Hardware support: Seagate Is the First Company to Ship 3 Zettabytes of Hard Drive Storage |
- Seagate Is the First Company to Ship 3 Zettabytes of Hard Drive Storage
- 8 vs. 16 vs. 32 GB RAM: This is how much RAM current games require(8 vs. 16 vs. 32 GB RAM in Spielen im Test)
- Forget Ryzen for Budget Gaming, Intel Core i5-11400F Review
- [VideoCardz] - AMD Ryzen 7000 "Raphael" to feature 5nm Zen4 core and Navi2 graphics?
- [ServeTheHome] Intel Optane DC P4800X and Memory Drive Technology Discontinued
- [VideoCardz] AMD Ryzen 7 5700G retail APU pictured and tested
- New Uses For AI: Big improvements in power and performance stem from low-level intelligence
- What skills does it take to built a CPU?
- Can mobile phones have the hardware to support mesh shading (1800%+ FPS boost)?
Seagate Is the First Company to Ship 3 Zettabytes of Hard Drive Storage Posted: 10 Apr 2021 09:21 AM PDT |
Posted: 10 Apr 2021 04:34 PM PDT |
Forget Ryzen for Budget Gaming, Intel Core i5-11400F Review Posted: 10 Apr 2021 04:40 AM PDT |
[VideoCardz] - AMD Ryzen 7000 "Raphael" to feature 5nm Zen4 core and Navi2 graphics? Posted: 10 Apr 2021 02:20 AM PDT |
[ServeTheHome] Intel Optane DC P4800X and Memory Drive Technology Discontinued Posted: 10 Apr 2021 06:25 PM PDT |
[VideoCardz] AMD Ryzen 7 5700G retail APU pictured and tested Posted: 11 Apr 2021 12:54 AM PDT |
New Uses For AI: Big improvements in power and performance stem from low-level intelligence Posted: 10 Apr 2021 05:17 PM PDT |
What skills does it take to built a CPU? Posted: 10 Apr 2021 11:13 AM PDT Hello. So if you major in Computer Science, what do you need to learn in order to create new CPU? I understand that's it's not something inexperienced 25 year old can do right after getting Ph.D. or whatever, but do you have to major specifically in Computer Engineering or is there something computer scientist can learn (after getting Bachelor's degree in CS) in order to engineer the CPU? [link] [comments] |
Can mobile phones have the hardware to support mesh shading (1800%+ FPS boost)? Posted: 10 Apr 2021 08:36 AM PDT Article: Mesh shaders can boost FPS up to 1800% It looks like mesh shaders can provide a huge boost in FPS (albeit the above links are not real games). Can mobile phones have the hardware (even if it is scaled down) needed to benefit from mesh shading, or does this feature consume too much power or something? Point to note, Samsung will have RNDA2 in the future, so maybe it will have mesh shading just like the consoles...? [link] [comments] |
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