Hardware support: Intel's 11th Gen Core i5-1135G7 Looks Faster than Both the Ryzen 7 4800U & Ryzen 9 4900H | Hardware Times |
- Intel's 11th Gen Core i5-1135G7 Looks Faster than Both the Ryzen 7 4800U & Ryzen 9 4900H | Hardware Times
- [Gamers Nexus] Lian Li Lancool 215 200mm Airflow Case, II Mesh, Unifan, & Silverstone Alta F1 Case
- Is Intel deprecating the TSX extension? New Xeon W-1290P lacks TSX.
- Intel Core i9-10850K 10-core processor spotted - VideoCardz.com
- Must Apple’s Universal 2 add overhead to support both ARM and x86 simultaneously?
- Sabrent Rocket Q 2 TB NVMe M.2 SSD
Posted: 04 Jul 2020 12:19 PM PDT |
[Gamers Nexus] Lian Li Lancool 215 200mm Airflow Case, II Mesh, Unifan, & Silverstone Alta F1 Case Posted: 04 Jul 2020 10:31 PM PDT |
Is Intel deprecating the TSX extension? New Xeon W-1290P lacks TSX. Posted: 04 Jul 2020 08:48 PM PDT I noticed this a bit ago while perusing the spec sheet, but haven't seen anything else about it. [link] [comments] |
Intel Core i9-10850K 10-core processor spotted - VideoCardz.com Posted: 04 Jul 2020 10:10 AM PDT |
Must Apple’s Universal 2 add overhead to support both ARM and x86 simultaneously? Posted: 04 Jul 2020 04:19 PM PDT At WWDC, I think Apple said that one could build apps for both Intel and "Apple Silicon" at once using the Universal 2 binary. Is it possible to do that without introducing overhead? It just doesn't seem to make sense to me how the same binary can work at the max (or at least the current) efficiency of both architectures. Or will Universal 2 inevitably make compromises to support both architectures, with their different instruction sets and structure (like BIG.little architecture)? Common sense tells me that the more architectures or configurations a software has to support, the less finely tuned it will be for each different architecture or configuration. I'm a novice that this kind of stuff so I don't know if this is a stupid question or not. [link] [comments] |
Sabrent Rocket Q 2 TB NVMe M.2 SSD Posted: 04 Jul 2020 12:33 PM PDT |
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