• Breaking News

    Tuesday, April 7, 2020

    Hardware support: Laptop Core i9-10980HK CPU has a power allowance of 135 Watts

    Hardware support: Laptop Core i9-10980HK CPU has a power allowance of 135 Watts


    Laptop Core i9-10980HK CPU has a power allowance of 135 Watts

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 11:59 AM PDT

    [GN] How Power Supplies Are Made (2020) | PSU Factory Tour, ft. Cooler Master

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 04:38 PM PDT

    What is the reason behind ARM's decision to keep releasing new "big" cores(A75/76/77/78) but not "SMALL"(A53/55) ones?

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 10:54 PM PDT

    What is the reason behind this decision, they seem to release a new big core every year but the A55 has been around forever, i don't get it.

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

    Intel To Sell Home Gateway Assets For $150 Million

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 03:13 PM PDT

    [Jarrods Tech] Vega iGPU Gaming Comparison - 12nm vs 7nm (4900HS vs 3750H)

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 04:04 AM PDT

    Intel 11th Gen Core i7-1185G7 Tiger Lake CPU Benchmark Leaked

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 10:05 PM PDT

    PCIe 5.0 Drill-Down

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 04:58 PM PDT

    Intel 10th Gen Core Desktop Marketing Materials Confirm Core Counts

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 11:58 AM PDT

    Anatomy of a Graphics Card

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 10:03 PM PDT

    What CAN’T your hardware achieve yet? What capabilities do you dream of?

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 12:17 PM PDT

    With the wide-spread implementation of MIDI 2.0 on the horizon, we may be approaching an exciting and inspiring new age of aural alchemy & electronic music-making magic! Until late, what have you struggled to execute with your favorite setup, be it hardware, DAW-driven, iOS, or anywhere in between? Basically, if you were given a magical do-anything box, what would you bring to your rig?

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

    What is your opinion on the hardware of the next-gen consoles so far?

    Posted: 07 Apr 2020 02:03 AM PDT

    I'm very excited for these consoles but I'm starved for discussion. If you go on r/PS5 or r/XboxSeriesX all you'll see is people posting misinformation or terribly-sourced articles and rumour mongering in an effort to make their console seem 'superior'. They don't actually seem to know or understand the underlying hardware and take things wildly out of context.

    I already went into quite a lot of detail about these consoles in my last post here but the commenters in that post were either agreeing with me or disagreeing on stuff that I said, but not really providing their own opinion of these consoles.

    So I want to hear your opinion on the hardware of the next-gen consoles? What do you think of the different approaches that we're seeing from Microsoft and Sony? How do you think it'll impact PC gaming? What generational improvements do you think we'll see? Let's discuss!

    submitted by /u/jasonj2232
    [link] [comments]

    Rosetta@Home Now Supports 64-bit Arm SBC's and Servers in the Fight against COVID-19

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 12:56 PM PDT

    NVIDIA is contributing its AI smarts to help fight COVID-19

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 07:42 PM PDT

    (Semi Eng) HBM Issues In AI Systems

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 04:27 PM PDT

    Techpowerup: Origin PC Updates EON15-X Laptop Adding 12 Core AMD Ryzen Desktop CPUs

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 06:46 AM PDT

    PCIe to PCIe transfer

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 09:50 AM PDT

    Suppose i have an NVME drive and an FPGA connected to the PCIe fabric.

    I hack the NVME kernel driver such that everything stays the same, except that a read cmd buffer points to a memory region that is mapped to the fpga (all nvme queue data structures reside in system RAM as before). The nvme driver would ignore completions of data transfers that are directed at the fpga. obviously i assume that the PCIe switch between drive and fpga supports slot-to-slot communication.

    would this work or am i forgetting something. can i expect that switches support address based routing in card-to-card transfers?

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

    Do you also think we need a rack standard for SBCs like raspberry pis?

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 12:08 PM PDT

    It would be so nice to be able to have a micro rack with different equipment for the home tinkerer.

    submitted by /u/pure_x01
    [link] [comments]

    To what extent can you build an open hardware computer?

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 07:15 AM PDT

    I am a keen follower of the OpenPower iniative and subscribed to its sub.

    I always dreamed of a truly open PC, from CPU, Motherboard, RAM, SSD, GPU/APU, Audio Dacs, LAN, Wireless connection, EUFI (Boot) ability. (Please tell me what I am missing)

    I know IBM also launched a open DDR alternative in the form of "The Open Memory Interface (OMI)"

    Also there aren an Open SSD iniative.

    To what extent, at this time of speaking, is this possible and what components can and can't you implement to achieve this goal?

    Also, news have been circulating that China is pumping billions into its home grown Linux distros with literally thousands of people working on it. China are hesitant upon using propriarity instruction sets like x86, by reason of national security and the tension between China and the US.

    Do you think China will be leading the world in creating open systems and a software stack to support it?

    submitted by /u/John238
    [link] [comments]

    Do RAM expanders still exist for modern CPUs?

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 04:22 PM PDT

    Back in the Commodore 64 days you could buy cartridges that contain RAM to expand the system memory that was in the computer itself. Is that still possible with modern processors? For example plugging into the PCIe slot or a dedicated port apart from the regular RAM slots. I feel like if your workflow needs a ton of RAM but not that much compute performance (or if you need exponentially more ram as you scale in compute) like low-latency caching or some scientific applications, an external RAM expander could make sense.

    submitted by /u/AgreeableLandscape3
    [link] [comments]

    Differences on DRAM process nodes manufacturing process?

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 02:53 AM PDT

    Hi all,

    I am preparing a presentation and I am investigating on the future roadmap for DRAM, I am seeing the differences in performance for different DRAM nodes (for example 1y vs 1z), but I cant find any details on the differences when it comes to manufacturing processes.

    For example, use of more advanced lithographic systems, or new materials.

    Does someone have an article or some information on what are the key differences when it comes to new nodes for DRAM manufacturing?

    Thanks!!

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

    No comments:

    Post a Comment