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    Saturday, June 6, 2020

    Hardware support: Due to a series of unfortunate events, the Display Tech AMA is being rescheduled for two weeks from today

    Hardware support: Due to a series of unfortunate events, the Display Tech AMA is being rescheduled for two weeks from today


    Due to a series of unfortunate events, the Display Tech AMA is being rescheduled for two weeks from today

    Posted: 05 Jun 2020 01:56 PM PDT

    Some of the representatives who had planned to join us had unexpected issues and needed to reschedule.

    As a silver lining, we may have representatives from 2 other large monitor companies. We will have more information for everyone in a week.

    Sorry for the delay.

    Stay safe & healthy

    submitted by /u/bizude
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    I've Disappointed and Embarrassed Myself (Linus admits he was wrong about the PS5 SSD and apologises to Tim Sweeney)

    Posted: 05 Jun 2020 12:04 PM PDT

    [Videocardz] NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 pictured?

    Posted: 06 Jun 2020 01:03 AM PDT

    [Hardware Unboxed] Don't Buy The Asus TUF Gaming A15, Design Flaw Analysis

    Posted: 05 Jun 2020 04:40 AM PDT

    Shouldn't we expect decreased longevity of SSDs (NVME M.2 and SATA) with upcoming NVCache in 3xxx series RTX cards and the customized 'unified-memory' design of the PS5?

    Posted: 05 Jun 2020 01:02 PM PDT

    Basically, what the title says - I'm appealing to people who might know more about this.

    Recent information has been made available about Sony's implementation of a unified memory architecture in the PS5 (SSD as RAM and VRAM, in some cases). Also, Nvidia is purported to be utilizing NVcache as an answer to HBCC RAM in its upcoming RTX 3 series cards (Ampere), which would utilize a motherboard's DDR and non-volatile memory (SSDs) to bolster VRAM and decrease load times.

    Now, I just bought an NVME drive (TLC), which is expected to last - oh, say - 7-10 years with typical read-write cycles on a current desktop motherboard. With a trend toward more frequent utilization of fast SSDs as a replacement for DDR in some instances, won't it mean this drive will experience significantly faster degradation, were I to upgrade to an NVcache-utilizing graphics card in the future? Wouldn't this be the case for all systems utilizing similar technology - including the PS5?

    If so, how bad would it get? Would a PS5 require a replacement SSD after just a few years? What about a desktop? I mean, how much of a pain in the ass would it be to cough up cash and reinstall an OS every couple years of gaming on a PC?

    submitted by /u/occipixel_lobe
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    [VideoCardz] Intel finally discloses Comet Lake-S power limit values

    Posted: 05 Jun 2020 02:20 PM PDT

    MSI Launches a Water-Cooled Motherboard That Won’t Break the Bank

    Posted: 05 Jun 2020 07:08 AM PDT

    Ancient History Of The Phone Jack

    Posted: 05 Jun 2020 01:03 PM PDT

    (Anandtech) Amazon Makes AMD Rome EC2 Instances Available

    Posted: 05 Jun 2020 01:41 PM PDT

    Multiple Monitors on multiple NON-SLI graphics cards

    Posted: 06 Jun 2020 01:34 AM PDT

    I really hope this does not fall under *tech support*, because I am interested in the technology itself.

    I would love to know how multiple monitors are being handled by multiple graphics cards.

    For example:

    - 5 monitors (all Hdmi/DP)

    - 2 different graphics cards without any direct connection (SLI or similar)

    So when I connect all my monitors and I have to connect one or two of them to the second graphics card, does the better graphics card compute the entire image (for all monitors) and sends it 'through' the smaller one?

    Or does the second card do anything besides being an extension card?

    Does this work? Are there errors to be expected?

    submitted by /u/Aff3nmann
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    Benchmarks Of 2nd Gen AMD EPYC On Amazon EC2 Against Intel Xeon, Graviton2

    Posted: 05 Jun 2020 02:47 AM PDT

    Can USB Type-C replace ports in laptops like display port, power port, etc.?

    Posted: 05 Jun 2020 09:32 PM PDT

    Just wondering if we will only find USB Type-C ports and if that's even feasible.

    submitted by /u/reddit4rms
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    What Makes A Chip Tamper-Proof

    Posted: 05 Jun 2020 01:54 PM PDT

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