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    Saturday, January 23, 2021

    Hardware support: Scythe releases new 120mm fan called "Wonder Snail" with three variants (1200, 1800, 2400RPM)

    Hardware support: Scythe releases new 120mm fan called "Wonder Snail" with three variants (1200, 1800, 2400RPM)


    Scythe releases new 120mm fan called "Wonder Snail" with three variants (1200, 1800, 2400RPM)

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 04:44 PM PST

    https://www.scythe.co.jp/product/fan/wondersnail120-pwm/

    According to them, the 1200 RPM is only for cases where heat isn't generated that much. The 1800 and 2400RPM variants, while spinning faster, will not produce much noise, they claim. As for the airflow and such these are the info:

    Noise levels/Airflow:

    4 ~ 18.6 dBA / 8.01 ~ 37.73 CFM(1200RPM variant)

    4 ~ 22.9 dBA / 8.01 ~ 51.68 CFM(1800RPM variant)

    4 ~ 29.3 dBA / 7.68 ~ 77.23 CFM(2400RPM variant)

    Static Pressure

    0.07 ~ 0.89 mmH2O / 0.69 ~ 8.70 Pa(1200RPM variant)

    0.07 ~ 1.74 mmH2O / 0.69 ~ 17.06 Pa(1800RPM varianP)

    0.05 ~ 3.59 mmH2O / 0.49 ~ 35.25 Pa(2400RPM variant)

    They're not yet available outside of Japan, but they're currently out of stock in Amazon Japan. Plan to buy one to replace gentle typhoon I guess to see if the 2400RPM really doesn't make noise. Regardless of which variant, they're priced at around 1,500Y which is around USD$15. Hoping these get released in the West and get reviewed to verify Scythe's claims. The release of this fan is probably why the Aya-Kaze fans were discontinued.

    submitted by /u/lordlors
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    Dissecting the Apple M1 GPU, part II

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 02:58 PM PST

    The Verge: "Samsung will reportedly make 3nm processors at expanded Texas plant"

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 05:28 AM PST

    NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 listed early for almost as much as RTX 3060Ti - VideoCardz.com

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 03:31 PM PST

    [AnandTech] Phison at CES 2021: New USB SSD Controllers, Adds E21T For Low-End NVMe

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 05:09 PM PST

    Gigabyte has updated various Z390 Bios with Re-Size BAR support

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 12:38 PM PST

    why did HBM price never drop?

    Posted: 23 Jan 2021 02:21 AM PST

    who is buy all of it cause demand to be always high? or jest manufacture never cut the price

    submitted by /u/akwmw
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    The Next Gen Database Servers Powering Let's Encrypt

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 08:12 AM PST

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    Posted: 23 Jan 2021 01:31 AM PST

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    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 07:59 AM PST

    Global chip shortage hits China's bitcoin mining sector

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 06:15 AM PST

    I Asked Nvidia Why They Removed Max-Q | Jarrod's Tech.

    Posted: 23 Jan 2021 01:19 AM PST

    Nvidia will no longer differentiate between Maq-Q and regular GPUs in naming.

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 10:13 PM PST

    Reuters: "Intel floats possibility of licensing deals but would TSMC and Samsung be interested?"

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 09:14 AM PST

    Does price creep imply production cost increases?

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 11:53 AM PST

    A lot has been said in this sub about the price creep of the latest CPUs and GPUs. My instinct tells me that this is the result of the cost to fab newer nodes has gone up in a way it hasn't for previous generational leaps, but I'm not sure if this is true. Can anyone enlighten me on this? I'm curious if there's any information out there about the cost to produce these new parts, and if we know anything about its relation to price increases. Are the 7nm nodes just more expensive to produce?

    submitted by /u/GlammBeck
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    ELI5 how monitor resolutions with difference size panels work...

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 11:03 PM PST

    (ELI5 = Explain like I'm 5, aka layman's terms)

    So, I've never really understood this. How can a 2560 x 1440 resolution monitor, or any resolution, come in different sizes? Is it that the pixels physically get larger/smaller with the monitor size, or is there a larger/smaller gap between the pixels with different sizes? If that is the case, wouldn't a smaller screen technically be clearer. Am I just completely wrong with both of those and it is something completely different?

    submitted by /u/DapperNurd
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    The Chromebook Experience, Powered by MediaTek

    Posted: 22 Jan 2021 02:46 AM PST

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