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    Saturday, December 28, 2019

    Hardware support: My GFs dad swears up and down that x86 is a terrible architecture and that PowerPC is superior.

    Hardware support: My GFs dad swears up and down that x86 is a terrible architecture and that PowerPC is superior.


    My GFs dad swears up and down that x86 is a terrible architecture and that PowerPC is superior.

    Posted: 27 Dec 2019 10:12 PM PST

    Can someone explain if hes right or completely off base? It keeps coming up.

    submitted by /u/ProtegeGarage
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    RAM overclock stability and heat management.

    Posted: 27 Dec 2019 08:36 AM PST

    (G.SKILL) G.SKILL Announces New Ultra Low-Latency DDR4 32GB-Module Kits

    Posted: 27 Dec 2019 11:14 AM PST

    [VideoCardz] Leaked slide confirms Intel 10th Gen Core K-series are 125W TDP

    Posted: 27 Dec 2019 10:59 AM PST

    [VideoCardz] Intel Core i9-10900K to boost up to 5.3 GHz, specifications of 10th Gen Core Comet Lake-S leaked

    Posted: 27 Dec 2019 09:36 PM PST

    SK Hynix to Introduce New NVMe SSDs With 128-Layer '4D NAND'

    Posted: 27 Dec 2019 08:55 AM PST

    [GamersNexus] HW News - Higher GPU Prices in 2020, 80-Core CPU Newcomer, LGA1200 Socket

    Posted: 28 Dec 2019 01:52 AM PST

    Ice Lake based Macbook shows up on Geekbench

    Posted: 27 Dec 2019 03:09 AM PST

    How fundamentally incompatible are Intel's LGA 115x platforms?

    Posted: 27 Dec 2019 07:06 AM PST

    We know that with a proper pinout, LGA1156 is cross-compatible with P67. We also know that there's a high degree of cross-compatibility between LGA1151v1 and LGA1151v2 via BIOS modding.

    My question is simple: has the signaling protocol changed at all since LGA1156? Is there anything (other than that fact it wouldn't be useful) preventing a motherboard manufacturer with proper knowledge from building a Z390 motherboard with an LGA1156 socket?

    If the answer is no: What was the benefit of introducing new platforms? There were some platform changes that would result in incompatibility (addition/removal of FIVR and move to DDR4), but those don't seem to be particularly difficult challenges to work around - FIVR could have simply been skipped over, and DDR4 motherboards simply wouldn't have supported older CPUs.

    What stopped LGA1156 (aside from the fact the CPU wouldn't physically fit) from supporting an i9-9900K? We already know that Coffee Lake still contains a DDR3 controller, so that's certainly not a reason.

    submitted by /u/pntsrgd
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    So, DDR5 is now "officially" dead for 2020?

    Posted: 28 Dec 2019 01:24 AM PST

    Zen 3 is DDR4 confirmed by AMD themselves, Intel is stuck with ++, and despite all the promised DDR5 product launches for late 2019 that never happened and estimates for 2020 don't look good either

    Maybe I am missing something?

    submitted by /u/fxgod
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    Researchers Teleport Data Between Two Chips Via Quantum Entanglement

    Posted: 27 Dec 2019 01:13 PM PST

    Honoring Chuck Peddle; Father Of The 6502 And The Chips That Went With It

    Posted: 27 Dec 2019 03:05 AM PST

    Ultimate Workstation Pt1: $20,000 of GPUs & 3970X PC Build, ft. BPS Customs

    Posted: 27 Dec 2019 11:39 AM PST

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