• Breaking News

    Thursday, December 31, 2020

    Hardware support: STOP DOING THIS!!!!!!! - Jayztwocents on GN AIO mounting video

    Hardware support: STOP DOING THIS!!!!!!! - Jayztwocents on GN AIO mounting video


    STOP DOING THIS!!!!!!! - Jayztwocents on GN AIO mounting video

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 07:28 PM PST

    [VideoCardz] Alleged NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080, RTX 3070 and RTX 3060 Mobile GPU specifications emerge

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 08:38 AM PST

    AnandTech Year In Review 2020: Solid State Drives

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 07:22 PM PST

    [VideoCardz] Lenovo confirms GeForce RTX 3050 TI 6GB, RTX 3050 4GB and RTX 3060 12GB

    Posted: 31 Dec 2020 12:44 AM PST

    Intel's existing Wi-Fi 6 AX200/AX201 and new Wi-Fi 6 AX101/AX203 network adapters get Bluetooth 5.2 certification

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 07:43 AM PST

    Is there any technology you are excited about next year or future?

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 02:18 PM PST

    2 days left. What next year/future tech excites you?

    submitted by /u/XVll-L
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    Hardware Unboxed - RX6800 vs RTX 3070, 40 Game Benchmark

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 03:04 AM PST

    The T2 Development Blog: "ACE: Apple Type-C Port Controller Secrets | Part 1"

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 06:32 AM PST

    Yoga Slim 7 PRO (AMD) - Just Josh: The BEST Windows Laptop I've Reviewed in 2020

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 03:15 PM PST

    Transprecision computing promises 8 times energy saving

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 03:00 PM PST

    How does SLC cache work in ssd's?

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 10:10 AM PST

    Upon reading reviews of ssds I often find charts showing performance drops in sustained write load. They always mention that it only takes affect when there is a sustained write load, however it's never explained in much greater detail.

    How will a drive with a 30 gb SLC cache affect the average consumer?

    FOr example, If I have a folder with 50 gbs of photos, could I split the folder into two 25gb folders and write them onto the ssd to bypass the SLC cache limit?

    WHen does the SLC cache become available again ?

    submitted by /u/FartMasterDice
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    Would a device with on-package memory but room for optional DIMM slot expansion be feasible?

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 08:02 AM PST

    For a while now I've been thinking of something like this in terms of AMD and HBM, but now with Apple Silicon and the M1 including a 128-bit LPDDR4X solution on-package, it brought the idea back.

    Currently, AMD64 computers for example won't run without memory, won't boot without something in the DIMM slots. What I am wondering is whether it would be possible to have some amount of memory on-package, and then have further expansion via DIMM slots?

    The Mac Pro currently has a maximum amount of memory of 1.5 TB, and the current cheesegrater Mac Pro design at least seems to reflect the fact that Apple recognizes that the trashcan Mac Pro was a mistake; and while the Mac Pro is likely not their best-selling product, part of the point of it is expandability, serviceability and reparability.

    ...I doubt Apple will just sell their high-end Mac Pro chips on the shelf for you to upgrade the CPU on your own; but the current Mac Pro Intel chips are apparently Apple-excusive or something anyway. You can still swap in the memory as you like, is my point.

    What if, for example, you bought a Mac Pro with "just" the on-package memory at first, and then could upgrade via the DIMMs later?

    Or, for a DIY motherboard, an AMD or Intel x86-64 CPU that has x amount of RAM on-package, that it can use to boot the operating system without anything in the RAM slots, but then if you need to upgrade the RAM by putting more in the slots you can?

    submitted by /u/Scion95
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    What kinde of memory is used for CPU and GPU cache?

    Posted: 30 Dec 2020 04:45 AM PST

    Is it similar to dram? or is it more like hbm? or a completly different type of it's? And does it insane speed and super low sub 1ns latency for L1 cache just due to the fact that it's sitting right next to the cores?

    submitted by /u/FlxDrv
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