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    Monday, June 13, 2022

    Hardware support: Samsung Z Flip 3 hinge fails after 418500 folds

    Hardware support: Samsung Z Flip 3 hinge fails after 418500 folds


    Samsung Z Flip 3 hinge fails after 418500 folds

    Posted: 13 Jun 2022 09:59 AM PDT

    Do different processors consuming the same wattage produce the same amount of heat?

    Posted: 13 Jun 2022 03:19 AM PDT

    For example, if we have a 3800x and 12600k both consuming 100 W would both produce the same amount of heat at that wattage? And if not then why?

    submitted by /u/SoldierSeat
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    Intel 4 Process Node In Detail

    Posted: 13 Jun 2022 10:45 AM PDT

    Xbox 360 Architecture | A Practical Analysis

    Posted: 12 Jun 2022 02:28 PM PDT

    Razer Kunai Chroma 120 mm Case Fan in Review - Hopelessly overpriced, but without juice and power | igor'sLAB

    Posted: 13 Jun 2022 12:07 AM PDT

    Real World Tech: "Intel 4 Process Scales Logic with Design, Materials, and EUV"

    Posted: 12 Jun 2022 07:48 PM PDT

    "Cadence Digital and Custom/Analog Design Flows Certified by TSMC for Latest N3E and N4P Processes"

    Posted: 13 Jun 2022 10:17 AM PDT

    Hitman 3 PC Ray Tracing Upgrade: Looks Good - But A Big Hit To Performance

    Posted: 13 Jun 2022 10:28 AM PDT

    Where The Real Chip Shortage Is [Asianometry]

    Posted: 13 Jun 2022 10:16 AM PDT

    Intel 13th Gen Core RaptorLake (i9-13900) Preview & Benchmarks – Hybrid Performance

    Posted: 12 Jun 2022 07:23 PM PDT

    VideoCardz: "NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1630 delayed, RTX 40 series launch slips by a month"

    Posted: 12 Jun 2022 05:32 AM PDT

    Centaur CHA SoC, CNS x86 CPU 8c/8t Performance Part One

    Posted: 12 Jun 2022 06:31 PM PDT

    Hello /r/hardware,

    I was going to post a full review of the Centaur CNS x86 cores today, but I haven't had time to test AVX-512 as in depth as I wanted to. So I'll start today with a review of this CPU in a way that it was never intended to be used: Gaming. I'll have links to recordings of the videos if you would like to see the performance for yourself. The non-gaming results I have thus far have been posted on my Twitter account if you want to see what I have thus far.

    Before I go on, I'll give you a quick example of AVX-512 performance : y-cruncher 2.5b

    • Centaur CHA SoC, 8c/8t CNS cores at 2.5 ghz : 294.8 seconds
    • Ryzen 1700x : 305 seconds

    System Specifications:

    • Centaur CHA, CNS Cores at 2.5ghz
    • MSI MEG s280 AIO Liquid Cooler
    • CHA0001 Motherboard
    • 2x 8gb DDR4-3200 (JEDEC)
    • Zotac RTX 3060ti

    Games that ran good!

    DOOM (2016) and Strange Brigade both ran particuarly good on this CPU. DOOM had minimums in the 80s and averages around 130, Strange brigade had minimums of ~107fps and averages around 140.

    DOOM: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5LMGc3zREU
    Strange Brigade: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfWTTMS6JTg

    Games that were "playable"

    Crysis Remastered was surprisingly playable, averaging around 50-60fps. It did have occasional dips into the 30s, however. https://youtu.be/Wr5DSo3-Pm4

    Cyberpunk 2077's performance varied depending on where it was tested. In many areas the CNS cores are capable of sustaining ~60fps. See: https://youtu.be/bkHk9w8mE1E However, when driving and fighting performance suffered, dipping into the 30s. https://youtu.be/TDsOsnGNdBs

    Far Cry V is one of the most single core intensive games out there, so I was curious to see how badly it performed. On a normal system, you'll see that one core is loaded much more than the others in this title. On the CNS cores, one core had slightly higher utilization, but the overall load was almost evenly spread. None of the cores ever reached above 80% utilization. Framerates averaged around 40-45fps, with minimums of 29fps. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8E-jFMjBFJM

    Games that were unplayable

    Judging by framerate alone, you might think that Assassin's Creed: Odyssey was barely playable - dipping into the 30s, but averaging in the 40s. However, the video doesn't very well capture the microstutters that occur in gameplay. AC:O is not what I would consider playable on this CPU, it's a stuttery mess IMO. This is more apparent at the end of the video, which captures the in-game benchmark. https://youtu.be/LGfZ5vzvGes

    WHY AREN'T RPCS3 RESULTS SHOWN?

    I only have a copy of Demon Souls, and it's experiencing issues during the SPU portion. I'm troubleshooting to attempt to resolve this, and I might borrow a few games from a friend to test other titles.

    That's all for now, I'll have a more in-depth overview of non-gaming results posted after I've had more time to test AVX-512 in depth.

    submitted by /u/bizude
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    der8auer EN - This Water Cooling Case costs 1700 EUR and has Radiator Side Panels

    Posted: 12 Jun 2022 04:09 AM PDT

    First detailed pictures of the GLENFLY Arise-GT10C0 based on Zhaoxin GPU technology

    Posted: 13 Jun 2022 06:51 AM PDT

    What's the deal with the Seagate MACH.2 multi actuator drives?

    Posted: 12 Jun 2022 03:13 PM PDT

    I first saw these drives around 2019 around CES with demos like this one showing both heads working seemingly independently. Around May 2021, they made a big splash, with lots of coverage from the tech press:

    https://www.servethehome.com/seagate-exos-2x14-mach-2-500mbps-hard-drive-launched/

    https://www.tomshardware.com/news/seagate-lists-dual-actuator-hdd-exos-2x14

    https://www.storagereview.com/news/seagate-exos-2x14-hdd-delivers-524mb-s

    and more that I can't be bothered to list.

    I got curious and searched for reviews of these, but I couldn't find any at all, only the initial coverage, and I can't find anywhere to buy these drives either. I'm confused - what happened with these?

    submitted by /u/betacollector64
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    Intel and EUV manufacturing: Technical details on "Intel 4" and Meteor Lake

    Posted: 12 Jun 2022 08:45 AM PDT

    Micron to make cutting-edge '1-beta' memory chips in Japan this year

    Posted: 12 Jun 2022 11:12 AM PDT

    Why America Will Lose Semiconductors - SemiAnalysis

    Posted: 13 Jun 2022 07:55 AM PDT

    [GN]New AMD Threadripper & Zen 5 Roadmap, More Zen 4 Details, RDNA GPUs, & More

    Posted: 11 Jun 2022 09:32 PM PDT

    HDD, SSD or something else; is there another technology that could replace SATA HDD as the chief resource for large capacity storage?

    Posted: 12 Jun 2022 01:48 PM PDT

    I don't know much about hardware, really. But I've been buying SATA hard disk drives for 20 years, now. I've been lurking this sub for a little while now and I have to ask, since you all seem that you would know; is there a technology in theory or practice that could one day replace HDDs? They seem to be increasing capacity; 8TB to 14 to 20TB, etc. Will they simply continue to grow or will SSDs eventually be the primary means if prices indeed could come down to a similar price-point? OR, is there another technology that is at least in theory or discussion that could eventually replace the SATA hard drive? It has had a remarkable legacy and I'm just curious how long it might go.

    tl;dr are SSDs slated to replace HDD in the long run or is there another technology that could do this?

    submitted by /u/turdman9000
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    [Budget-Builds Official] Matrox C420 with AMD Cape Verde GPU

    Posted: 12 Jun 2022 08:37 AM PDT

    Is there a hard limit of how much power a PSU can handle?

    Posted: 11 Jun 2022 08:18 PM PDT

    Packed into a regular ATX form factor of course. I just watched the 3450W PSU vid of LTT and kinda realized I've yet to see a 2000+ W PSU anywhere, is that because of the size limit or the ATX standards just told manufacturers not to make such things?

    submitted by /u/aquamar1ne
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    Buying an USED 5000$ Custom Made PC Build

    Posted: 13 Jun 2022 05:58 AM PDT

    why no updates on sata3?

    Posted: 11 Jun 2022 03:25 PM PDT

    Why is there no backwards compatible updates to sata3? Literally every other port has constant updates... usb, hdmi, dp, etc..

    From my understanding something only gets abandoned if it has a replacement that is far superior. I get it that m.2 is far superior, but the problem is that there usually only 1 or 2 ports available, versus the whopping stacks of sata ports you get.

    Kind of silly how the port that connects my keyboard to my computer has greater bandwidth than my what my storage drive gets.

    submitted by /u/TrankTheTanky
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