1) Most motherboard manufacturers have beefed up thier BX boards to include support for 133FSB, AGP 4X, ATA/66, etc. Try
http://www.abit-usa.com and
http://www.asus.com for reliable BX boards that are EXTREMELY overclockable.
*****BULLSHIT EDITED BY SLACKMASTER 2000********
2) "E" Processors are "coppermine" and only have 256K cache. "B" Processors run at 133Mhz FSB. "EB" Processors, you guessed it, are coppermine and run at 133Mhz. All CPU's over 600Mhz are coppermine, though Intel has chosen to drop the "E" these processors, unless they are also "B", in which case they are "EB".
******END OF EDIT**********************
3) If you bought a brand new sports car, and noticed that the manufacturer rigged it such that the gas pedal only depresses three quarters the way to the floor, wouldn't you do something about it? If you overclock a CPU and it is operating within temperature and voltage guidelines, then you are not doing anything "wrong". Intel is very good at making fast PIII processors right now. When they're making 600Mhz processors, as we speak, do you think they set their machines to "suck?" Nope. They make 600Mhz CPU's the same damn way they make 900Mhz CPU's. Lucky you, if you know how to overclock, and have a CPU that'll do it.
What CPU's will do it? Well, like I said, they're still making 600Mhz CPU's right now, but they're making them well enough that they *could* run a lot higher. So if you get a truely *new* 600Mhz CPU, your chances of overclocking it are much better than if you get a "new" 600Mhz CPU that was actually manufactured 10 months ago! This is one reason overclocking is risky unless you buy pretested CPU's.
In order to overclock successfully you need to understand a) Temperature b) Voltage c) CPU Multiplier d) Bus Multipliers - PCI & AGP (note that an Athlon machine has a system bus that is seperate from the memory bus, meaning that you have an additional multiplier to consider) e) how they all work together to fry your video card

. If you're not willing to learn the process, then don't do it. Overclocking is very dangerous if you don't know what you're doing. In this case, only buy pretested/preconfigured overclocked systems if the price is right.
Slackmaster 2000
[Edited by Slackmaster2K on 08-19-2000 at 14:13]