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    Hardware support: 80 Plus PSU Standards - Issues and Solutions - Cultists Network

    Hardware support: 80 Plus PSU Standards - Issues and Solutions - Cultists Network


    80 Plus PSU Standards - Issues and Solutions - Cultists Network

    Posted: 30 Apr 2022 06:44 PM PDT

    AMD Navi31 flagship RDNA3 GPU could hit 92 TFLOPS of FP32 performance, four times more than Navi21 - VideoCardz.com

    Posted: 30 Apr 2022 06:52 AM PDT

    IEEE Spectrum: "The X-Ray Tech That Reveals Chip Designs"

    Posted: 30 Apr 2022 09:16 PM PDT

    LTT Labs Head revealed (Gary Key, ex-anandtech) + small interview and plans

    Posted: 30 Apr 2022 08:47 AM PDT

    [VideoCardz] Canadian retailer confirms Radeon RX 6950XT, 6750XT, 6650XT reference design

    Posted: 30 Apr 2022 12:26 PM PDT

    14th Gen Core "Meteor Lake" has been powered-on, on track to launch in 2023 - VideoCardz.com

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 07:54 PM PDT

    If it suddenly creaks under the backplate: Watch out for Mini-ITX, Socket AM4 and custom backplates! | igor'sLAB

    Posted: 30 Apr 2022 02:15 AM PDT

    NVIDIA H100 "Hopper" GPU with 80GB memory listed in Japan for over 33,000 USD - VideoCardz.com

    Posted: 30 Apr 2022 01:42 AM PDT

    Intel CEO now expects chip shortage to last into 2024

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 05:20 PM PDT

    Does Intel have an answer (or developing one) for AMDs Infinity Fabric?

    Posted: 30 Apr 2022 11:13 PM PDT

    A couple things

    1.I know mesh over EMIB is being used to connect the different "tiles" in Intels chips, such as Sapphire Rapids, but from what I heard, Infinity Fabric is much more flexible and scalable and is used for other uses than just in the CPU such as connecting GPU to GPU and CPU to GPU.

    2.Would it even be possible for Intel to develop their own Infinity Fabric type interconnect without infringing on patents by AMD? Based on what I have read on r/AMD_Stock it seems like a major roadblock for Intel.

    3.Does Intel even need an answer? Could they develop multiple separate technologies for connecting CPU to GPU and CPU tile to another CPU tile, versus AMD just using infinity fabric for everything?

    submitted by /u/techwars0954
    [link] [comments]

    PC Shipments Decline After 2 Years of Pandemic-Fueled Growth

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 08:18 AM PDT

    Tom's Hardware: "Nvidia Poaches Intel Alder Lake Architect to Strengthen Arm CPU Push"

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 06:48 PM PDT

    TechPowerUp: "NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 Ti Founders Edition Review"

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 06:24 PM PDT

    TFTCentral's review of the LG 42" C2 OLED is now public

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 09:44 AM PDT

    The Register: "India reveals RISC-V CPU roadmap, expects product by 2023"

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 09:56 AM PDT

    common/uncommon uses for server racks

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 09:48 PM PDT

    I have few years of experience with lots of tech but have yet to dabble with server racks.
    Today I want to discuss what can be placed in them and the use cases people have for them.
    (mostly focusing on personal use at home not companies but anything is welcome)
    I will list some things I know that can placed in racks and you can add to the list in the comment

    • servers (of course)
    • routers
    • network switches
    • custom rack PCs
    • NAS device
    • htpc (though am not sure how you would get video out if its place so far from the tv)
    • bigger audio equipment (seems less common though)
    • security cameras ( not a rack mount thing but they use a lot of ethernet cables if they don't use WIFI some cool one can even be powered by Ethernet only )
    • uninterrupted backup power supplies (if uptime is important or for more expensive stuff)

    __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

    just to make this post informational a bit too i will add some "cool" (am new to these racks so i find it interesting ) info i found about the designs

    • racks have a sizing stander called "rack units" so a 1U device would take 3 holes on each side of the mount and a 2U would take 6 and so on
    • there are also half sized units where you could mount 2 devices next to each other on the same "rack unit" and would support each other in the middle
    • some have compartment (mostly wall mounted ones) in the back for direct electrical socket placement and some have basically air conditioner attachments (seems like things that would be useful if placed in a garage or attic)

    __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

    since i deviated from the topic a bit the main discussion point was
    what can you place in a rack and what common and uncommon uses do you have?

    submitted by /u/hanzoxshimada101
    [link] [comments]

    Augury - Using Data Memory-Dependent Prefetchers to Leak Data at Rest

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 06:46 PM PDT

    [STH] ZFS without a Server!?! It is DPU time! (NVIDIA BlueField-2)

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 09:14 AM PDT

    Samsung 3nm Chip Mass Production On Track To Start in Q2

    Posted: 28 Apr 2022 05:13 PM PDT

    Nikkei Asia: "SoftBank-owned Arm ousts CEO of Chinese joint venture"

    Posted: 28 Apr 2022 08:13 PM PDT

    Cybenetics ATX v3.0 Spec Power Excursions Calculator - Freeware tool for power supply calculation according to Intel’s specifications for load peaks | Download | igor'sLAB

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 01:49 AM PDT

    [Dave2D] XPS 13 Plus - Cleaner And Faster Than A MacBook!

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 10:47 PM PDT

    Sycom launches GeForce RTX 3090 Ti with Asetek/Noctua custom liquid-cooling solution, features five fans in total - VideoCardz.com

    Posted: 28 Apr 2022 04:17 AM PDT

    Can semiconductor manufacturing return to the US?

    Posted: 29 Apr 2022 09:53 PM PDT

    AMD begins RDNA3 (GFX11) graphics architecture enablement for LLVM project - VideoCardz.com

    Posted: 28 Apr 2022 07:23 AM PDT

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