• Breaking News

    Monday, May 16, 2022

    Hardware support: VideoCardz: "NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 with 16128 CUDA cores and 450W TDP is allegedly twice as fast as RTX 3090"

    Hardware support: VideoCardz: "NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 with 16128 CUDA cores and 450W TDP is allegedly twice as fast as RTX 3090"


    VideoCardz: "NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 with 16128 CUDA cores and 450W TDP is allegedly twice as fast as RTX 3090"

    Posted: 16 May 2022 03:50 AM PDT

    [HUB] AMD Market Manipulation or Good Deal? Radeon RX 6950 XT Review

    Posted: 16 May 2022 04:14 AM PDT

    Nvidia GeForce RTX 40-Series GPUs Tipped to Debut in Early Q3

    Posted: 15 May 2022 11:11 AM PDT

    [Luumi] Summary of AMD 5300G on LN2 - Hard Coldbug at -120c & Overclocking to 5.54GHz+

    Posted: 16 May 2022 01:47 AM PDT

    [Noctua] ASUS GeForce RTX 3080 Noctua Edition graphics card

    Posted: 16 May 2022 06:39 AM PDT

    Gigabyte UD1000GM PG5 1000 W Review - The First PCIe 5.0 PSU | TechPowerUp

    Posted: 15 May 2022 04:55 PM PDT

    University of Cambridge: "Algae-powered computing: scientists create reliable and renewable biological photovoltaic cell"

    Posted: 15 May 2022 05:37 AM PDT

    [JerryRigEverything] Steam Deck Durability Test! - Is the 'Upgraded Glass' Worth it?

    Posted: 16 May 2022 06:48 AM PDT

    What software do chip designers (Intel, Nvidia, AMD) use to validate their clocks?

    Posted: 15 May 2022 10:33 AM PDT

    I've been trying to overclock some of my hardware, and it's rather difficult to test stability. Stability varies between programs, between OS's, standby state. It's pretty hard to test stability in all these states. On the other hand, these these chips never seem to falter in their factory settings. I'm never as confident in my overclock as the factory clock. It makes me wonder, what software do these companies use to test stability. Is this secret sauce or just public knowledge that I'm ignorant of?

    Thanks.

    Edit: Thanks everyone for answering. Maybe my question was not worded properly; I seemed to have gotten answers to two questions. (1) How clocks are validated during design and (2) how clocks are validated after manufacturing of the chip. I was asking for the latter, but it y'all's answers sparked my interest in the former question. I got some reading to do! Regarding the validation after manufacturing, the comments are telling me it's secret sauce. What a shame. Could have been useful for overclockers everywhere.

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

    The Apple GPU and the Impossible Bug

    Posted: 14 May 2022 05:59 PM PDT

    What stops us from designing an x86 CPU from scratch

    Posted: 15 May 2022 09:44 PM PDT

    In a thought experiment with unlimited R&D resources what legal barriers prevent a competitor from entering the x86 CPU market, is it illegal to copy the x86 instruction set? How about extensions?

    submitted by /u/TheGamingPhoenix_000
    [link] [comments]

    Scanner Recommendations

    Posted: 16 May 2022 07:08 AM PDT

    Hi all,

    I have to scan a lot of documents on a weekly basis (~500 pages) for recordkeeping. Ideally, I'd like to buy a scanner that is able to auto feed, scan both sides, and upload it to a could destination for storage (drive, dropbox, etc). Does anyone have any recommendations? I've checked out some review sites and saw Brother ImageCenter ADS-2800W may fit the bill: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01AD5ESEA/ref=emc_b_5_mob_t?th=1

    Does anyone have experience with this or have a better recommendation? You help is much appreciated!

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

    What sort of expertise/training will the workers at TSMC's new fab in AZ require?

    Posted: 15 May 2022 10:14 PM PDT

    According to this article, the new TSMC fab in Arizona will employ ~1,200 people. What sort of training or education does it take to work in a fab like this? What proportion of the employees will have a PhD or a bachelor's in electrical engineering? How many (any?) will only need the sort of technical training one might get at a community college?

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

    Fortune: "Arm's tech powers 95% of the world's smartphones. Investors want more"

    Posted: 14 May 2022 07:21 PM PDT

    Liliputing: "AYA Neo 2 handheld gaming PC with Ryzen 7 6800U coming later this year"

    Posted: 14 May 2022 04:35 PM PDT

    RTX 3080 und RX 6800 XT: Treiberentwicklung von AMD und Nvidia im Vergleich(RTX 3080 and RX 6800 XT: Driver development from AMD and Nvidia in comparison)

    Posted: 14 May 2022 10:49 PM PDT

    Could have Nintendo made the NES and Super NES limit sprites on screen without lag?

    Posted: 15 May 2022 06:18 AM PDT

    I have read specs of consoles during those times, where they say how many sprites on the screen could be displayed.....but does that mean even with bad performance? Think of when there are a lot of sprites on the screen and there is lag or even flicker......this is a hypothetical question, but imagine if Nintendo cared not only about the quality of the graphics and theme but also even more about performance (they already did, but imagine even more), where they didnt want any lag in the game. Could they have set a hard limit on the amount of sprites on the screen where the developer could never have lag due to the amount of sprites they have on screen? Would that be a firmware setting?

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

    No comments:

    Post a Comment