Hardware support: Come shape the future of Intel graphics! AYA starts in 1.5 hours (9AM PST) on r/Intel, we'd love to hear your feedback! |
- Come shape the future of Intel graphics! AYA starts in 1.5 hours (9AM PST) on r/Intel, we'd love to hear your feedback!
- Samsung Odyssey G9 49" Curved 5K 240 Hz FreeSync & G-Sync Gaming Monitor at CES 2020
- Cache Is King - Architects at IBM, Intel, AMD, and Marvell weigh in on use of L4 cache memory in servers
- [Anandtech]NVIDIA Cuts Price of GeForce RTX 2060 To $299
- Today, the day of permanent price cuts: Nvidia RTX, Intel Xeon, HTC Vive and Oculus Go
- Red Hat Recommends Disabling The Intel Linux Graphics Driver Over Hardware Flaw
- [Gamers Nexus] Der8auer & Steve: All the Problems with CES - Laziness, Lying, & Bad Products
- Intel’s Confusing Messaging: Is Comet Lake Better Than Ice Lake?
- OLOy: 128gb Threadripper 3960X 3970X Memory Tested
- Why do hardware manufactures name things so terribly?
- Oracle just released a whopping 334 security fixes in critical patch update | ZDNet
- The PinePhone starts shipping—a Linux-powered smartphone for $150
- MIPI alliance announces I3C vers 1.1
- Another reason to hurry with Windows server patches: A new RDP vulnerability
- Why is Intel Facing a 14nm Processor Shortage Despite Lack of 10nm Volume Production?
- [Discussing] Why Radeon VII on paper stronger than RTX 2080 S but weaker on games .
- We got EVGA in Trouble with Nvidia - Which Video was that? Charity Q&A Battle with GN Steve
- Why You Should Wait To Buy A New TV | Best 2020 TVs
- Walkthrough of the EK Waterblocks Suite at CES 2020
- Does decent firm-/software support exist in consumer hardware?
Posted: 16 Jan 2020 07:26 AM PST I was going to post a meme, but then saw rule 3.3 lol See you at the AYA? [link] [comments] |
Samsung Odyssey G9 49" Curved 5K 240 Hz FreeSync & G-Sync Gaming Monitor at CES 2020 Posted: 16 Jan 2020 07:05 PM PST |
Posted: 16 Jan 2020 07:34 PM PST |
[Anandtech]NVIDIA Cuts Price of GeForce RTX 2060 To $299 Posted: 16 Jan 2020 08:39 AM PST |
Today, the day of permanent price cuts: Nvidia RTX, Intel Xeon, HTC Vive and Oculus Go Posted: 16 Jan 2020 01:45 PM PST Four major products got a permanent price cut today:
Enjoy! [link] [comments] |
Red Hat Recommends Disabling The Intel Linux Graphics Driver Over Hardware Flaw Posted: 16 Jan 2020 05:55 PM PST |
[Gamers Nexus] Der8auer & Steve: All the Problems with CES - Laziness, Lying, & Bad Products Posted: 16 Jan 2020 01:16 PM PST |
Intel’s Confusing Messaging: Is Comet Lake Better Than Ice Lake? Posted: 16 Jan 2020 06:24 AM PST |
OLOy: 128gb Threadripper 3960X 3970X Memory Tested Posted: 16 Jan 2020 10:31 AM PST |
Why do hardware manufactures name things so terribly? Posted: 16 Jan 2020 09:14 AM PST I don't think anyone here needs an example of how naming schemes don't make any sense without context. If anyone here had a list of gpus or cpus from the last 10 years without chronological order it'd be hard to piece together the age and models. Why haven't they adopted the auto manufacturer / apple naming scheme. (name of product) (year indicator) Worst case scenarios if there is a refresh is it so hard to just increment single digit numbers at the end? [link] [comments] |
Oracle just released a whopping 334 security fixes in critical patch update | ZDNet Posted: 16 Jan 2020 03:08 PM PST |
The PinePhone starts shipping—a Linux-powered smartphone for $150 Posted: 16 Jan 2020 03:40 PM PST |
MIPI alliance announces I3C vers 1.1 Posted: 16 Jan 2020 02:53 PM PST |
Another reason to hurry with Windows server patches: A new RDP vulnerability Posted: 16 Jan 2020 08:50 AM PST |
Why is Intel Facing a 14nm Processor Shortage Despite Lack of 10nm Volume Production? Posted: 16 Jan 2020 03:49 AM PST |
[Discussing] Why Radeon VII on paper stronger than RTX 2080 S but weaker on games . Posted: 16 Jan 2020 02:08 AM PST Long time ago ~2008 I read article on Anandtech comparing ATI/AMD architecture and nVidia , think I remember that Radeon cards uses more smaller shaders unites but on lower frequency (most of the time) while nVidia were focusing on making shaders(compute) unites lager and had more resources (register/caches etc ) , That approach end up AMD were always having higher compute power VS nVidia , that reflected on FLOPS calculations (in Teraflops) . From Techpowerup GPU chart we found that RTX 2080 SUPER ~20% faster in Games while Radeon VII ~17% faster in compute calculations 13.44 TFLOPS VS 11.15 TFLOPS , not only that I always though nVidia strong point in gaming was it (Texture mapping unit) TMUs but surprise surprise , Radeon VII had more TMUs 240 VS 192 , not only that both have close gaming clock speed 1750 MHz VS 1815 MHz . In short what's wrong with AMD card that makes it's performance terrible like that ? is is it drivers issue or games engines were not optimized to their architecture . [link] [comments] |
We got EVGA in Trouble with Nvidia - Which Video was that? Charity Q&A Battle with GN Steve Posted: 16 Jan 2020 03:57 AM PST |
Why You Should Wait To Buy A New TV | Best 2020 TVs Posted: 16 Jan 2020 06:25 PM PST |
Walkthrough of the EK Waterblocks Suite at CES 2020 Posted: 16 Jan 2020 03:03 PM PST |
Does decent firm-/software support exist in consumer hardware? Posted: 16 Jan 2020 09:58 AM PST In recent years I've had numerous headaches with the software that manufacturers supply with their products. For example, Ai Suite 3, the abomination ASUS ships with their motherboards. It's unstable, underdeveloped, works unpredictably, etc, etc. Even more fun there is a separate version for each motherboard series, and you can guess they don't really update those which are for the older models. Although I've experimented with installing Ai Suite for Z390-based motherboards on my H97-based one and guess what, it works just the same way the "right" one does. So they actually could have a universal driver/utility suite just like GPU manufacturers, but meh, why bother, right? As a result, it took literally years to figure out some issues I had with my system because of the motherboard, years just to find the switches I had to flip so that my PC would finally work the way I configure it. The same problems with bad software and zombie-support were with TT hardware monitored PSU. Also, recently I've bought an ASRock motherboard for my brand-new home server and found out the tool they supply to tune the hardware is from the year 2005 at best, by the look of it. I won't even mention the tools for mouse/keyboard/headphones that all want you to register "in the cloud". So, does decent firm-/software support exist somewhere in consumer hardware? Is there a manufacturer with "one tool to rule them all"? Or should one install a bunch of useless bloatware per device, find its uselessness and stick to using those fancy devices with all their fancy functions like it's some overpriced generic ones? [link] [comments] |
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