and technologies for overclocking, like the Intel
This year has been very exciting for PC enthusiasts with six processor launches in less than ten months. The new processors feature up to eighteen overclockable cores which is significantly more than last year’s flagship ten-core model. The extra cores present new challenges for overclockers on both mainstream and high-end desktop platforms. In this panel we discuss the ins and outs of multi-core overclocking and show you a live demo of an 18-core system pushed to its limits.
Slidedeck from panel discussion at PAX Australia 2017
HWBOT X San Pedro Sula Event Report (June 10, 2017)HWBOT
For the first time in Honduras, the first Amateur Overclocking Tournament will be held. This event took place in June at the San Pedro Sula University, which has provided us with support for what is Overclocking Community that Is being formed in the country.
http://x.hwbot.org/event/first-amateur-2017-overclocking-tournament/
On November 12th and 13th the FFOC (French Federation of Overclocking) held their first ever solo overclocking event in France. Dubbed the Atelier Overclocking and PC Building event, it was in fact also the very first HWBOT X event to take place in France. The event offered PC building classes plus a chance to engage in some competitive overclocking. It took place at Gamer’s Assembly Halloween Edition, a smaller version of the world LAN Party that played a pivotal part of the HWBOT World Tour earlier this year.
The HWBOT St.Benoit event was sponsored by HWBOT and Seasonic and hosted in the city of St. Benoit not far from Poitiers in France. Doors opened on Friday 11th when gamers, overclockers and enthusiasts were invited to get into in the venue and begin setting up in preparation for the two days to come. The doors were then opened on Saturday morning and remained open until 5pm on Sunday.
More information: http://x.hwbot.org/blog/hwbot-x-st-benoit-france-november-2016/
In this presentation, Pieter from HWBOT takes the audience down the rabbit hole of extreme overclocking. The aim of the presentation is to explain why Overclocking is more than a rich man's game. Overclocking requires skill, insight in technologies and science, and a solid problem-solving strategy.
"Overclocking is not something you can just pick up and do, you need to put a lot of love into it" - Joseph "Steponz" Stepongzi
The document summarizes HWBOT's World Tour 2016 overclocking competition events. It discusses HWBOT's mission to promote overclocking. The World Tour 2016 included 7 events around the world with approximately 450 participants total after the first 3 events, growing significantly from 30 participants in 2014. The document also provides background on overclocking, noting that it allows getting more performance from hardware by pushing it beyond factory specifications. It describes overclocking workshops held as part of the events to teach participants.
Report of the HWBOT Novice Nimble #1 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 21 teams during a six week period in April and May.
http://oc-esports.io/#!/round/novice_nimble_2
This document provides information about the ROG OC Showdown event taking place June 6-8, 2015 in Taipei, Taiwan. The event will include a HWBOT World Series overclocking competition with cash and hardware prizes. Thirty seats are available for the 3-day overclocking competition, which participants must bring their own hardware and equipment for. The document provides contact information and notes participants are responsible for their own accommodation.
This document summarizes the results of Rookie Rumble #16, an overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and analyses of the 407 participants' submissions across various hardware categories and stages of the competition. The top submissions set several hardware category records, with the highest CPU frequency reaching 5411 MHz. Exposure statistics show over 15,000 people viewed the competition page and over 1000 submissions were made.
Report of the HWBOT Rookie Rumble #15 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 357 overclockers during a three week period in February and March.
This document summarizes the results of the Rookie Rumble #12 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and statistics on the 269 participants and their 490 submissions. The highest CPU overclock was 5.15GHz. Most common hardware used included Intel Core i7-4790K and Core i5-4690K CPUs as well as MSI and ASUS motherboards. The competition generated over 7,000 page views on the HWBOT website.
Report of the HWBOT Novice Nimble #1 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 21 teams during a six week period in January, February, and March.
http://oc-esports.io/#!/round/novice_nimble_1
This document summarizes the results of the Rookie Rumble #18 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and analyses of the 373 participants and over 1,000 submissions. The top performers achieved frequencies up to 5.3GHz and hardware records in categories like the Xeon E5 2698 V3. Outreach efforts included pop-up invites, newsletters, social media posts, and articles to promote the event.
PAX Australia 2016 Panel "Pushing Limits: Going Beyond 8 GHz"HWBOT
The simplest and easiest way to understand a very general concept of overclocking is that of increasing the processor frequency to improve performance. The lucky few among you may have a system that runs at 5GHz or above. Extreme overclockers however, go well beyond that limit.
On November 4th 2016, Australian Overclockers held a public panel at the PAX AUS 2016 event at the Melbourne Convention center. Hosted at the Wombat Theater the panel will discuss the difficulties encountered when overclocking beyond 8GHz and will include an impressive live demo of an LN2 cooled overclocked system running at 8GHz!
http://x.hwbot.org/event/pax-aus-2016-panel-pushing-limits-overclocking-beyond-8-ghz/
This document provides an overview and safety information for liquid nitrogen certification Level 1. It discusses HWBOT's mission to evangelize and professionalize overclocking. It outlines risks of working with liquid nitrogen like cold burns and frostbite. Safety requirements are explained such as training, personal protective equipment. Procedures for various incidents are described, including calling for help, evaluating risk, and seeking medical assistance. The document aims to educate on safe liquid nitrogen practices.
This report summarizes GPUPI benchmarking statistics and hardware usage trends among overclockers from November 2014 to August 2016. It finds that the Core i7 4790K and GeForce GTX 980 Ti are the most commonly used CPU and GPU. The report also analyzes benchmark submissions, user leagues, web traffic, benchmark versions, cooling methods, frequencies, motherboard brands and models. The data comes from the thousands of submissions made to the HWBOT GPUPI benchmarks over this time period.
This session provides an architectural introduction of Intel’s enthusiast system solutions, with an emphasis on performance tuning for gaming and content creation. The discussion will include key overclocking ecosystem ingredients such as Intel® Extreme Memory Profile (Intel® XMP) technology. Live demos will accompany our discussion. Attendees will leave with a good understanding of the overclocking capabilities of Intel’s latest processors.
http://myeventagenda.com/sessions/0B9F4191-1C29-408A-8B61-65D7520025A8/7/5
It’s that time of the year again when overclocking teams on HWBOT start eyeing the HWBOT Team Cup, the ultimate prize in team-oriented overlocking. It’s a contest that pits dozens of teams of overclockers against each other with a total of thirty stages that covers virtually every hardware category imaginable.
Running throughout the months of July, August and September, the HWBOT Team Cup is surely the truest test of competitive team overclocking, requiring the broadest possible array of skill sets with overlockers invited to bench on everything from the latest Skylake and Haswell-E platforms to legacy Intel and AMD platforms including stages devoted to DDR2 and DDR tweaking as well as two newly devised ‘Dogpile’ stages that require you to make as many submission as possible on as many CPUs as possible.
This year’s contest involves five separate challenges or sub-competitions as we refer to them, each with an historical epoch in mind. Contest categories include Current Generation, Modern, Legacy, Vintage and Dogpile. Let’s look at the stages in more detail regarding specific hardware limitations and benchmarks.
This document provides an overview of overclocking innovations for 2016, including:
- A live demonstration of overclocking Intel's first 10-core desktop processor using the Intel X99 chipset.
- A discussion of new overclocking capabilities for Intel Core processors like per-core overclocking and AVX ratio offset.
- Details on motherboard technologies from ASUS that enhance overclocking, like the ROG OC Panel and microcontrollers.
- An explanation of overclocking options for Intel 6th generation Core processors using the Intel Z170 chipset, including unlocked ratios and memory overclocking.
The document discusses tools and technologies for overclocking, like the Intel
This year has been very exciting for PC enthusiasts with six processor launches in less than ten months. The new processors feature up to eighteen overclockable cores which is significantly more than last year’s flagship ten-core model. The extra cores present new challenges for overclockers on both mainstream and high-end desktop platforms. In this panel we discuss the ins and outs of multi-core overclocking and show you a live demo of an 18-core system pushed to its limits.
Slidedeck from panel discussion at PAX Australia 2017
HWBOT X San Pedro Sula Event Report (June 10, 2017)HWBOT
For the first time in Honduras, the first Amateur Overclocking Tournament will be held. This event took place in June at the San Pedro Sula University, which has provided us with support for what is Overclocking Community that Is being formed in the country.
http://x.hwbot.org/event/first-amateur-2017-overclocking-tournament/
On November 12th and 13th the FFOC (French Federation of Overclocking) held their first ever solo overclocking event in France. Dubbed the Atelier Overclocking and PC Building event, it was in fact also the very first HWBOT X event to take place in France. The event offered PC building classes plus a chance to engage in some competitive overclocking. It took place at Gamer’s Assembly Halloween Edition, a smaller version of the world LAN Party that played a pivotal part of the HWBOT World Tour earlier this year.
The HWBOT St.Benoit event was sponsored by HWBOT and Seasonic and hosted in the city of St. Benoit not far from Poitiers in France. Doors opened on Friday 11th when gamers, overclockers and enthusiasts were invited to get into in the venue and begin setting up in preparation for the two days to come. The doors were then opened on Saturday morning and remained open until 5pm on Sunday.
More information: http://x.hwbot.org/blog/hwbot-x-st-benoit-france-november-2016/
In this presentation, Pieter from HWBOT takes the audience down the rabbit hole of extreme overclocking. The aim of the presentation is to explain why Overclocking is more than a rich man's game. Overclocking requires skill, insight in technologies and science, and a solid problem-solving strategy.
"Overclocking is not something you can just pick up and do, you need to put a lot of love into it" - Joseph "Steponz" Stepongzi
The document summarizes HWBOT's World Tour 2016 overclocking competition events. It discusses HWBOT's mission to promote overclocking. The World Tour 2016 included 7 events around the world with approximately 450 participants total after the first 3 events, growing significantly from 30 participants in 2014. The document also provides background on overclocking, noting that it allows getting more performance from hardware by pushing it beyond factory specifications. It describes overclocking workshops held as part of the events to teach participants.
Report of the HWBOT Novice Nimble #1 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 21 teams during a six week period in April and May.
http://oc-esports.io/#!/round/novice_nimble_2
This document provides information about the ROG OC Showdown event taking place June 6-8, 2015 in Taipei, Taiwan. The event will include a HWBOT World Series overclocking competition with cash and hardware prizes. Thirty seats are available for the 3-day overclocking competition, which participants must bring their own hardware and equipment for. The document provides contact information and notes participants are responsible for their own accommodation.
This document summarizes the results of Rookie Rumble #16, an overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and analyses of the 407 participants' submissions across various hardware categories and stages of the competition. The top submissions set several hardware category records, with the highest CPU frequency reaching 5411 MHz. Exposure statistics show over 15,000 people viewed the competition page and over 1000 submissions were made.
Report of the HWBOT Rookie Rumble #15 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 357 overclockers during a three week period in February and March.
Report of the HWBOT Rookie Rumble #14 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 303 overclockers during a three week period in January and February.
This document summarizes the results of the Rookie Rumble #13 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings for the overall competition as well as each stage. It also analyzes the hardware and participants, with the highest overclocked frequency being 5507 MHz. Charts and graphs show results for CPU models, cooling solutions, memory, and other components. The competition engaged 364 participants who submitted 864 results, generating over 10,000 impressions on the competition page.
Title: Making Money the Easy Way: A Quick Guide to Generating IncomeWilliamZinsmeister
Welcome to "Making Money the Easy Way: A Quick Guide to Generating Income." This book is designed to provide you with practical, actionable strategies to generate income with minimal effort. Whether you’re looking to supplement your current income or create a full-time revenue stream, this guide covers a variety of methods to help you achieve your financial goals. We will explore opportunities available online, various investment strategies, profitable side hustles, creative approaches, and essential financial tips to ensure sustainable income growth.
The Future of B2B Audience Targeting with LinkedInTajul Islam
Tired of pouring money into LinkedIn ads that don't convert?
A marketer’s guide to unlocking the full potential of LinkedIn’s extensive targeting resources and partner tools.
There's a better way. This guide unlocks the secrets to laser-targeting your ideal B2B audience on LinkedIn. Forget generic campaigns. We'll show you how to combine LinkedIn's advanced features with your existing customer data to reach high-value decision-makers directly. Imagine reaching the exact companies and people who can benefit most from your product or service.
Download our free eBook and discover a data-driven approach to LinkedIn marketing that delivers real results. Stop chasing the wrong audience – start targeting the right ones today
How to Generate Add to Calendar Link using Cal.etY
Cal.et is a free tool that helps you create “Add to Calendar” links for your events. It supports popular calendar platforms like Google, Apple, Outlook, Yahoo, and Office365. Users can generate short, shareable URLs, customize event details, and even create QR codes for easy access. It’s ideal for embedding event links in emails, websites, and social media, making it easier for participants to save event information directly to their calendars.
This document was submitted as part of interview process for Content Strategist position at Viapulsa, an Indonesian tech company which offers service to convert/transfer mobile credits into bank account.
Meta Revolutionizes Product Promotion with Automated Video Catalog Ads.pptxprovidenceadworks416
As a digital marketer, I am thrilled to see Meta revolutionizing product promotion with its new automated video catalog ads. This innovative feature allows anyone to seamlessly integrate dynamic video content into my catalog product ads, enhancing the visual appeal and engagement of campaigns. By leveraging Meta's advanced AI and machine learning capabilities, one can automatically deliver tailored video ads to the most interested users, boosting traffic and conversions. This new approach not only simplifies the ad creation process but also significantly improves performance and ROI.
This document was submitted as part of interview process for Marketing Specialist position at DTA Promotion, an Indonesian company which offers 360 degree marketing services, including ATL and BTL advertising platform.
2024 Trend Updates: What Really Works In SEO & Content MarketingSearch Engine Journal
The future of SEO is trending toward a more human-first and user-centric approach, powered by AI intelligence and collaboration. Are you ready?
Watch as we explore which SEO trends to prioritize to achieve sustainable growth and deliver reliable results. We’ll dive into best practices to adapt your strategy around industry-wide disruptions like SGE, how to navigate the top challenges SEO professionals are facing, and proven tactics for prioritizing quality and building trust.
You’ll hear:
- The top SEO trends to prioritize in 2024 to achieve long-term success.
- Predictions for SGE’s impact, and how to adapt.
- What E-E-A-T really means, and how to implement it holistically (hint: it’s never been more important).
With Zack Kadish and Alex Carchietta, we’ll show you which SEO trends to ignore and which to focus on, along with the solution to overcoming rapid, significant and disruptive Google algorithm updates.
If you’re looking to cut through the noise of constant SEO and content trends to drive success, you won’t want to miss this webinar.
2. Lan ETS - Montreal, Canada
North America
Gamers Assembly - Poitiers, France
Europe
Computex - Taipei, Taiwan
Asia
March 6 - 8
April 4 - 6
June 6 - 8
4. Lan ETS - Montreal, Canada
North America
March 6 - 8
Location
Pavillon A, École de technologie supérieure, Montréal - Canada
5. Lan ETS - Montreal, Canada
North America
March 6 - 8
Venue
At Lan ETS – Canada’s largest LAN Party – 1,000 Players
6. Lan ETS - Montreal, Canada
North America
March 6 - 8
Activities
World Series for Amateurs
3 Days of Overclocking
Overclocking Workshop
Join the overclocking competition exclusive to amateurs and HWBOT Rookies. Qualify
for the elimination phase and battle your way to the final on stage!
Register on location for the overclocking workshop. Learn the basics and join your first
amateur overclocking competition.
Are you just a casual bencher or never tried Liquid Nitrogen? Book your spot and join us
for three days of LN2 overclocking!
7. Lan ETS - Montreal, Canada
North America
March 6 - 8
Activities by Leagues
Rookie Novice Enthusiast Extreme Elite
World Series for Amateurs
Leagues
Overclocking Workshop
3 Days of Overclocking*
HWBOT World Series*
Tag team Battle
recommended
training
* bench spot ticket required!
8. Lan ETS - Montreal, Canada
North America
March 6 - 8
Seating Availability
World Series for Amateurs
3 Days of Overclocking
Overclocking Workshop
Open to all amateur overclockers. Unlimited opportunities to qualify via the workshop or
on your own. The best qualify for the elimination phase. (No Extreme / Elite allowed)
Register on location for the daily workshop.
Each workshop accommodates four students. Lan ETS gamers & visitors welcome!
26 seats available, book your bench spot now via Eventbrite page.
9. Lan ETS - Montreal, Canada
North America
March 6 - 8
Event Schedule
Arrival & Setup + Tag team Registration
All night Freestyle OC
From 5PMMarch 6
March 7 10AM – 6PM Workshop + World Series for Amateurs Qualifiers
All Day & Night Freestyle OC + HWBOT World Series access
March 8 10AM – 4PM World Series for Amateurs Finals
All Day Freestyle OC + HWBOT World Series
From 5PM Packing & Departure
10. Lan ETS - Montreal, Canada
North America
March 6 - 8
Amateur Schedule
Setup – Workshop RegistrationMarch 6
March 7 45min Slot Workshop sessions
45min Slot World Series for Amateurs Qualifiers
March 8
Tag team 3 vs. 3 Tag team Battle
Finals - Stage World Series for Amateurs Finals
> Double Elimination Tournament
From 4pm Packing & Departure
11. Lan ETS - Montreal, Canada
North America
March 6 - 8
Competition Structure
March 6 March 7 March 8
Registration
Workshop
+
Qualifiers
HWBOT World Series
12. Lan ETS - Montreal, Canada
North America
March 6 - 8
Packing List
Bring Your Own Hardware (BYOH)
This is a BYOH event.
Make sure to pack all your gear, pots & mounts, PSU, monitors & 1x power bar
Label Your Gear
This event takes place on a 1,000 Gamer Lan Party.
The OC Area is shielded off, but we recommend that you mark all your equipment.
Sleeping Gear / Hotel
If you plan to use the dormitory area/showers of the Lan, pack all your necessary gear.
There are also plenty of hotels around the location, Google is your friend.
13. Lan ETS - Montreal, Canada
North America
March 6 - 8
Contact
Accommodation Tips in Montreal
Trouffman (trouffman@overclocking-tv.com)
General Inquiries - HWBOT
Timothee (xyala@hwbot.org) / Pieter (pieter@hwbot.org)
General Inquiries - Overclock.net
El Gappo (el_gappo@overclock.net)
14. Lan ETS - Montreal, Canada
North America
March 6 - 8
Event Partners
Thanks to our event partners