• Breaking News

    Thursday, April 9, 2020

    Hardware support: AMD 4th Gen Ryzen Desktop Processors to Launch Around September 2020

    Hardware support: AMD 4th Gen Ryzen Desktop Processors to Launch Around September 2020


    AMD 4th Gen Ryzen Desktop Processors to Launch Around September 2020

    Posted: 08 Apr 2020 10:08 PM PDT

    Gaming PC Builder Maingear Is Now Making Emergency Ventilators

    Posted: 08 Apr 2020 06:42 AM PDT

    [GN] Car Wheel Computer Case Review: Barrow Speed from AliExpress

    Posted: 08 Apr 2020 01:46 PM PDT

    Dell XPS 15 and XPS 17 next-gen leak

    Posted: 08 Apr 2020 04:43 PM PDT

    Mobile Benchmark Cheating: When a SoC Vendor Provides It As A Service

    Posted: 08 Apr 2020 07:39 AM PDT

    [Hardware Unboxed] - Ryzen 9 4900HS Discrete GPU Game Battle, The Best Chip for Mobile Gaming?

    Posted: 08 Apr 2020 04:13 AM PDT

    [Eposvox] NVENC vs AMF/VCE vs QuickSync vs X264 - ULTIMATE Encoder Quality Analysis 2020

    Posted: 08 Apr 2020 11:01 AM PDT

    How companies like Veriforce and Ford are working together to create the best hardware for Open Source Ventilators (OSV)

    Posted: 09 Apr 2020 12:00 AM PDT

    Userbenchmark - AMD 4900U?

    Posted: 08 Apr 2020 10:20 PM PDT

    Fractal Design Celsius+ AIO CPU Cooler Review

    Posted: 08 Apr 2020 07:04 AM PDT

    Huawei could launch a 65W Gallium Nitride (GaN) Charger alongside P40 series in China

    Posted: 08 Apr 2020 10:56 PM PDT

    Modular mobile GPUs?

    Posted: 08 Apr 2020 03:51 PM PDT

    I'm reading all of the posts regarding the 4900HS not receiving higher end Nvidia GPUs- I don't understand why modular GPUs haven't been embraced in modern notebook gaming systems? To an amateur like me it seems it's within the technical capabilities of all of the manufacturers involved. It would also reduce waste as you may not need to replace a perfectly good laptop when you GPU might just lag slightly, or lack sufficient memory. Would it require adoption of a notebook form factor like a "mobileATX" to accommodate interchangeability and cooling needs?

    It just seems to me like this is something that should have existed 5-10 years ago.

    submitted by /u/ET2-SW
    [link] [comments]

    In the future, if PCI-E would support up to 350w, what would change on motherboards ?

    Posted: 08 Apr 2020 08:06 AM PDT

    As far as we know and unless I'm wrong, PCI-E 5 will still support 75w, like the previous iterations. Which means we'll still have to power our power-hungry GPU through PCIE power connectors.

    What if, in the future, a future iteration of PCI-E support more than 75w ? Let's say 350w. What would change on the motherboard ? How would they deal with it ? Could we see a kind of electronical transformer on the motherboard itself ? What would it look like potentially ?

    submitted by /u/Karp0
    [link] [comments]

    No comments:

    Post a Comment