• Breaking News

    Monday, April 13, 2020

    Hardware support: China's top chipmaker says it can match Samsung on memory tech

    Hardware support: China's top chipmaker says it can match Samsung on memory tech


    China's top chipmaker says it can match Samsung on memory tech

    Posted: 12 Apr 2020 09:46 PM PDT

    Intel Core i9-10900, i7-10700K, and i7-10700 Canadian retail prices seem competitive against Coffee Lake chips but are a missed opportunity against AMD Matisse CPUs

    Posted: 12 Apr 2020 03:48 AM PDT

    (Semi Engineering) Reliability Challenges Grow For 5/3nm

    Posted: 12 Apr 2020 12:20 PM PDT

    The Mechanics of a CPU

    Posted: 12 Apr 2020 07:00 AM PDT

    Huawei Kirin 710A said to be using SMIC 14nm process

    Posted: 12 Apr 2020 11:18 AM PDT

    YMTC unveils 128-layer flash memory chip

    Posted: 12 Apr 2020 11:14 PM PDT

    [OC] Summary of all Intel Desktop CPUs (i3, i5, i7, i9)

    Posted: 12 Apr 2020 04:41 AM PDT

    I made this after getting confused with some of the naming conventions, only to find it's completely erratic over the generations.

    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1MyIQv-CfA7zMkbCYf56t_cOjsL7ApGX7kuHzcyIVVnw/edit?usp=sharing

    I'm sure there might be some deeply buried logic behind it all, but jeez.

    I couldn't find anything like this online - maybe it's useful to someone.

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

    [GN] HW News - 5.3GHz Intel 10-Core OC, Liquid Metal on Laptops, Samsung 3nm Delay

    Posted: 12 Apr 2020 08:29 AM PDT

    [PROHITECH][Russian] Testing HPET timer ON / OFF and Spectre / Meltdown mitigations impact on performance in 2020

    Posted: 12 Apr 2020 02:49 AM PDT

    How does wireless (wifi/cellular/radio/bluetooth) work? A look at radio communication

    Posted: 12 Apr 2020 05:56 AM PDT

    From a hardware POV, why was Ray Tracing implemented over HDR for games?

    Posted: 12 Apr 2020 12:16 PM PDT

    Hello all,

    First I'm not a hardware expert but had a random thought I wanted to ask you all.

    I noticed that at one point GPU manufactures were pushing HDR compatibility in the Let's say "Vega/GTX 1080 pascal generation" then in the next went to Ray tracing and now consoles are aiming for it as well. I wanted to know if you all can speculate as to why we didn't see HDR pushed more as it still offers great image clarity but should be less resource intensive than Ray tracing. Was the technology not optimized or is it a case of just needing to sell the next batch of products?

    submitted by /u/Anansispider
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