• Breaking News

    Friday, July 17, 2020

    Hardware support: Lenovo ThinkPad T14s: AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 4750U leaves Intel in the dust

    Hardware support: Lenovo ThinkPad T14s: AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 4750U leaves Intel in the dust


    Lenovo ThinkPad T14s: AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 4750U leaves Intel in the dust

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 08:02 PM PDT

    Intel announces September 2 event, likely teasing 11th Gen Tiger Lake CPU launch

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 04:12 AM PDT

    "The source many tech blogs used to report on @nvidia #Ampere using a new 12 pin PCIE power connector is fake. This would have been apparent had anyone ran it through a translator."

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 05:33 AM PDT

    [Hardware Scientist] 120mm Fans vs. 140mm Fans - Are Bigger Fans Better?

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 10:42 AM PDT

    The Linux Performance For AMD Rome vs. Intel Cascade Lake One Year After Launch

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 06:07 PM PDT

    Hunting for backdoors in counterfeit Cisco devices

    Posted: 17 Jul 2020 12:11 AM PDT

    Intel Gen12 Graphics Bring EU Fusion - EUs Fused In Pairs

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 04:30 PM PDT

    Roadmap reveals 5nm Snapdragon 875 and 735, new MediaTek chipsets

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 03:21 AM PDT

    [VideoCardz] Intel Alder Lake-S iGPU shows up on SiSoftware website with 32 Execution Units

    Posted: 17 Jul 2020 12:58 AM PDT

    [VideoCardz.com] - DigitalStorm lists Intel Core i9-10850K for around 450 USD

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 11:41 AM PDT

    Do you think we'll see AMD make GPU/CPU/SSD hybrid devices(consoles) for PC?

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 09:45 AM PDT

    AMD is making the new XB/PS consoles and apparently they are able to be made so cheap, and with such performance due to the fact that they are able to basically make one big hybrid "console gaming unit" that uses the same RAM, is heavily integrated, and is able to use SSD better than a normal PC.

    So, I'm wondering, what is keeping AMD from simply making an "AMD" brand console, similar to the PS/XBox, that can be used in a desktop computer? Considering the cost/performance improvements, I don't see why AMD wouldn't do this. While there are a small number of people who use desktops for gaming AND things like rendering... the vast majority of PC gamers only game, and do non-resource intensive things like youtube, email, browsing, etc.

    Does it not seem inevitable that AMD will eventually use its built in advantage that it has(both CPU and GPU manufacturer, unlike anyone else in the world), and bring this "console gaming unit" design to PC? It just seems that as time goes on, and things keep getting more powerful, NOT having the integration, and lower latency of a console seems like it will become a bottleneck. Sure, PC desktop hardware can keep "brute forcing" through the disadvantages, but without a major rework to the general design of desktop PCs in regards to gaming, the lack of integration will seemingly only become a larger and larger bottleneck, and come at more and more of a cost in terms of cost efficiency.

    I'd love to hear what people think. With Nvidia pulling farther and farther away from AMD, with their new techs, and AI, I wonder why AMD isn't playing to their natural advantage, and expertise in making "integrated gaming units" not only for console use, but for PC use as well.

    submitted by /u/saturatethethermal
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    T-FORCE DARK Z 3600MHz DDR4 2x16GB Kit Memory Review – is 32GB RAM Becoming the ‘New 16GB’ for Gaming?

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 06:28 AM PDT

    Intel Alder Lake CPUs Might Pair 10nm Big-Little Cores With 14nm GPU

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 04:32 PM PDT

    Corsair Launches a Companion Touch Screen for Your Desktop PC

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 09:20 AM PDT

    Samsung’s Exynos 990 decision might destroy Galaxy Note 20 sales

    Posted: 16 Jul 2020 04:54 AM PDT

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