The AnandTech 20th Anniversary Giveaway

Now that the commemorating is done, let’s get to the fun part of our 20th anniversary: the giveaway.

For some of our past anniversaries we’ve done hardware giveaways, and for our 20th anniversary I wanted to do the best giveaway yet. It only seemed fitting that as a thank you to the readers that have supported us over the last two decades, that we try to give something back to you.

I set out with a goal to do 20 days of giveaways, one for each year of AnandTech’s existence. To do so, myself, the other editors, and the sales team reached out to our friends at hardware vendors across the globe to line up hardware for our greatest giveaway ever. The results exceeded even my wildest expectations.

31 vendors have donated hardware for the AnandTech 20th anniversary giveaway, smashing even my most optimistic goals. We still haven’t finished adding up the value of all of the prizes, but it’s tens of thousands of dollars. It’s honestly almost more than we could handle, if not for the hard work of the Purch community team in helping out to organize all of this.

So a big thank you goes out to our friends at Intel, AMD, HTC, NVIDIA, Seasonic, ARM, Asus, and more, for providing us with so many prizes to give out to you guys. I knew we had a lot of friends, but it’s only after you ask for free hardware to give to random readers that you realize just how many friends you have. And similarly, how these companies are eager to make a good impression with you.

Starting today and running through May 23rd, we’re doing 20 days of giveaways. We have CPUs, motherboards, phones, tablets, video cards, cases, power supplies, laptops, and even some bona fide swag to give away. Each giveaway is only open for 48 hours, so you’re going to want to check in each and every weekday to enter that day’s giveaway(s). Many will enter, not as many will win, but with the number of prizes we have available the odds may be more in your favor than you think.

However for our many international readers, I need to apologize. We’ve not been able to do international giveaways, and the 20th anniversary giveaway is no different. AnandTech/Purch is too big to do a clandestine giveaway, and that means we need to follow all of the relevant local laws on giveaways. And, as it turns out, there are a lot of countries out there who either dislike giveaways or require that someone in their country wins a giveaway in order for it to be offered there. As a result, we’re only able to open these giveaways to residents of the United States. I’m genuinely sorry we can’t offer anything outside of the United States, but I hope you can understand.

Anyhow, for our first giveaway I thought it was only appropriate that we go full-circle and start back where AnandTech itself started: AMD. So please check out our AT20 Day 1 AMD giveaway for your chance to win a Ryzen 7 1800X, a Ryzen 5 1600X, or one of four Radeon RX 570 video cards. And then check back in tomorrow and the day after that (and the day after that) for future giveaways.

Celebrating AnandTech’s 20th Anniversary
Comments Locked

310 Comments

View All Comments

  • CharonPDX - Wednesday, April 26, 2017 - link

    What do I get for guessing the interfaces?

    Top I/O block, left to right: Yellow is joystick/MIDI, almost certainly has line in, line out, and microphone minijacks underneath it. Pink is DB-25 parallel port, underneath is a pair of DA-9 serial ports. Next to that is a pair of USB 1.1 ports. Next to that is the paired keyboard/mouse PS/2 ports.

    In the space between the slots and the back of the board are some audio plugs, for connecting to CD-ROM, front-panel headphone/microphone, etc.

    The slots are, from left to right: AMR (possibly CNR,) 3x 32-bit conventional PCI, AGP Pro, universal voltage. Perpendicular to those, the CPU slot is a Slot-A, the original Athlon slot.

    Three PC-133 SDRAM slots. parallel with the CPU slot

    Underneath the RAM is the standard 20-pin ATX power header. Ah, the days before 4-pin CPU power headers...

    Far left is a white jumper block for the front panel controls.

    At bottom is a partly cut off blue ATA/ATAPI (Probably "UDMA 100", could be UDMA 133, I don't recall precisely for that chipset.) There is almost certainly another ATA/ATAPI port and a floppy port on there, probably cut off in the photo.
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, April 27, 2017 - link

    You get my amazement. When I had thrown up that picture, I was expecting most people to think it was a Slot-1 board. Instead you got it right and really did name all of the interfaces. Well done! (Are you sure you don't work for AnandTech?)
  • CharonPDX - Thursday, April 27, 2017 - link

    Recognized it by the "K7V" moniker, I had some full-ATX variant of the K7V back in the day with my ultra-speedy 700 MHz Athlon.
  • its_venky - Thursday, April 27, 2017 - link

    Congratulations
  • akialwayz - Thursday, April 27, 2017 - link

    AWSOME JOB GUYS....Happy 20th!!
  • scmorange16 - Thursday, April 27, 2017 - link

    Happy Anniversary AnandTech. Congratulations from India!
  • babbage78 - Thursday, April 27, 2017 - link

    Congrats on the 20 years. I always come to this site for an in-depth and unbiased look into new tech and hope to do so for another 20 years. At least.
  • psychopac - Thursday, April 27, 2017 - link

    Congratulations on completing 20 years, keep it up!
  • Sailor23M - Thursday, April 27, 2017 - link

    Congrats on your 20th Anniversary guys, keep up the good work
  • Stochastic - Thursday, April 27, 2017 - link

    Congrats! I've been following the site religiously since 2006. Much of what I know about the tech industry is from years of reading Anandtech.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now