Hardware support: Unbricking a $2,000 Bike With a $10 Raspberry Pi |
- Unbricking a $2,000 Bike With a $10 Raspberry Pi
- New Mindfactory data shows AMD's 5700 series cards are RMA'd at twice the rate of Turing cards.
- Inside the 8086 processor, tiny charge pumps create a negative voltage
- (GN)Not Dead Yet: Google Stadia 2020 Review & Latency Benchmarks for Game St...
- [VideoCardz] Intel Tiger Lake-H expected in first quarter of 2021
- Pi-KVM: easy and cheap DIY KVM over IP with mouse, mass storage drive, VNC, IPMI and other
- Is Nvidia’s big Ampere difficult to cool with air? A thermal prognosis gives first information | igor'sLAB
- Intel is accused of infringing the FinFET patent of the Microelectronics Institute of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in demele or more than 200 million yuan
- Lower-end (most times older) hardware almost nowhere to be found on top PC channels
- Apple, ARM, and What It Means
- Fixing MacBook Pro Thermal Performance Issues
- Do you suspect eventually GPUs will be integrated so well into CPUs such that standalone video cards won't be necessary for most people's needs?
- What is the true speed of an HDD?
Unbricking a $2,000 Bike With a $10 Raspberry Pi Posted: 02 Aug 2020 11:07 AM PDT |
New Mindfactory data shows AMD's 5700 series cards are RMA'd at twice the rate of Turing cards. Posted: 02 Aug 2020 04:55 AM PDT The 5700XT seems to have the biggest problems compared to its competitor. Mindfactory sold 29340 5700XT's and 1050 were returned. They also sold 30030 2070 Supers and only 371 were returned: [link] [comments] |
Inside the 8086 processor, tiny charge pumps create a negative voltage Posted: 02 Aug 2020 08:46 PM PDT |
(GN)Not Dead Yet: Google Stadia 2020 Review & Latency Benchmarks for Game St... Posted: 02 Aug 2020 04:47 PM PDT |
[VideoCardz] Intel Tiger Lake-H expected in first quarter of 2021 Posted: 03 Aug 2020 12:07 AM PDT |
Pi-KVM: easy and cheap DIY KVM over IP with mouse, mass storage drive, VNC, IPMI and other Posted: 02 Aug 2020 05:03 PM PDT |
Posted: 02 Aug 2020 09:02 AM PDT |
Posted: 02 Aug 2020 01:11 PM PDT |
Lower-end (most times older) hardware almost nowhere to be found on top PC channels Posted: 02 Aug 2020 01:32 PM PDT I recently built a low-end PC from used PC parts and while searching through reviews on YouTube, I noticed that there are no videos from top PC channels discussing these kinds of older parts. The videos I am referring to are "[Part Name] gaming for 2019" or "[Part Name] for 2020" or something along the lines. Most videos that deliver however, show only selected footage of 10 or more games running these hardware. Wouldn't it be nice for top channels (as they have larger audience and reach) to have these kind of video discussions considering there is a large bulk in PC community that are still rocking their 5th, 6th, 7th, or even 8th Gen Intel/AMD FX rigs? It may also help some people who are thinking about upgrading to go for it or hold their machines for now. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 02 Aug 2020 06:15 AM PDT |
Fixing MacBook Pro Thermal Performance Issues Posted: 02 Aug 2020 11:13 AM PDT |
Posted: 02 Aug 2020 08:58 AM PDT Similar to how the CPU can currently handle all the sound processing so sound cards aren't common anymore? [link] [comments] |
What is the true speed of an HDD? Posted: 02 Aug 2020 06:56 AM PDT I have seen how numerous amounts of HDDs can run at between 2-4GigaBytes/s for 1~5 seconds before slowing down to around 50~250MB/s. Normal Drives, NAS drives, Server Drives.. they all do the same So if the buffer could never really be filled up to slow it down, does this mean HDDs could actually be insanely fast? [link] [comments] |
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