• Breaking News

    Tuesday, October 27, 2020

    Hardware support: Samsung, Stanford make a 10,000PPI display that could lead to 'flawless' VR

    Hardware support: Samsung, Stanford make a 10,000PPI display that could lead to 'flawless' VR


    Samsung, Stanford make a 10,000PPI display that could lead to 'flawless' VR

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 09:30 AM PDT

    [VideoCardz] AMD Ryzen 9 5950X tops PassMark's single-threaded chart

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 02:59 PM PDT

    [VideoCardz] AMD Ryzen 7 5800X and Ryzen 9 5950X CPU-Z scores leaked

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 10:21 PM PDT

    Linux amdgpu patch confirms 128MB cache on Navi 21

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 12:29 PM PDT

    ADATA has made a secret revision to the SX8200 Pro replacing the SM2262EN with the SM2262G

    Posted: 27 Oct 2020 12:53 AM PDT

    Sometime this year Adata has revised the SX8200 Pro, replacing the SM2262EN with the older SM2262G. This has been confirmed by ServeTheHome, where the Adata rep confirmed that a revision has occurred, and that:

    "The performance of drives with 2262G is the same with the drives with 2262EN, and the drives with either or controllers can be seen in the market at the same time as well."

    This isn't cause for issue in of itself, since IMHO the SM2262 is the better controller (doesn't suffer from consistency issues), but the issue comes from the lack of communication on this.

    Essentially, the SM2262G which is just a different revision of the SM2262 is essentially the same controller as the one in the regular SX8200, and everything else is the same.

    This means that the SX8200 and SX8200 Pro is essentially identitical, having the same controller and NAND, with only some differences in the manufacturer of the DRAM cache. Not only is this highly misleading, Adata's response to STH further attempts to hide this fact from reviewers. SM2262 and SM2262EN is not the same controller, and SM2262EN has better performance while operating within its SLC cache.

    This new revision has already been stocked by retailers, which means there's no guarentee whether you'll get the drive as reviewed in 2019 or early 2020 or this new, arguably worse revision. There is now also no reason to go for the Pro version, since it is now in all ways identitical to the regular version.

    TL;DR, Adata makes unannounced revision to SX8200 Pro, replacing its controller with the same one in the SX8200, meaning that the two drives are essentially the same.

    EDIT: Forgot to mention that this review says that they've also moved to Samsung DDR3 from Nanya, although this change affects nothing

    submitted by /u/DarkWorld25
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    NVIDIA preparing GeForce RTX 3080 Ti with 9984 CUDA cores? - VideoCardz.com

    Posted: 27 Oct 2020 01:15 AM PDT

    [VideoCardz] NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti specifications confirmed by GPU-Z validation

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 04:03 PM PDT

    [VideoCardz] NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti goes on preorder in China

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 10:11 AM PDT

    PG-132 SKU35 RTX 3070Ti to tackle RX 6800 XL

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 07:26 AM PDT

    Question about Semiconductor Manufacturing Industry?

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 06:21 PM PDT

    Hey guys, sorry if this is the wrong place to ask. But I'm interviewing as a salesman at a company that sells a product lifecycle management software to semiconductor manufacturing companies.

    Are there any semiconductor experts here who can shed some insider knowledge with me? Anything that you can share I'll be grateful, as the task is vague, so I'm just trying to learn as much as possible.

    For example, what are the types of job roles and machines in a plant? I understand the importance of "clean rooms" and that silicon chips get better the more transistors you cramp on it. I know the semiconductor industry is pretty unstable with lots of ups and downs but future investments in AI and 5G hold promise.

    Thank you for all insight posted

    submitted by /u/Pelagios-Pankratios
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    [VideoCardz] NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 (GA104-300) GPU pictured

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 02:58 PM PDT

    Intel's Raja Koduri is presenting at Samsung Foundry's SAFE conference

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 02:15 PM PDT

    How do CPU pins work?

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 08:02 AM PDT

    Aside from delivering the voltage, is each pin dedicated for specific signals, like memory and buses? Or are all pins the same?

    submitted by /u/KonArtist01
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    Follow up to my earlier question about starting a motherboard/graphics card company: what are some areas that can be improved compared to what we have on the market? What problems have remained unsolved and neglected by current brands?

    Posted: 27 Oct 2020 12:03 AM PDT

    I don't want to build a Yet Another Gigabyte/MSI/ASRock, etc. What features and attributes would make you consider a new brand in the block vs current top players?

    submitted by /u/LuxuriousLinux
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    Kite: A Family of Heterogeneous Interposer Topologies | DAC 2020

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 09:24 AM PDT

    Intel lists Wi-Fi 6E AX210 network adapter as "Launched"

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 01:55 PM PDT

    Apple supplier Luxshare unnerves Foxconn as U.S.-China feud speeds supply chain shift

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 06:43 AM PDT

    How much capital is needed to start a motherboard and graphics card manufacturing company?

    Posted: 26 Oct 2020 02:31 AM PDT

    Not a company that asks a third party to develop most of the boards, but a company like Gigabyte or MSI or EVGA.

    Let's assume to begin with, only Radeon and Ryzen boards.

    submitted by /u/LuxuriousLinux
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