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    Hardware support: /r/hardware's best of 2019 - submit nominations here

    Hardware support: /r/hardware's best of 2019 - submit nominations here


    /r/hardware's best of 2019 - submit nominations here

    Posted: 23 Dec 2019 07:20 AM PST

    It's time for Reddit's Best of 2019 Awards.

    Choose your favorite /r/hardware submisson or comment of 2019!

    Make your nominations here and/or upvote your favorites.

    You are welcome to categorize your nominations, i.e:

    Best Post of the Year

    Most informative comment

    Best (Text) Review

    Best Video review

    etc. -

    Only one nomination per comment. Please do not nominate yourself. You may only nominate submissions made in 2019.

    This thread is set to contest mode which sorts comments randomly and hides vote scores. In January, the votes will be tallied and a results thread will be posted. We will give reddit gold to the top submissions!

    submitted by /u/bizude
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    PS5, Xbox Series X SSD may use software-defined flash to boost speeds

    Posted: 23 Dec 2019 12:04 PM PST

    Macronix to Start Shipments of 3D NAND in 2020

    Posted: 23 Dec 2019 06:36 PM PST

    Team 6502 - The story of the team ​behind the chip that launched a revolution

    Posted: 23 Dec 2019 07:54 AM PST

    Behind Samsung’s $116 billion bid for chip supremacy

    Posted: 23 Dec 2019 08:37 AM PST

    Tiger Lake 15/28W vs Ice Lake 15W SPEC scores leak.

    Posted: 23 Dec 2019 03:30 AM PST

    https://mobile.twitter.com/9550pro/status/1209051526607429635

    Edit: Keep in mind the TGL part has 500 MHz all core and 400 MHz single core on the 1065G7.

    submitted by /u/GhostOfJimLahey
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    Chinese CPUs Now Work On Domestically-Produced Operating System

    Posted: 23 Dec 2019 12:55 PM PST

    Innolux Latest Panel Development Plans - Megazone Display w/ 2 Million+ Dimming Zones Q2 2020

    Posted: 23 Dec 2019 08:01 AM PST

    (HotHardware) Addlink S70 SSD Review: Speedy, Affordable NVMe Storage

    Posted: 23 Dec 2019 05:24 PM PST

    How hard is it for companies like Intel or AMD to make dual CPU socket architecture for consumer CPUs?

    Posted: 23 Dec 2019 11:10 AM PST

    Lately I found out about how old Xeon CPUs in dual configuration perform as well as modern computers setups, or even better, depending on the budget. I wonder if it is possible to do the same for consumer CPUs while keeping reasonable costs for the consumer? They already do that for servers, so maybe it's not that much of a problem to do it on consumer CPUs? ECC REG RAM is not needed so it's probably lowering costs.

    submitted by /u/twentyfourismax
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    Any book recommendations for x86 desktops?

    Posted: 23 Dec 2019 06:50 AM PST

    If you look at my post history you'll see a lot about me looking in-depth into trying to understand the hard ware of a typical x86 computer, with my main focus on chipsets, and the motherboard. Is there any books anyone would recommend to try and understand the architecture of x86 computers in a moderate depth, for example how a x86 computer is able to support multiple forms of memory (RAM, ROM), IO, registers even. Thank you.

    submitted by /u/TryingToImprove0
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