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Busy Bee posted:So I'm confused on what PaaS entails. Does anyone have a common business that utilizes PaaS? IaaS - basically means they give you a Windows/Linux virtual machine (VM), and you're free to run whatever software you want on it: webserver, database server, etc. PaaS - is a step up from IaaS in that they give you a fully-managed webserver or database that you can just publish your website to. So, for something like a .NET web app, I can just click publish to Azure App Service, and it will be up and running at myapp.azure.net in a few seconds. This is different from IaaS, because I don't need to worry about Windows updates, setting up IIS, etc, and there's no VM to directly connect to. (there is a VM in the background, but it's more-or-less hidden.) SaaS - really just means any hosted software sold as a subscription. This would be a large percentage of paid software these days, with the exception of things like Microsoft Windows, which you buy once and install.
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# ? Nov 4, 2017 12:29 |
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# ? Jun 1, 2024 05:33 |
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B-Nasty posted:IaaS - basically means they give you a Windows/Linux virtual machine (VM), and you're free to run whatever software you want on it: webserver, database server, etc. What would be an example of a .NET web app that most people use daily? Why would someone decide to go with IaaS when PaaS seems to be the more simple option where everything is taken care of?
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# ? Nov 4, 2017 12:41 |
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Busy Bee posted:What would be an example of a .NET web app that most people use daily? Why would someone decide to go with IaaS when PaaS seems to be the more simple option where everything is taken care of? Well, StackOverflow would be one you've probably heard of. IaaS tends to be more popular than PaaS, because you have more control and it is typically cheaper for the same amount of performance. I think there's also a fear in many companies about locking themselves in to a PaaS solution, whereas a Windows VM (IaaS) is the same no matter if I get it through Microsoft/Amazon/Google. PaaS is usually a good choice when you're just starting a business, because you can quickly scale by throwing more money at the problem. Once you have a better idea of what your needs are, and maybe have someone to manage it, IaaS starts to make more sense.
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# ? Nov 4, 2017 12:51 |
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Edit: I answered my own question as zebra has printers that handle both receipt paper as well as shipping labels. Does anyone know of a thermal printer that can print both retail receipts as well as USPS shipping labels? I've looked around and can see some multi-size thermal printers from companies like Zebra but haven't found any descriptions that explicitly say they can do receipts and shipping labels. The largest format of receipt paper I can find is 3 1/8 inches (80mm) wide and it looks like shipping labels are 4 inches wide so I'm unsure what will work. hummingbird hoedown fucked around with this message at 04:48 on Nov 5, 2017 |
# ? Nov 4, 2017 15:32 |
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Gromit posted:Due to someone ruining it for everyone, I've been asked in my office if I can set up our Internet so that we have URL logging so that we can go back at any time and see where particular users have gone. I am not looking to block any sites or restrict use, just to keep a log of where everyone is going should there be an issue further down the track. Cheese it, it's the fuzz.
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# ? Nov 5, 2017 01:32 |
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Okay. I've got no idea where to post this but I figure this thread is probably the best place around these parts. It's a hardware question but not a computer question. I bought a VCR to watch some old family videos a little while back. Haven't used one in about a decade and a half so I'm a little confused by a nuance of the hardware. My parents would always film something, turn the camera off, fast forward across some blank tape, then record more. Unfortunately, my cheap little junk store VCR seems to turn off as soon as it detects blank tape. I can try to power through by holding down the fast-forward button but it doesn't always seem to work. Is this just because the VCR is a POS and I need to buy a decent one, or is there some kind of setting I don't know about?
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# ? Nov 5, 2017 16:31 |
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feedmyleg posted:Okay. I've got no idea where to post this but I figure this thread is probably the best place around these parts. It's a hardware question but not a computer question. You can, if you want to, digitize those movies. There probably are USB capture cards that can help you and let you record from the VCR on the computer. It'll be a bit of work, but if you back those movies up you won't lose them (which will happen for sure with the tapes). About VCR settings I haven't touched one in 20 years .
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# ? Nov 5, 2017 16:58 |
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I have never heard of a VCR that does that.
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# ? Nov 5, 2017 17:29 |
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I agree. I thought it was weird. Could be an issue with it being an old used VCR with some run-down components inside. Sounds like a new one is probably the way to go...Volguus posted:You can, if you want to, digitize those movies. There probably are USB capture cards that can help you and let you record from the VCR on the computer. It'll be a bit of work, but if you back those movies up you won't lose them (which will happen for sure with the tapes). About VCR settings I haven't touched one in 20 years . That's my plan, but with a lot of family videos I'm trying to determine which ones are worth digitizing.
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# ? Nov 5, 2017 19:09 |
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I'm looking for receipt printers that can print datamatrix barcodes on them. I'd like to write a program that creates datamatrix barcodes of randomly generated numbers to after as keys. Many receipt printers only support certain barcode formats. Does anyone know if a printer could be forced or tricked into printing an unsupported barcode format through programming? Or will a printer simply be unable to print a format if it wasn't designed to support it?
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# ? Nov 5, 2017 19:24 |
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Hummer Driving human being posted:I'm looking for receipt printers that can print datamatrix barcodes on them. I'd like to write a program that creates datamatrix barcodes of randomly generated numbers to after as keys. Many receipt printers only support certain barcode formats. Does anyone know if a printer could be forced or tricked into printing an unsupported barcode format through programming? Or will a printer simply be unable to print a format if it wasn't designed to support it? As long as it can print arbitrary images (like store logos) at the resolution you're hoping for, it should at least be possible to turn your barcode into an image and print that.
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# ? Nov 5, 2017 19:49 |
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Volguus posted:You can, if you want to, digitize those movies. There probably are USB capture cards that can help you and let you record from the VCR on the computer. It'll be a bit of work, but if you back those movies up you won't lose them (which will happen for sure with the tapes). I did a batch some years ago and can recommend this type of cheap dongle: https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/B00EOMIDXG It worked quite well. Better than the two-three equivalents I have tried in the past, at least. However, be ready to deal with lovely audio/video sync - I have never seen a cheap capture dongle that manages to get it right. Furthermore, video post-processing and noise removal is strongly recommended as it can work wonders to clean up the lovely picture from your degraded tapes (as they are likely to be). My workflow was something like the following:
The result was pretty okay - took a lot of time and effort to figure out the right process but once I got it down proper, it was pretty easy. I used Premiere Pro and Audacity for the most. Might have also used FFmpeg for some custom processing (I honestly forget - Adobe tools tend to have stupid limitations that need to be worked around with other tools). For noise removal I used Neat Video plugin for Premiere Pro. EssOEss fucked around with this message at 21:40 on Nov 5, 2017 |
# ? Nov 5, 2017 21:37 |
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Yeah, the only thing that ever worked exceptionally well for me to digitize VHS tapes was a Pinnacle FireWire breakout box, but it was like 150$ The cheap USB ones are tolerable if you don't have a zillion hours of tape to digitize.
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# ? Nov 5, 2017 21:49 |
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JnnyThndrs posted:Yeah, the only thing that ever worked exceptionally well for me to digitize VHS tapes was a Pinnacle FireWire breakout box, but it was like 150$ The cheap USB ones are tolerable if you don't have a zillion hours of tape to digitize. We had a Canopus firewire breakout box (possibly ADVC-110) with nice clean video and I want to say it was several hundred dollars at the time. That was like 10-15 years ago so there may be something better/cheaper available now, but it looks like the Canopus boxes are still going for $100+ on the used market so maybe they're still a decent choice. But either way I'm guessing you're going to be out at least $100 for a converter that doesn't totally suck rear end, you just can't make a very good converter at a <$100 price point. Since the converter can only digitize whatever signal you hand it, if you're going to do a lot of video or you need exceptional quality it's also going to be worthwhile to track down a studio-grade VHS deck (a "VTR" in studio lingo). Probably will not be as expensive as "studio grade" gear sounds, since nobody wants VHS anymore, I'd guess another $100 or so. All in all I'd figure on sinking a minimum of $200 into the hardware, probably $300 by the time you're done and through, plus some time to figure out a decent workflow with your software of choice. But I'd guess you'll pay $50 per hour of tape to get a professional to do it for you with their equipment so the break-even point isn't that far off. Paul MaudDib fucked around with this message at 23:15 on Nov 5, 2017 |
# ? Nov 5, 2017 22:41 |
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Services like YesVideo offer videotape conversion at like $15 per 2 hours of content, and will have your videos placed onto an online storage they run for that cost. They'll then usually charge like $10 per DVD to have that content directly put on DVD if you don't trust the online storage and in any case thy mail the original tapes back to you. A lot of stores like CVS and Wal-Mart have arrangements with them to drop off the tapes and come back in a few weeks to pick up DVDs if you ordered them and so on. It's basically cheaper than ever to have someone just go ahead and digitize all your stuff to you and have them encoded in a form that you can just slap on youtube or put on Facebook. I've directed family members to that service in the past when they had tapes to get transferred and the quality of the encodes and stuff was top notch for the quality tapes come in as. I don't really think it's worth it anymore to try to hunt down a decent VHS deck and go throught he process of actually transferring them yourself, though it might still be worth iit if you've got like 600 hours of tape on hand that needs transferring.
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# ? Nov 6, 2017 00:21 |
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Hummer Driving human being posted:I'm looking for receipt printers that can print datamatrix barcodes on them. I'd like to write a program that creates datamatrix barcodes of randomly generated numbers to after as keys. Many receipt printers only support certain barcode formats. Does anyone know if a printer could be forced or tricked into printing an unsupported barcode format through programming? Or will a printer simply be unable to print a format if it wasn't designed to support it? https://www.brother.com.au/professional-label-printers/ql-800-detail I use this at work. It has a program that you store images of each label, we use it for GS1 barcoding. I don't see any reason why you couldn't print out labels in the format you are using once it's all setup. Labels are stored pretty much as an image and you can get assorted sizes of labels on rolls with pre-determined sizes. Though if each label is going to be unique, it may not suit. That one is fine for us as we're just labeling a certain customer's product once a week, so it's a low volume use.
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# ? Nov 6, 2017 01:02 |
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fishmech posted:Services like YesVideo offer videotape conversion at like $15 per 2 hours of content, and will have your videos placed onto an online storage they run for that cost. They'll then usually charge like $10 per DVD to have that content directly put on DVD if you don't trust the online storage and in any case thy mail the original tapes back to you. Oh yeah, at $7.50 per hour it's really not worth loving around with it yourself. That's like an order of magnitude less than I figured it would be. Again, unless you have like 600 hours of tapes, but even then it's probably worth just dropping a few grand to make the problem go away. You don't want to manually digitize 600 hours of video by yourself.
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# ? Nov 6, 2017 01:26 |
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I think I may have actually asked this somewhere on this forum at some point in the past, but I forgot what answer I was given and where I asked it. So, sorry for the repeat. Gonna buy a 1060 within the month, there are single and dual fan models. If I have no intention of overclocking anything, the single fan version should keep everything cool enough even at 100%. Is that correct? This is the exact card I'm looking at. - https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814487261
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# ? Nov 6, 2017 01:36 |
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Volcott posted:I think I may have actually asked this somewhere on this forum at some point in the past, but I forgot what answer I was given and where I asked it. So, sorry for the repeat. We just had the debate in the Parts Picking Thread. Basically the 1060 is cool enough that you can get away with a single-fan card as long as it's a decent vapor-chamber cooler like the EVGA SC cards and not just a slug cooler like the Zotac Minis. However, assuming the price is similar and you have the space, there is no reason to choose a single-fan card over a dual-fan card. The dual-fan cards are still cooler and quieter at a given TDP, and in Pascal "cooler" directly translates into "faster". It's worth let's say $20 extra, it's just not worth $60+ extra. Paul MaudDib fucked around with this message at 03:10 on Nov 6, 2017 |
# ? Nov 6, 2017 01:41 |
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Paul MaudDib posted:We just had the debate in the Parts Picking Thread. Basically the 1060 is cool enough that you can get away with a single-fan card as long as it's a decent vapor-chamber cooler like the EVGA SC cards and not just a slug cooler like the Zotac Minis. However, assuming the price is similar and you have the space, there is no reason to choose a single-fan card over a dual-fan card. The dual-fan cards are still cooler and quieter at a given TDP. It's worth let's say $20 extra, it's just not worth $60+ extra. Thank you for repeating yourself. I'll go try to find that first post now. I really should wait until I'm actually ready to buy stuff before I ask these kinds of questions.
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# ? Nov 6, 2017 01:52 |
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Volcott posted:Thank you for repeating yourself. I'll go try to find that first post now. Here you go. Volcott posted:I really should wait until I'm actually ready to buy stuff before I ask these kinds of questions. Yes, absolutely, everything depends on price. There are no bad cards, only bad prices. You can still figure out a general sense of "I should only be willing to pay $X more for a 10xty Ti than a 10xty, and I should be willing to pay an extra $30 for a nicer cooler on card Z" but everything depends on what prices you can get things for.
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# ? Nov 6, 2017 03:13 |
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Since I reset my PC it's been running fine. All I've been doing after installing some basic programs like Chrome/Steam/Discord has been downloading games. I went to restart my computer and it was hanging there at the Asus splashscreen for the longest time, for about 8 minutes. I boot to SSD and it's never had such a huge issue like that before. After a bit I finally started to see that spinning icon for a second before it instantly went into windows like nothing happened.
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# ? Nov 6, 2017 12:08 |
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feedmyleg posted:I bought a VCR to watch some old family videos a little while back. Haven't used one in about a decade and a half so I'm a little confused by a nuance of the hardware. My parents would always film something, turn the camera off, fast forward across some blank tape, then record more. Unfortunately, my cheap little junk store VCR seems to turn off as soon as it detects blank tape. I can try to power through by holding down the fast-forward button but it doesn't always seem to work. The only thing I know of that would cause a VCR to stop moving a tape is when the tape has tightened up so the mechanism thinks it has reached the end and shuts off. You could try retensioning them by fast-forwarding and rewinding each tape their entire length. Can you wind the tape manually by unlocking the cover and trying to turn the reel by hand? (It's been a LONG time - I *think* you need to unlock the tape cover to wind it any distance by hand.)
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# ? Nov 10, 2017 05:39 |
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I was thinking about getting an RGB fan to brighten up my Silverstone SG-13, but from looking online it seems as though they use a second cable that's supposed to plug into a RGB header/hub. My motherboard is of a pre-RGB header vintage (Asrock B85m ITX) and the case is cramped enough that a hub/controller type thing would be a difficult fit. If I bought one and plugged it into a fan header only, would the LEDs not even switch on? Or does the RGB connecter only serve to control the LEDs, and not plugging it in puts the fans on some kind of default colour cycle?
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# ? Nov 10, 2017 15:02 |
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Kintamarama posted:I was thinking about getting an RGB fan to brighten up my Silverstone SG-13, but from looking online it seems as though they use a second cable that's supposed to plug into a RGB header/hub. It depends on the RGB fan you're buying, but most of of them have one plug for the fan power and a separate one for the RGB LEDs. You'd need a controller to get the LEDs to light up at all. Single color LED fans don't have this issue since they don't need to know separate values for red, geen, and blue, they just get power and light up the LED.
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# ? Nov 10, 2017 15:52 |
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uhhhhhhh
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# ? Nov 10, 2017 16:51 |
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Most people are looking to remove those from cases, not the other way around. Probably better to get non-garbage fans and a RGB LED lightstrip so it's easier to remove when you eventually decide it looks terrible.
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# ? Nov 10, 2017 18:58 |
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Kintamarama posted:My motherboard is of a pre-RGB header vintage (Asrock B85m ITX) and the case is cramped enough that a hub/controller type thing would be a difficult fit. If I bought one and plugged it into a fan header only, would the LEDs not even switch on? Or does the RGB connecter only serve to control the LEDs, and not plugging it in puts the fans on some kind of default colour cycle? Something like this. http://www.cmstore-usa.com/rgb-led-controller/. I legitimately do not know if this would actually work with these specific RGB fan frames. Then either of these. $10 version $20 version Edit: I believe this route might be cheapest if you're looking at keeping it like under say $150. Two and three fan packs with controller can cost $100 on their own. For $40+how ever much for each fan. You could do 6 fans in RGB for $100. SlayVus fucked around with this message at 19:51 on Nov 10, 2017 |
# ? Nov 10, 2017 19:13 |
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The only reason I put a white led fan ins in my case was so that I could see if I dropped anything under my desk or where the top usb ports are when it's dark.
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# ? Nov 10, 2017 23:16 |
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I've come to realise that RGB fans are more involved than plug 'em in and go. As I mentioned in my first post, I don't know where I'd put a RGB controller in my SG-13, and from the cursory research I've done, I can't even tell if the different brands controllers are compatible with competitors fans. I'm not interested in a basic LED fan either, as I would have liked the option to change the colour, or switch it off as I saw fit. Thanks for your help SlayVus and Rexxed, though in the end you've ended up convincing me to drop the idea.
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# ? Nov 10, 2017 23:56 |
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Yay even after a Windows 10 reset with no files saved my PC crashes. Completely fresh with new drivers, updates, and barely anything installed. Did it early September, was fine. Had one BSOD randomly a couple weeks ago, then another BSOD where it went away a second after it appeared (no way to read it) and now it's back to doing the hard freeze that shows a freeze frame and screams a buzzing sound from my speakers that tries to give me a panic attack. Edit: Maybe there's a small chance that there's a conflict between Nvidia and Realtek HD Audio Controllers, as I found just one random person online recommend for just World of Warcraft. But as far as I can tell you should have both since Realtek drives audio through my Mobo speaker jacks, and Nvidia handles audio over HDMI. Since I have one set of speakers for my PC through my Mobo output, and one set of speakers for my TV using HDMI I want to have both if I can. Ularg fucked around with this message at 05:35 on Nov 15, 2017 |
# ? Nov 15, 2017 05:24 |
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Got a fan question for my new build, this is probably extremely pedantic. Hopefully this is the worst of my issues. So my motherboard has 3 spots to plug in a fan. Two are labled CPU fan and one is labled for the case. I'm using a Noctua NH-D15 for the CPU, which has two fans. One of the spots for the CPU fan on the motherboard has 4 pins and the other has 3, the case fan has 4 pins... But my case fan only has 3 pins and my CPU fans both take 4 pins Should I just plug in everything where it's labled to go or match each fan with the right amount of pins? The fan also came with an adapter thing to be able to plug both CPU fans into a single spot... I suspect I don't want to plug a CPU fan in the case fan spot, but the one CPU fan on the motherboard only having 3 pins is throwing me off. The only other issue I'm having is I can't seem to get the connector from the power supply to the motherboard to fit all the way in, feels like I'm going to break my motherboard. I'm definitely doing it on the right side because it's got a lip for it to snap in that it's not reaching.
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# ? Nov 16, 2017 09:48 |
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4-pin fan headers are for using PWM mode speed control, which basically allows the controller to slow down the fan more before it stops entirely. 4 pins better. 4-pin fans are also able to operate from 3-pin headers - you just will not benefit from PWM and the PWM pin will simply be not used. Like this: There should be little plastic guides centered on the 3 pins - the one that is offset is the one that should not be used. And the reverse is also true - you can plug a 3-pin fan into a 4-pin header, you just might have to tell your motherboard firmware not to try to use the PWM mode for that fan (it should go at full speed all the time if motherboard thinks it uses PWM but it is actually not connected). I would suggest following the labeling and using PWM where available.
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# ? Nov 16, 2017 11:27 |
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My current rig (i5 sandy bridge) has 2x4GB of DDR3. I can add another 2x4GB for about a third of the cost of getting 2x8GB sticks. What are the downsides of running 4 sticks (two different brands, as well) instead of two larger sticks?
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# ? Nov 16, 2017 14:16 |
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Schiavona posted:My current rig (i5 sandy bridge) has 2x4GB of DDR3. I can add another 2x4GB for about a third of the cost of getting 2x8GB sticks. What are the downsides of running 4 sticks (two different brands, as well) instead of two larger sticks?
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# ? Nov 16, 2017 14:32 |
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Does thermal paste in the tube ever go bad? More specifically, I have some Arctic Silver 3 which is ~15 years old now, and it's still the expected consistency coming out of the syringe. Any reason not to keep using it?
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# ? Nov 17, 2017 06:42 |
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I'd spend $5 to replace some 15 year old paste, but that's just me. I'm not sure where my cut-off point would be for age. I'm guessing about 6.4 years.
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# ? Nov 17, 2017 06:49 |
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Chuu posted:Does thermal paste in the tube ever go bad? More specifically, I have some Arctic Silver 3 which is ~15 years old now, and it's still the expected consistency coming out of the syringe. Any reason not to keep using it? Probably not, assuming you push out the first 1/8th inch that has dried out, but dude, why are you fretting over a $5 tube of thermal paste?
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# ? Nov 17, 2017 06:57 |
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How do I connect a computer to wifi if I only have an ethernet port? No USB ports, no PCI slots, just an RJ45 jack. ~$200 budget. Prefer something from a big name company like Cisco or Linksys.
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# ? Nov 17, 2017 19:30 |
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# ? Jun 1, 2024 05:33 |
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Faith For Two posted:How do I connect a computer to wifi if I only have an ethernet port? Get a good old WRT54GL (https://www.linksys.com/us/p/P-WRT54GL/), put it in wireless bridge mode, spend the $130 you have remaining on drugs.
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# ? Nov 17, 2017 19:36 |