• Breaking News

    Monday, November 29, 2021

    Hardware support: Democrats Push Bill to Outlaw Bots From Snatching Up Online Goods

    Hardware support: Democrats Push Bill to Outlaw Bots From Snatching Up Online Goods


    Democrats Push Bill to Outlaw Bots From Snatching Up Online Goods

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 10:25 AM PST

    Samsung Display to Begin Production of a 34" QD-OLED Panel for Monitor Usage - TFTCentral

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 12:12 PM PST

    VideoCardz: "Innosilicon graphics cards based on "Fantasy One" GPU feature up to 32GB GDDR6X memory"

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 01:04 PM PST

    [VideoCardz] NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 Ti confirmed to feature Micron's 21 Gbps GDDR6X memory

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 12:11 AM PST

    Raspberry Pi Trading plans £370m+ stock market IPO

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 05:49 AM PST

    The Telegraph: "Nvidia at risk of $1.25bn loss if Arm takeover falls through"

    Posted: 28 Nov 2021 04:38 PM PST

    LPDDR SDRAM vs. DDR SDRAM: What exactly are the differences these days?

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 05:57 PM PST

    I could be completely wrong, but as far as I can tell it seems that LPDDR/LPDDRX SDRAM is superior to DDR SDRAM in basically every way — at least assuming we're talking about the same version number (though I'm aware that they are developed independently).

    Let's say we're talking about LPDDR4X vs DDR4. It looks to me like LPDDR4X is essentially higher-binned RAM with lower power consumption without any meaningful performance loss. Is this true or am I totally missing the mark? Surely there has to be some sort of tradeoff, right? If so, what are the tradeoffs, and are they meaningful?

    The general consensus used to be simple — LPDDR consumes less power (particularly at rest) in exchange for a performance penalty. But if I look at, say, the M1 Pro and M1 Max (M1 Max…?) MacBook Pros, they are equipped with LPDDR5 and seem to have very impressive memory performance.

    Is LPDDR RAM actually just fancier, higher-quality RAM? Or is there some sort of major performance tradeoff I'm missing? I've been confused about this for a while and I would really appreciate it if someone more knowledgeable than me could weigh in.

    Thank you for your time.

    submitted by /u/_slightly
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    CNBC: "Achieving semiconductor independency is 'not doable,' EU competition chief says"

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 11:16 AM PST

    "A closer look at the Sony PSP DTP-T1000 Development Kit | MVG"

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 04:59 AM PST

    China Closer to Build an Autonomous GPU Industry

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 04:07 AM PST

    [Gamers Nexus Awards] Best & Worst PC Cases of 2021

    Posted: 28 Nov 2021 11:01 PM PST

    Why Fiber Optic Connection is failing in Australia and 5G is gaining grounds

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 11:11 PM PST

    US-China tech war: China’s efforts to catch up in advanced chips on hold as country’s attention turns to mature nodes

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 07:58 AM PST

    Wall Street Journal: "Inside Intel's Secret Warehouse in Costa Rica"

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 10:49 AM PST

    Intel 12th Gen Core "Alder Lake" Core i9-12900, i5-12600, i5-12500 and i5-12400 Pictured

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 02:53 AM PST

    [AHOC/Buildzoid] Overclocking DDR4 Samsung B-die on Gigabyte Z690 motherboards kinda sucks ATM

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 03:08 AM PST

    TSMC Outsources Part of Its Advanced Packaging Process

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 01:11 AM PST

    Imagination Tech: "Why IMG CXT ray tracing is a game-changer for mobile"

    Posted: 29 Nov 2021 03:25 PM PST

    Is GPU power delivery intentionally overbuilt?

    Posted: 28 Nov 2021 04:20 PM PST

    Hello all - I recently bought a 6900 XT (Red Devil Ultimate, ooooh, aaaah) and have wondered about the PEG connectors since buying it. It's got three eight pins, and is manufacturer rated at 303 watts max draw.

    But if I'm doing my very complicated math correctly, 75+150+150+150 = 525. So are they just showing off/inconveniencing customers via their power delivery, or is there a good reason for this kind of overbuilding?

    Thanks in advance, of course. =)

    submitted by /u/angled_musasabi
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