Hardware support: [Gamers Nexus] NZXT Bait & Switch on PCIe Riser Replacement: Just Do the Right Thing |
- [Gamers Nexus] NZXT Bait & Switch on PCIe Riser Replacement: Just Do the Right Thing
- Huawei Reportedly Preps 32-Inch Monitor with 3:2 Aspect Ratio, 90hz refresh rate, 4500x3000 Resolution
- Several "SSDS" started to die with Chia mining
- [Der8auer] SSD Killer? We Tested Chia Cryptocurrency Farming for 1 Week
- How is Intel going to compete when they have (virtually) no EUV machines ?
- Is there any true Open Source WiFi cards over 802.11g?
- SemiWiki: "Is IBM’s 2nm Announcement Actually a 2nm Node?"
- If Intel could have invested more into Itanium, would it have a chance to eventually beat x86-64?
- What special and innovative ideas were incorporated into DEC's Alpha, Sun's SPARC, and SGI's MIPS CPUs that were their distinguishing features vs. x86 at that time.
- [ServeTheHome] Inland Premium 1TB NVMe SSD Review A Store Brand Surprise
- What if we we had 2021 hardware in 1999, yet the software stays the same?
- Fortune Systems
[Gamers Nexus] NZXT Bait & Switch on PCIe Riser Replacement: Just Do the Right Thing Posted: 09 May 2021 05:13 PM PDT |
Posted: 09 May 2021 12:58 PM PDT |
Several "SSDS" started to die with Chia mining Posted: 09 May 2021 04:47 AM PDT |
[Der8auer] SSD Killer? We Tested Chia Cryptocurrency Farming for 1 Week Posted: 09 May 2021 08:42 AM PDT |
How is Intel going to compete when they have (virtually) no EUV machines ? Posted: 09 May 2021 12:33 PM PDT There has been numerous sources saying Intel is vastly behind in orders of EUV machines. These will be required to successfully manufacture at volume 7nm and future nodes. Retired Engineer posts actual numbers and he's a reliable source. Only ASML make the EUV machines and TSMC has been pre-ordering the vast majority. How will Intel even hope to compete? Has Pat missed something with his blue skys outlook? Looks like Intel are again hiding the brutal truth. [link] [comments] |
Is there any true Open Source WiFi cards over 802.11g? Posted: 09 May 2021 05:22 PM PDT Does anyone make a true open source WiFi card or does everything these days have at least a proprietary firmware? [link] [comments] |
SemiWiki: "Is IBM’s 2nm Announcement Actually a 2nm Node?" Posted: 09 May 2021 06:30 AM PDT |
If Intel could have invested more into Itanium, would it have a chance to eventually beat x86-64? Posted: 09 May 2021 07:18 AM PDT If Intel could have invested more into Itanium and it had received architectural improvements through the years and was built on a modern process (e.g. 5nm) and compiler writers had invested more into optimizing their compilers, would it have had a chance against x86-64? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 09 May 2021 07:26 AM PDT And before asking more questions like, does this sub have mercy for posts like this? [link] [comments] |
[ServeTheHome] Inland Premium 1TB NVMe SSD Review A Store Brand Surprise Posted: 09 May 2021 10:47 AM PDT |
What if we we had 2021 hardware in 1999, yet the software stays the same? Posted: 09 May 2021 04:12 AM PDT What would actually happen if by some major discovery we overnight gained the knowledge to make ryzen 5950X's RTX 3090,... on a node equal to TSMC 7 nm but back in 1999. What would software developpers do? What can be expected to happen to the computer industry if hardware got better exponentially overnight? In my opinion soft and hardware developpers would become so lazy thanks to all the free performance that by 2021 we would roughly be at the same level that we are now without such rapid innovation. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 09 May 2021 01:58 PM PDT |
You are subscribed to email updates from /r/hardware: a technology subreddit for computer hardware news, reviews and discussion.. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
No comments:
Post a Comment