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You "I don't like wide-aspect ratio monitors because I code" people can just turn that frown upside down by turning the monitor into portrait and getting fucktons of vertical space. And when you're not doing Srs Business work, you can watch movies all pretty like. It's fine!
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# ? May 28, 2017 06:37 |
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# ? May 10, 2024 00:28 |
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That fucks up subpixel anti-aliasing though. I'm cool with 16:9 and 16:10. Not sure how cool I am with the 3:2 stuff that's gotten really popular on HiDPI tablets and stuff these days. Better than 4:3. I don't miss that at all.
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# ? May 28, 2017 06:51 |
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Volguus posted:I thought that the 16:9 aspect ratio fad (hell, anything but the trusty 4:3) would just simply go away when normal people (you know, those who actually use computers to program stuff) would just simply start realize how lovely they are and stop buying them. That was more than 10 years ago. I was wrong, they never realized how lovely they are, and they even went now and made 21:9 monsters. And they upped the price to the relatively acceptable 16:10 monitor to astronomic levels, if you can even find any. 16:9 didn't become popular for computer monitors because there was a fad for it, it was pretty much that LCD TVs are all 16:9. Once LCD TVs started hitting high volume production, that created a giant economy of scale problem for all non-16:9 aspect ratios in lower volume markets like computer displays. Basically, you can't efficiently tile a non 16:9 display size into the standard raw glass panel sizes the LCD display industry manufactures and designs all their equipment to process, so there is some waste, so the resulting display is more expensive. To the Dells and HPs of the world, more expensive (even if it's just a little bit) is like garlic to vampires. Most computer buyers don't give a poo poo about whether their display is all that good, they care about paying the least possible amount of money for whatever piece of crap will do the job. So the computer industry mostly just goes along with 16:9.
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# ? May 28, 2017 07:31 |
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A lot of corporate stuff is still 16:10 1920x1200 panels (including all the cheap HP stuff we buy at work) 4:3 is kinda crap these days though - a lot of software is set up to work best at 16:9 or 16:10 and the maximum widely used 4:3 res was only 1600x1200 which isn't sufficient these days
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# ? May 28, 2017 07:38 |
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There should be more 2560x1600 monitors, corporate 1920x1200 monitors are the last gasp of 16:10.
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# ? May 28, 2017 11:28 |
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Paul MaudDib posted:Some Gigabyte mobos have an LED backlight on the rear IO shield that you can toggle via BIOS or windows application. I like that plus the USB "Q-flash" capability for the UEFI (very useful if you need to flash a BIOS to get microcode for your processor, like with Z87 or X99).
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# ? May 28, 2017 12:23 |
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Volguus posted:LEDs on the motherboard? gently caress that, nobody looks there. 16:9 on the monitor? Now I'm pissed.
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# ? May 28, 2017 12:28 |
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Toast Museum posted:In the US market, maybe it's a nostalgia thing. Like, the kids who were into light-up case fans 15 years ago have jobs and a little money now, and they want a laser show inside their PC. It's like overclocking: Virtually nobody cared about it back in 1999 when you can truly get +50% performance for free out of a Celeron 300A, fast forward to today everyone thinks from the likes of Reddit thinks spending $$$ on expensive mobos and cooling for like a 10% OC is good because it's OCing is "free" and "easy".
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# ? May 28, 2017 14:09 |
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WAR DOGS OF SOCHI posted:It's hard for me to believe that windowed cases are still a thing, but it looks like they're bigger than ever? i hate the look of windowed cases but i would also gladly eat poo poo to save a few bucks; hence it always tickles me when i'm looking for a case and the windowed version is invariably like £10 more. it's the same weird sensation of unwarranted smug elitism that percolates when you walk past the bread in the supermarket that has the crusts cut off and is therefore 3 times the price
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# ? May 28, 2017 15:50 |
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I physically cannot rotate my 21:9 34" monitor because my monitor mount will not go high enough to let it, so instead I'd rather flank the 21:9 center with rotated 4K IPS monitors (sub-pixel rendered fonts aren't applicable then). Man, that's a first world problem.Palladium posted:It's like overclocking: Virtually nobody cared about it back in 1999 when you can truly get +50% performance for free out of a Celeron 300A, fast forward to today everyone thinks from the likes of Reddit thinks spending $$$ on expensive mobos and cooling for like a 10% OC is good because it's OCing is "free" and "easy".
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# ? May 28, 2017 17:33 |
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necrobobsledder posted:Nerds are very susceptible to marketing pressure like any other demographic. OCing nowadays for arguments around price efficiency is as devious as discount retailers like Ross and TJ Maxx charging nearly the same price as the original retail price while claiming discounts (price marketing is the same across all verticals). Most of us that went through the overclocking era of yore know that we've long hit diminishing returns (not to mention Intel's changes over the years) and even more importantly, most of us have decent enough jobs now where we could just buy something more expensive instead of spending a little less total after all the coolers and such to try to get similar single threaded performance. Squeezing CPU performance also made sense when games were still very CPU-bound all the time when few titles could do much with GPUs. It is pretty funny that people spend huge amounts of money on known overclocking motherboards, then a chip that doesn't overclock well. For the most part, since the Sandy Bridge era, the only chips that overclock well are the Kaby Lakes. But if you toss "Fatality" on a motherboard's name, you're right, people will be happy with their 10% OC that they've paid a huge premium for.
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# ? May 28, 2017 18:01 |
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I wanted to post something, but then I pulled out the calculator and notice that my overclock on the 5820K only amounts for 11% (3.6GHz Turbo to 4GHz at any time (well, 21% if you use the base clock)), so nevermind.
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# ? May 28, 2017 18:38 |
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Combat Pretzel posted:I wanted to post something, but then I pulled out the calculator and notice that my overclock on the 5820K only amounts for 11% (3.6GHz Turbo to 4GHz at any time (well, 21% if you use the base clock)), so nevermind. If that's all you're getting, you're not doing it right. Without even touching VCore I can easily hit 4.3Ghz on mine, and with some modest bumps can get into the 4.5 range. Admittedly the heat produced at that point is pretty silly, to the point where even my H110 starts to struggle if I'm loading all the cores to the hilt with Handbrake or something, so I usually just leave it at 4.3 and call it a day. But yeah, it takes a bit more effort than the 2500k did (4.5Hz on air without even trying), and nothing will ever match the gains of that good 'ol Celeron 300A. Also, while the "Fatality" and other silly boards are their own issue, a lot of the "good" overclocking boards are just high-quality all the way around. Better components, more PCIe slots, better audio, etc., all of which are worth money to a lot of people regardless of the overclocking potential for a given board.
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# ? May 28, 2017 18:51 |
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DrDork posted:Also, while the "Fatality" and other silly boards are their own issue, a lot of the "good" overclocking boards are just high-quality all the way around. Better components, more PCIe slots, better audio, etc., all of which are worth money to a lot of people regardless of the overclocking potential for a given board. Yes, but people will put more money into their motherboard when buying a cheap motherboard and a faster GPU/CPU will usually be the better buy.
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# ? May 28, 2017 21:19 |
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DrDork posted:If that's all you're getting, you're not doing it right. Without even touching VCore I can easily hit 4.3Ghz on mine, and with some modest bumps can get into the 4.5 range. Admittedly the heat produced at that point is pretty silly, to the point where even my H110 starts to struggle if I'm loading all the cores to the hilt with Handbrake or something, so I usually just leave it at 4.3 and call it a day.
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# ? May 28, 2017 21:24 |
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I noticed people talking about the 7700k temperature spikes doing mostly nothing and tested mine out which is definitely jumping from 40c to 65c in a fraction of a second and then back down. My fans ramp up and back down too. Kind of driving me nuts. What is the stock voltage for these procs? 1.2v?
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# ? May 29, 2017 01:10 |
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I would think it's lower than that, my 4790K runs at 1.088 stock. IIRC, they're all a little different, each processor is set for the core voltage it needs to validate properly.
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# ? May 29, 2017 01:40 |
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Well, evidently Coffee Lake will be LGA1151v2. Same number of pins, same architecture, new arrangement. So much for drop-ins.
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# ? May 29, 2017 01:44 |
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I really, really hate when companies do poo poo like that. I feel like it's almost a 100% guarantee that's going to cause somebody some problems.
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# ? May 29, 2017 02:29 |
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BIG HEADLINE posted:Well, evidently Coffee Lake will be LGA1151v2. Same number of pins, same architecture, new arrangement. So much for drop-ins.
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# ? May 29, 2017 02:45 |
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I kinda figured there's no way they could do 6-cores on the same chipset. The interesting question will be whether you can put your LGA1151v1 in your LGA1151v2 socket, like you can with AM2+. I'm betting that you can't, though.
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# ? May 29, 2017 02:50 |
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VulgarandStupid posted:Yes, but people will put more money into their motherboard when buying a cheap motherboard and a faster GPU/CPU will usually be the better buy. it's a better buy if your time is worthless - in my experience motherboard quality seems to be way more variable than cpu/gpu quality; i've had quite a few crap out when i've penny pinched. then again my last mobo was a not inexpensive gigabyte model that also mysteriously went completely dead, so i guess some manufacturers are just generally a bit poo poo
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# ? May 29, 2017 07:51 |
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DrDork posted:You "I don't like wide-aspect ratio monitors because I code" people can just turn that frown upside down by turning the monitor into portrait and getting fucktons of vertical space. And when you're not doing Srs Business work, you can watch movies all pretty like. It's fine!
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# ? May 29, 2017 08:46 |
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Malloc Voidstar posted:or you could just set line width to 180 chars yeah but then you have to actually read 180 chars at a time
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# ? May 29, 2017 08:59 |
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BIG HEADLINE posted:Well, evidently Coffee Lake will be LGA1151v2. Same number of pins, same architecture, new arrangement. So much for drop-ins. Not so much surprising as cynicism reaffirming.
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# ? May 29, 2017 09:02 |
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GRINDCORE MEGGIDO posted:Not so much surprising as cynicism reaffirming. Chipzilla gotta chipzilla.
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# ? May 29, 2017 09:23 |
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ASRock Unveils the X299E-ITX/ac: Mini ITX + X299 + Quad-channel Memory
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# ? May 29, 2017 11:56 |
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Meanwhile in the Asrock exec meeting room: AM4 ITX? Who cares?
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# ? May 29, 2017 12:08 |
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quote:Dj-ElectriC it has a single pcie slot
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# ? May 29, 2017 12:24 |
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Intel is preparing more Skylake-X CPUs to counter Threadripper, now with a rumored Core i9-7980XE with 18C/36T. PCGH claims to know from a reliable source that the heatspreader on Skylake-X is not soldered, so the countdown to the first $2500+ Extreme Edition i9 killed during delidding starts now. http://translate.google.com/transla...n&langpair=auto At the risk of sounding like a broken record, just how big is the market for desktop users requiring 18 Cores at ~3 Ghz and without ECC RAM? At this point it looks like AMD and Intel are just rebadging CPUs that they had to make for the server market anyway. I'd be much more interested in a highly binned 6-8C SKU at 5 Ghz (not that I'd buy one).
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# ? May 29, 2017 12:27 |
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GRINDCORE MEGGIDO posted:it has a single pcie slot ASRock boards usually support PCI-E bifurcation, so it could theoretically support SLi with a bifurcated riser.
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# ? May 29, 2017 12:32 |
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repiv posted:ASRock boards usually support PCI-E bifurcation, so it could theoretically support SLi with a bifurcated riser. why
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# ? May 29, 2017 12:37 |
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Who are the people buying an m-ITX motherboard then sticking it in a case large enough to fit 2+ GPUs?
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# ? May 29, 2017 12:37 |
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Actuarial Fables posted:Who are the people buying an m-ITX motherboard then sticking it in a case large enough to fit 2+ GPUs? people who are about to regret their decision not to buy an matx board, obviously
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# ? May 29, 2017 12:39 |
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# ? May 29, 2017 12:41 |
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That picture makes me wonder if m-ITX have significantly lower idle power draw than comparable ATX boards because they're missing room for a lot of unnecessary things like LEDs, killer network chipsets, isolated soundcards, WiFi chipsets, etc. edit: I should read : quote:The board manages its limited PCB real-estate by going vertical. It features two riser cards, one with a few onboard controllers, and a pair of 32 Gb/s M.2 slots. Connectivity includes two Intel I219-V driven gigabit Ethernet interfaces, 802.11ac WLAN, and Bluetooth 4.1. eames fucked around with this message at 13:11 on May 29, 2017 |
# ? May 29, 2017 13:08 |
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Actuarial Fables posted:Who are the people buying an m-ITX motherboard then sticking it in a case large enough to fit 2+ GPUs? Founders 1080Ti x2 + EK waterblocks with single slot brackets + two slot bridge to fit two cards into the two slots that all ITX cases have? Of course there is the issue of aligning the graphics cards with the standard slots with the addition of the riser, so case modification would still be required for most cases. Should work with the ones with a separate GPU mount connected by a riser though. Palladium posted:Meanwhile in the Asrock exec meeting room: AM4 ITX? Who cares?
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# ? May 29, 2017 15:42 |
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18 core CPU eh? Means nothing if they don't pricematch AMD. What good is an 18 core Skylake-X when it's twice the price or more of the 16C Threadripper? On the other hand, if they try to stay competitive, it means 10C or 12C will become more affordable. Also not a fan of ditching the solder.
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# ? May 29, 2017 15:48 |
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Combat Pretzel posted:Also not a fan of ditching the solder. Must be a big die; I don't think longevity is the reason. I still wish they sold CPUs with a bare die and a built in shim.
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# ? May 29, 2017 15:54 |
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# ? May 10, 2024 00:28 |
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GRINDCORE MEGGIDO posted:Must be a big die; I don't think longevity is the reason. That'd allow people to overclock their CPUs without voiding warranty, can't have that.
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# ? May 29, 2017 16:18 |