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    Tuesday, November 23, 2021

    Hardware support: Samsung to pick Taylor, Texas, for its $17 bln chip plant - WSJ

    Hardware support: Samsung to pick Taylor, Texas, for its $17 bln chip plant - WSJ


    Samsung to pick Taylor, Texas, for its $17 bln chip plant - WSJ

    Posted: 22 Nov 2021 09:36 PM PST

    [HUB] Best Gaming Monitors of 2021: 1440p, 4K, Ultrawide, 1080p, HDR and Budget Choices

    Posted: 23 Nov 2021 02:04 AM PST

    [VideoCardz]JPR: AMD and Intel GPU shipment decreased by 11% and 26% respectively from last quarter, NVIDIA increased by 8%

    Posted: 23 Nov 2021 04:29 AM PST

    Intel Meteor Lake GPU tile rumored to utilize TSMC 3nm process technology - VideoCardz.com

    Posted: 23 Nov 2021 04:23 AM PST

    A year after release Radeon RX 6000 and GeForce RTX 30 cards are twice as expensive as they should be

    Posted: 22 Nov 2021 02:29 AM PST

    "ONEXPLAYER Mini" handheld gaming PC with 7 inch display coming soon

    Posted: 22 Nov 2021 10:32 PM PST

    [AnandTech] Best CPUs for Gaming: Holiday 2021

    Posted: 23 Nov 2021 05:02 AM PST

    Microsoft and Qualcomm special deal coming to an end could mean Windows for M1 Macs

    Posted: 22 Nov 2021 02:50 PM PST

    DDR5 RAM Prices Top $2,000 on eBay Amid Shortage

    Posted: 23 Nov 2021 08:27 AM PST

    Will 3D-stacked CPUs/GPUs feature lower clock speeds to maximize density/minimize power draw?

    Posted: 23 Nov 2021 08:02 AM PST

    Hey all,

    So this is something that's been on my mind. Given the current trends playing out with transistors and the trends that existing roadmaps project, we can expect transistors to physically stop shrinking around 2027-2028 once we get to the 1.5nm node. From there on out, we can expect chipmakers to implement techniques like monolithic 3D integration (chip stacking?) to continue increasing density. Since power improvements come from physically shrinking the transistors, I don't see how chipmakers can increase performance of these 3D stacked chips without either sacrificing clock-speed for more layers of chips or increasing the power budget of the chip. Personally, I don't see them opting for the latter option as that would 1) result in very hot running chips that drive up people's electricity bill 2) draw ire from environmental activists.

    I recently read about AMD's Zen 4D processors sacrificing clock speed for core count (probably to stay within a specific TDP budget). So I'm thinking that this is the direction the chip industry is headed in the long run.

    What are your thoughts on this? Could chipmakers eventually begin a trend of scaling down clock speeds (opposite of what we saw in the 90s) while adding layers to their chips to maintain a certain power budget while increasing density?

    submitted by /u/BL4CKN166464N6
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    Building a bare-metal Kubernetes cluster on Raspberry Pi

    Posted: 23 Nov 2021 07:50 AM PST

    Before You Build a Gaming PC in Late 2021

    Posted: 23 Nov 2021 07:49 AM PST

    XDA Developers: "Qualcomm has an exclusivity deal with Microsoft for Windows on ARM"

    Posted: 22 Nov 2021 08:42 AM PST

    Fabricated Knowledge: "The Rising Tide of Semiconductor Cost"

    Posted: 22 Nov 2021 09:38 AM PST

    [Gamers Nexus] Amazon Scam PC: Everything is Wrong in the iBUYPOWER Element Mini

    Posted: 21 Nov 2021 11:50 PM PST

    9to5Google: "Qualcomm updating chip naming with standalone 'Snapdragon' brand & single-digit + generation"

    Posted: 22 Nov 2021 09:02 AM PST

    VideoCardz: "AMD confirms Radeon RX 6500M and RX 6300M feature Navi 24 GPU"

    Posted: 22 Nov 2021 07:54 AM PST

    Is Geekbench indicative of gaming performance when benchmarking desktop CPU's and comparing the results?

    Posted: 23 Nov 2021 04:34 AM PST

    For example if one cpu scores 1000 single core and 4000 multi core and the other 900 single and 3500 multi does that definitively mean the faster one will achieve higher framerates in games?

    submitted by /u/FunkyFre5h
    [link] [comments]

    Patent (TSMC): "Through-Silicon Via Design for Stacking Integrated Circuits"

    Posted: 22 Nov 2021 07:28 AM PST

    The Korea Times: "Samsung to announce new chip plant site in US this week"

    Posted: 21 Nov 2021 10:32 AM PST

    Choked by U.S. Sanctions, China’s Chip Industry Views Heterogeneous Integration as a Way Forward

    Posted: 22 Nov 2021 02:46 AM PST

    DDR5 Deep Dive – Exclusive interview with Kingston about the new memory standard and many examples from practice

    Posted: 21 Nov 2021 10:58 PM PST

    [Phoronix] ASpeed Preparing AST2600 DisplayPort Support

    Posted: 22 Nov 2021 03:47 AM PST

    [AHOC/Buildzoid] Rambling about the ASUS Z690 Motherboard line up

    Posted: 22 Nov 2021 12:40 AM PST

    Box86 Can Now Run Crysis on ARM with DXVK [x86 to ARM translation]

    Posted: 21 Nov 2021 11:55 AM PST

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