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    Monday, July 13, 2020

    Hardware support: Nvidia Allegedly Kills Off Four Turing Graphics Cards In Anticipation Of Ampere

    Hardware support: Nvidia Allegedly Kills Off Four Turing Graphics Cards In Anticipation Of Ampere


    Nvidia Allegedly Kills Off Four Turing Graphics Cards In Anticipation Of Ampere

    Posted: 12 Jul 2020 02:22 PM PDT

    (GN)Best B550 Motherboards for AMD Ryzen CPUs: MSI, Gigabyte, ASRock, & ASUS

    Posted: 12 Jul 2020 07:25 PM PDT

    [Linus Tech Tips] - AMD Laptops - Faster, Longer Battery, and CHEAPER! (Envy x360 w/4500U Review)

    Posted: 12 Jul 2020 10:11 AM PDT

    Why are M.2 cellular cards so big compared to Wi-Fi cards?

    Posted: 12 Jul 2020 09:10 PM PDT

    Searching for various M.2 expansion cards, I noticed that M.2 cellular cards are always bigger than Wi-Fi cards. In this image, the leftmost card if the Wi-FI card and the one directly to the right of that is a 4G card, and as far as I know these are the most common form factors, and the Wi-Fi card probably also does Bluetooth. This upcoming 5G card has the same form factor.

    What's more, there are even Wi-Fi cards that only use part of an M.2 slot's width, like this one, but I've barely been able find even any marginally smaller M.2 cellular cards from what seems to be the standard form factor.

    Don't most phones have 4G/5G modules the size of a fingernail or something? As far as I know, most modems on phones are just a single chip or even built into the CPU, yet this picture of a 5G card shows a dense PCB with many chips. Why is this, and could M.2 cellular cards be made as small as M.2 Wi-Fi cards?

    submitted by /u/AgreeableLandscape3
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    [Digital Foundry] - Watch Dogs Legion PC Hands-On: Next Gen Ray Tracing Features Previewed

    Posted: 12 Jul 2020 02:23 PM PDT

    Intel Tiger Lake integrated Xe graphics beats Nvidia’s recent MX350 laptop GPU

    Posted: 12 Jul 2020 04:41 AM PDT

    BIOSTAR finally launches custom Radeon RX 5000 graphics cards

    Posted: 12 Jul 2020 12:39 PM PDT

    Why don’t CPUs have a flat contact design instead of pins?

    Posted: 12 Jul 2020 02:50 AM PDT

    I was curious, couldn't you make CPU's more durable if you were to have both the motherboard and the CPU have flat contacts (instead of pins) with a clamp that pushes them together. You wouldn't have to risk pins being broken on PGA/LGA.

    submitted by /u/TrevinLC1997
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    Acer Belgium lists an upgrade for the Aspire 5 A514 with a Tiger Lake processor

    Posted: 12 Jul 2020 04:37 AM PDT

    Since currently only AMD supports PCIe 4.0, do you guys think AMD will artificially make Big Navi bottleneck more on PCIe 3.0 then a 3080 Ti will?

    Posted: 12 Jul 2020 09:36 AM PDT

    Hey!

    So AMD made Ryzen 3000 CPUs backwards compatible with older mobos that only support PCIe 3.0. They wanted to make it so Ryzen 4000 will only be compatible with B550/X570 (and B650/X670 ofc), but there was an outrage so they walked that back.

    Do you think making Big Navi to bottleneck on 3.0 will be their way to try and sell more motherboards?

    submitted by /u/K1llrzzZ
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