• Breaking News

    Thursday, September 24, 2020

    Hardware support: GeForce RTX 3080 sees increasing reports of crashes in games - VideoCardz.com

    Hardware support: GeForce RTX 3080 sees increasing reports of crashes in games - VideoCardz.com


    GeForce RTX 3080 sees increasing reports of crashes in games - VideoCardz.com

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 10:39 AM PDT

    Lenovo begins selling OEM Ubuntu PCs to the general public

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 09:23 AM PDT

    [Videocardz] AMD Cezanne and Lucienne to both power Ryzen 5000U series

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 11:51 PM PDT

    [VideoCardz] NVIDIA confirms GeForce RTX 3090 is 10 to 15% faster than RTX 3080 in 4K gaming

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 12:08 PM PDT

    [Videocardz] Intel NUC 11 PRO 'Tiger Canyon' detailed

    Posted: 24 Sep 2020 12:31 AM PDT

    [der8auer] ASUS RTX 3080 STRIX Quick Look

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 05:43 AM PDT

    Is there any data at all out there that would suggest components in systems with higher capacity PSUs last longer/fail later on average?

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 04:44 PM PDT

    This is a comment I found today in relation to discussion on new Ampere cards and people who own 650W units and people who own 1000W units:

    When you learn about amplification and noise floor it becomes clear that overspeccing a power supply is a very good thing. Less load on the vrm of your components and the fan for the power supply kicks in less. $100 extra on a PSU goes a long way when you have thousands in components at risk. A buddy is a server admin responsible for a lot of systems and sees first hand how hardware fails and he always makes sure PSUs aren't a limiting factor because it results in hardware damage.

    This is the first time I come across such claim. Is there any truth to it that we know of? Maybe RMA data from MindFactory or similar retailers that also include type of power supply?

    submitted by /u/Randomoneh
    [link] [comments]

    BeQuiet! Announces Pure Loop All-in-One Liquid CPU Cooling Solution

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 07:42 AM PDT

    Could they make expansion cards dedicated only to expanding a graphics card memory and connect them via something like NVLink?

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 04:42 PM PDT

    The hamster in my head woke up and started spinning the wheel when I was seeing all the hub bub about 10gb vs 20gb for the 3080.
    It got me thinking if it would be possible to make a cheaper card whose only use was to increase the memory of a graphics card and connect them through something like NVLink.
    So you could take a 10gb 3080, and connect a 10gb expansion card to it to get 20gb.

    submitted by /u/WikipediaBurntSienna
    [link] [comments]

    Intel Announces Atom x6000E Series "Elkhart Lake", 11th Gen Core Tigerlake-UP3

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 06:11 AM PDT

    AeroCool Aero Bronze 650W Review including Protection Features testing

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 09:47 AM PDT

    A highly affordable power supply from AeroCool. The review includes Short Circuit testing on a Fast Auto machine.

    https://youtu.be/0hnwtTDweos

    submitted by /u/crmaris
    [link] [comments]

    RTX 3080, PCI Express 4.0 vs. 3.0 Benchmark

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 05:46 AM PDT

    Is 8K gaming really going to happen?

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 06:51 AM PDT

    So if y'all have been on YouTube you might see new videos from Linus and MKBHD and maybe others showing off the 3090 and 60 FPS gaming at 8K.

    I've only seen the Linus video at this point, but he seemed pretty blown away by it.

    According to the TV pixel density resolution charts from the guys over at RTings.com, the human eye needs to be really close to a display to see the difference between 8K and 4K. See here.

    For example,

    For an 85 inch TV, which is about the size Linus has in the video, you need to be closer than about 5 feet to even be able to tell a difference.

    My TV is 55 inches and I watch it at about 8 feet. If it was 8K I'd need to closer than 3.5 feet to even tell it was higher resolution than 4K, which just seems ridiculous to me.

    If the difference is so subtle, why is Linus so exaggerated about it in the video? Is this just marketing hype and the reviewers have sold out, or am I missing something?

    Edit: Many people are suggesting that it will happen, but take time for hardware to get to 8k (GPUs & TVs). I understand that we could theoretically get there, my question is if it will ever be mainstream granted 95% of the people won't be able to tell the difference between 4K and 8K in a blind cross over.

    submitted by /u/caedin8
    [link] [comments]

    Western Digital Updates Red Pro Line with 16 and 18TB Capacity Points

    Posted: 23 Sep 2020 05:47 AM PDT

    3080 vs 3090 vs big navi

    Posted: 24 Sep 2020 01:52 AM PDT

    If big navi have 80cu and boost clock up to 2.2GHZ that mean it will beat 3080 and reach 3090 proformance. But with GDDR6 I think this will be a huge bottle neck to the big navi and that will slow it down unless. Amd have a plan to negate this draw back and beat 3080 in every way possible. I dont think if big navi is able to beat 3080 but there is a chance if amd is silent about it and nivida overhyped the 3080. What you think is going to happen? And what do you think the real proformance of big navi sienna cichlid is going to be? My predicton is -10% slower than rtx 3080 -50% raytracing proformance than rtx 3080.

    submitted by /u/countuar
    [link] [comments]

    No comments:

    Post a Comment