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    Saturday, July 10, 2021

    Hardware support: The Verge: "Biden signs executive order targeting right to repair, ISPs, net neutrality, and more"

    Hardware support: The Verge: "Biden signs executive order targeting right to repair, ISPs, net neutrality, and more"


    The Verge: "Biden signs executive order targeting right to repair, ISPs, net neutrality, and more"

    Posted: 09 Jul 2021 04:26 PM PDT

    Useful information about hardware - Do you know other websites?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2021 05:33 AM PDT

    Gamers Nexus: "Tearing Down Intel's Video Card: DG1 Iris Xe Disassembly & Build Quality"

    Posted: 09 Jul 2021 01:55 PM PDT

    (Anandtech) Samsung: Deployment of 3nm GAE Node on Track for 2022

    Posted: 09 Jul 2021 12:44 PM PDT

    Could Right-to-Repair help the silicon shortage?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2021 04:18 PM PDT

    Say the screen on your phone breaks, but the SoC is still fine. Being able to fix the screen would mean you don't need a new phone, and a new SoC.

    Only replacing the fan, heatsink or even one of the memory chips for a discrete graphics card means you don't need another GPU die, or however many VRAM dies it has.

    submitted by /u/Scion95
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    Intel submits Alder & Raptor Lake PCH information to SATA-IO - VideoCardz.com

    Posted: 09 Jul 2021 01:22 PM PDT

    Asus PG32UQX Review, Insane HDR Gaming at an Insane Price

    Posted: 09 Jul 2021 04:28 AM PDT

    Has someone actually heard about Car SOCs (used for Autonomous Driving and Visualisation) to fail or break?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2021 01:14 PM PDT

    Well i was wondering, since many Car manufacturers now use SOCs for their Self Driving Logics and Visualisation of Tachometer/Navigation and so on ... has anyone ever worried if they will last a long time? My own experience was that either the RAM or the Mainboard was the first thing to say goodbye in an old system. I had around 15 Setups including Notebooks and Desktop PCs. I guess i had at least 3 broken Mainboards and 2 Ram DIMMs which failed in two different systems after time. One Dimm in one of my Notebooks died and one Mainbord. The other Boards and Dimms died in my Desktops without even touching them (I guess degradation/static force over time or the soldering points/Condensators worn out).

    What about those SOCs that Tesla/MB use? They both use NV Hardware, for example this is a Tesla Board (don't know if its the current one or older GEN)

    https://www.investors.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/IT90_nvda_062416_ibd.jpg

    Whats your opionion on it? Do you think they will last with no problems at least 12-15 years, and if yes, what after that? What if they suddenly fail, the car is dead and theres no replacement because they switched to newer version not compatible with the old one? Because if you ask me, the Motherboard does not look different than a GPU PCB, and we all know how fragile they can be, especially with climate changes and shocks while driving. Are they hardened or something? I mean i don't remember any smartphone to have broken hardware. Either its a dead battery or physical damage, but i never had the internals die on a Smartphone since i use them from 2011. Does somebody know if there is something going on that make them more robust in comparison to good old Desktop hardware?

    submitted by /u/dark_session
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    A Wild Inspur NF5488A5 8x NVIDIA A100 server with AMD EPYC

    Posted: 09 Jul 2021 11:10 AM PDT

    Checking Out The ASRock OC Formula 6900XT and the OC Formula Z590

    Posted: 09 Jul 2021 08:15 AM PDT

    Why does VideoCards promo a fake news? Then removed my comment that pointing it out.

    Posted: 09 Jul 2021 02:19 PM PDT

    Hi, guys.

    We all know there was a news about mining cards were flooding the GPU market in China that posted by Videocardz. I left a comment on the report but it was quickly removed even before a downvote. https://imgur.com/a/2raCBwf

    I am Chinese and I have been following the GPU price for a while because I terribly want a 3080.

    Because Nvidia does not sell FE cards in China, so there isn't anywhere in China you can buy cards at MSRP, but rarely people can buy AIB MSRP cards, normally the drops are on JD.COM, but in most of the time it was only a few cards for 300k-500k people, but magically it always appears on aftermarket later.

    I can guarantee that, these advertisement in the report are all made up by the gamers, I have personally seen these pictures for so many times, the action was started by a community called 显卡吧 in China to counter scalpers, and it worked well, it has been going for over a month already.

    The largest used item market in China has been flooded by thousands and thousands of these fake advertisement, even the real sellers could not identify if it's legit.

    I followed the source of this reports that redirected me to tom's HARDWARE, the author is Zhiye Liu.

    Well, it obviously has a Chinese name like I do, he reads Chinese, so I have to assume that this report is intentionally misleading the community but we do not know what reason yet.

    submitted by /u/02hchen
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    The Verge: "Nintendo Switch OLED hands-on: a small upgrade that makes a big difference"

    Posted: 09 Jul 2021 07:37 AM PDT

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