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jisforjosh posted:I went from no side windows on a Fractal Design R5 to tempered glass/RGB everything on a Lian Li PC-011 Dynamic Nice, I dig it. My only lights are from my aorus gpu so it’s fairly subdued. Being able to change the colours based on temperature is a neat feature.
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# ? Apr 28, 2019 16:24 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 23:50 |
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priznat posted:Nice, I dig it. My only lights are from my aorus gpu so it’s fairly subdued. Having 2 wires for each fan was a nightmare at first to manage but I think I went a little too anal about it.
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# ? Apr 28, 2019 16:39 |
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jisforjosh posted:I went from no side windows on a Fractal Design R5 to tempered glass/RGB everything on a Lian Li PC-011 Dynamic What's up PC-011 Dynamic buddies! I don't have any current pics of mine to throw up though.
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# ? Apr 28, 2019 18:19 |
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repiv posted:i had to dig up this old post because lmao lmao I hadn’t seen the ms excel anecdote
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# ? Apr 29, 2019 10:05 |
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Turns out the Anniversary Edition stuff was real and as leaked. You get a 2700X with standard clocks, Su's signature, and some codes for various goodies. Shoulda at least gone with a black substrate or somethin cmon. https://www.anandtech.com/show/14282/amd-50th-anniversary-ryzen-7-2700x-and-radeon-vii-gold-edition-products
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# ? Apr 29, 2019 19:25 |
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While conceptually disappointing, it's not like the r/AMD crowd won't eat them up.
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# ? Apr 29, 2019 19:52 |
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Who is buying a 2700 anything at this time?
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# ? Apr 29, 2019 20:11 |
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People who don't follow this stuff closely enough to know what's coming out when, probably. New posts in the PC Parts Picking thread with build ideas that are based around last-generation parts aren't entirely uncommon.
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# ? Apr 29, 2019 20:30 |
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Places were firesale-ing 1600/x and stuff. I made a build around one myself, especially knowing that the socket would be useful into the coming generation of processors
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# ? Apr 29, 2019 20:41 |
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Icept posted:Who is buying a 2700 anything at this time? People still buy the FX-8350 in significant numbers
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# ? Apr 29, 2019 21:43 |
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That reminds me, I need to pick up a 1200/1300 for bootstrap and testing reasons somewhere before they're all gone.
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# ? Apr 29, 2019 21:48 |
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Llamadeus posted:Noctua and BeQuiet seem to be way out in front if you care about noise at all: https://www.computerbase.de/2018-12/cpu-kuehler-amd-threadripper-test-luftkuehlung/3/#abschnitt_resultate_im_basistakt Paul MaudDib posted:I am underwhelmed by the U14S (and outright disappointed by every other cooler I saw before) but my understanding is that's the best cooler currently available. I hadn't seen results on the Silver Arrow; the money question is of course how it performs with the Noctua fans. Noctua's NF-A12x25 is so good that it completely distorts all results for coolers that aren't using it. Even their older fans beat the poo poo out of most of the stuff on the market. Thanks for these! It looks like the U14s is decently competitive despite lacking the double stack. The English reviews were all sadly spartan - there were only a few that even bothered to compare to a single other cooler, let alone a variety of competition. I love that chart and I'm amazed that temperature v. noise plots aren't standard for cooler reviews - it's such a natural way to visualize the trade-off. Tom's Hardware comes closest with their weird "acoustic efficiency" measure, but it's unnecessarily difficult to interpret. MaxxBot posted:People still buy the FX-8350 in significant numbers There has to be some sort of strange and/or sad story here. Are FX-8350s the new money laundering currency? Stickman fucked around with this message at 00:57 on Apr 30, 2019 |
# ? Apr 30, 2019 00:55 |
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I got my FX-8350 for free and I still overpaid (in electrical efficiency). If I lived near a Microcenter I could probably buy a $80 R5 1600 and a motherboard (with $30 discount) for darn near what I could eBay the FX-8350 and Motherboard for.
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# ? Apr 30, 2019 02:03 |
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Stickman posted:There has to be some sort of strange and/or sad story here. Are FX-8350s the new money laundering currency? Some of the cultier denizens of r/AMD, to this day, defend the FX series processors as being Not Total Garbage because they have so many (lovely) cores which clock very high (never mind that you're burning so many watts to do comparatively little work because, as mentioned earlier, the CPU design was a losing bet). They cluster together and defend their decisions (and FX CPUs) to each other, in the middle of discussions about how excited people are about new Ryzens. There are two main divisions of people who read r/AMD. First (these days) are people who started going there because of Ryzen, for news about upcoming products and/or to talk about their new builds. Second are the old, hard-line, true-believers, who have bad cases of Stockholm syndrome, sunk-cost fallacy, and regard perfectly reasonable business decisions on the part of Intel as deep conspiracies against their AMD waifus. They're also the kind of people who unironically upvote Asian marketing materials involving AMD waifus. The FX people are, so far as I can tell, the gutter-crust-punk subset of this second group. I have no idea what actually drives them, though.
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# ? Apr 30, 2019 05:28 |
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I have a simpler explanation from my experience in this hobby for 17 years: People are generally dumb at choosing components for PCs.
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# ? Apr 30, 2019 06:49 |
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my cousin asked for help designing a gaming PC, I told him to hit me up on facebook, and the next time I saw him he'd went ahead and bought parts without asking me. He did an FX-8350 build in 2016, and he was kind of ripped off on parts too (iirc he paid like $150 or $175 for his 8350) (worst part is I was window-shopping a 5820K build at that point and if I'd thought of it I could have sold him my board and 4690K for what he paid for the FX and offset some of my build costs...) Paul MaudDib fucked around with this message at 07:48 on Apr 30, 2019 |
# ? Apr 30, 2019 07:43 |
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Palladium posted:I have a simpler explanation from my experience in this hobby for 17 years: People are generally dumb at choosing components for PCs. That and people hate being on the losing end of a bet, so they'll rationalize the hell out of their choices just to stave off that buyer's remorse. An FX-8350 at bargain basement prices will inevitably draw in people who'd be better off with that R5 1600 BeastOfExmoor mentioned.
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# ? Apr 30, 2019 13:23 |
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Palladium posted:I have a simpler explanation from my experience in this hobby for 17 years: People are generally dumb at choosing components for PCs. It is pretty incredible how true this is. There's not that many choices, but people almost inevitably make the wrong ones if they're not experienced. Some coworkers built their own workstations a few years ago. They made some decent choices (Samsung Pro SSDs), but just went way off the rails in other areas. For instance, the built them with FX-8350's and top end gaming video cards. 95% of the work they were doing was 2D AutoCAD which to this day essentially does not use video card acceleration and can only use one core.
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# ? Apr 30, 2019 18:53 |
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Balliver Shagnasty posted:That and people hate being on the losing end of a bet, so they'll rationalize the hell out of their choices just to stave off that buyer's remorse. It's the Prescott MOAR Gigahurtzes! tier logic at play. Faster cores and more of them are obviously better than less, slower cores.
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# ? Apr 30, 2019 19:23 |
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Rome sampling this quarter, availability in Q3 (Q3 for AMD starts July-September). Doesnt explicitly mention Matisse, by Ryan Smith in the comments does say "Nothing is launching in Q2", so seems like it is still a few months to wait. https://www.anandtech.com/show/14286/amd-7nm-navi-gpu-and-rome-cpu-to-launch-in-q3
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# ? May 1, 2019 00:15 |
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BeastOfExmoor posted:It is pretty incredible how true this is. There's not that many choices, but people almost inevitably make the wrong ones if they're not experienced. Some coworkers built their own workstations a few years ago. They made some decent choices (Samsung Pro SSDs), but just went way off the rails in other areas. For instance, the built them with FX-8350's and top end gaming video cards. 95% of the work they were doing was 2D AutoCAD which to this day essentially does not use video card acceleration and can only use one core. Before CPUs were market segmented by cores, the #1 bad pick was buying flagship or near flagship clocked CPUs, #2 was overly expensive blinged out mobos, and #3 was buying blinged out GPUs that were priced similarly to a basic higher tiered GPU.
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# ? May 1, 2019 05:30 |
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Palladium posted:Before CPUs were market segmented by cores, the #1 bad pick was buying flagship or near flagship clocked CPUs, #2 was overly expensive blinged out mobos, and #3 was buying blinged out GPUs that were priced similarly to a basic higher tiered GPU. It's not a bad pick to pay disproportionally more for minimal gains if you actually want or need those gains (buying the Pentium II 300 instead of 233 for a few % of performance, buying the gamer mainboard with the dumb bling because it has better on board sound or more SATA ports, buying the higher tier/slower GPU for its game bundle or the great cooler that stays cool and quiet vs. the base model/faster GPU that renders more pixels/second while sounding like a jet engine). Obviously specific products exist(ed) that never dropped out of the top category (super expensive gamer grade video cards that were just as fast/loud/hot as the base models, gamer mainboards that used the same components as cheaper ones, except for the badly designed heatsink that doesn't do anything). So it's specific products rather than entire categories being bad picks.
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# ? May 1, 2019 11:06 |
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Balliver Shagnasty posted:That and people hate being on the losing end of a bet, so they'll rationalize the hell out of their choices just to stave off that buyer's remorse. That said, I did watch a game benchmark comparing an FX-8370 to a Ryzen 5 1600 and it looked like the FX-8370 was fairly close. The 8370 was usually a little slower, about 70fps vs 60fps at 720p but at 1080p or 1440p the 8370 tied or even beat the 1600. Simply put, if I had an old AM3 motherboard that could support the 8350 or 8370, I would probably choose it as an upgrade at it's fire sale price instead of the 1600 which would also need new RAM and a new motherboard.
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# ? May 1, 2019 19:16 |
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It’s like if Intel actually released those Tejas processors. Except those were only 150W!
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# ? May 1, 2019 19:37 |
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Crotch Fruit posted:I did recently buy an FX-9370, but I sure as hell didn't buy it new. 4.4GHz 8 physical cores, loving 220W TDP. My only justification for my purchase is I think I got a suffeciently good deal and the fact that I think it's a fun and On top of that, it consumes half as much power so it literally pays for itself over time. Khorne fucked around with this message at 20:04 on May 1, 2019 |
# ? May 1, 2019 19:51 |
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Crotch Fruit posted:I did recently buy an FX-9370, but I sure as hell didn't buy it new. 4.4GHz 8 physical cores, loving 220W TDP. My only justification for my purchase is I think I got a suffeciently good deal and the fact that I think it's a fun and Here's the video, but you're missing this important observation from the author: quote:Hello guys, in the case of Rise of the Tomb Raider, FPS on AMD FX are not to trust at 100% since in the final part of the benchmarks, FX 8370 is unable to load properly the Textures, hence having more FPS and altering the metrics a little bit. That said, for older games and a fixed lower-mid-range GPU, it's not terribly surprising to see the performance gap diminish or disappear at higher resolutions. At lower frame rates, the CPU does less work, so as long as your under the fps range where those particular CPUs start being overloaded for a particular game, you're not going to see much of a performance difference. If you try running newer and more CPU-demanding games, you'll see a performance difference even into the lower frame rates, and same if you bump up the power of the GPU to push frame rates higher. You'll also start to see a drop off in frame rate stability (measured by 1% frame rates) before you see the average frame rates drop off. For instance, even this weirdo running Shadow of the Tomb Raider at 4k on a 2070 with everything turned up was seeing CPU frame rates drop into the 20s, reducing frame rate stability even though average fps was still 41 fps vs 42 on the 2600. Lowering the resolution or graphics settings to increase frame rate wouldn't affect the CPU spike frames, so you'd still have noticeable drops in frame rates, even though there's still some room before it starts noticeably affect the average fps. The other important factor (which is a repeat of previous conversation!) is that you could sell that FX-8370, motherboard, and RAM for ~$200 after the ebay/paypal cut, which is only $30 less than a decent 1600 + B450 + 16GB of RAM new at Microcenter. There's literally no reason to throw good money after bad if you have a working motherboard that supports an FX-8370. Just sell that poo poo to some other sucker and upgrade for pocket change! E: This is the same thing we're running into with older i5s (and occasionally i7s). Stability is starting to become an issue, even at <100 frame rates where average fps is still very close to top-of-the-line CPUs. Stickman fucked around with this message at 21:03 on May 1, 2019 |
# ? May 1, 2019 20:55 |
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Stickman posted:Here's the video, but you're missing this important observation from the author: First off, correct video. quote:quote: random youtube troll posted:Honestly, that has nothing to do with the FX 8370. That same thing happens on my i7-4790. It is an issue with that benchmark itself in the texture loading for the third test.
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# ? May 1, 2019 21:20 |
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It obviously depends on the game but in general there's no way Piledriver is remotely competitive with even a R5 1600 anymore. If it works for your games and your resolutions then great but Ryzen is probably at least 30% if not closer to 50% faster on average, even with a highly OC'd Piledriver. It's going to provide a bad experience in a lot of games. When the 1600 is $80 at Microcenter, even a value argument for Piledriver starts to fall apart, IMO. Like if you have a complete system and you just need to replace the CPU then I guess do whatever, but buying Bulldozer in 2019 is throwing good money after bad, and you certainly shouldn't buy a new mobo/memory/etc for it. Paul MaudDib fucked around with this message at 21:28 on May 1, 2019 |
# ? May 1, 2019 21:23 |
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Crotch Fruit posted:Second, the very next reply: The problem might not be 8370-specific, but it explains why the 8370 appeared to be performing better than the 1600 at 1440p. If it had correctly loaded the textures, the extra GPU display load would undoubtedly have put performance at parity. Crotch Fruit posted:Is the 1600 faster than an 8370? Yes. Is it more expensive? Hell yes. Is it even more expensive when you have to buy a new motherboard and RAM as well? Sure you can float the money while your parts sit on ebay waiting and hoping for a sale, I for one prefer not to rely on "sell that poo poo to some other sucker" to pawn off my old hardware too when I upgrade. Sure, you get a slightly better CPU, in ideal circumstances where eBay cooperates with you might end up spending an extra $30 more, but even in that scenario you will still have to pay to ship everything. If you care about cost, it's generally not worth keeping old motherboards until they die. Motherboards that can run an FX-8370 still sell for $100+ because people want replacements, but if you wait until it dies then it's worthless. I also wouldn't want to put one on any old AM3+ board - that power draw would easily over-stress the VRM on cheaper boards. Ebay listed sale prices don't include shipping, so you really would be getting nearly enough to upgrade to a brand-new 1600 system by selling the 8370 components. If you don't have $250 up front for the upgrade, a cpu upgrade could be sensible, but your not really saving an appreciable amount of money, you've significantly hamstrung your ability to play new AAA games or run at high frame rates, and you lose all that value if one of your now-very-old components bites the dust. Stickman fucked around with this message at 21:51 on May 1, 2019 |
# ? May 1, 2019 21:31 |
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How much did you pay for that piece of poo poo anyways?
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# ? May 1, 2019 21:33 |
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ItBreathes posted:How much did you pay for that piece of poo poo anyways?
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# ? May 2, 2019 02:25 |
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TSMC seems ready for a Zen2 die shrink https://www.anandtech.com/show/14290/tsmc-most-7nm-clients-will-transit-to-6nm
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# ? May 2, 2019 07:32 |
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Isn't Zen2 on the regular 7nm process, not 7nm+?
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# ? May 2, 2019 08:25 |
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eames posted:TSMC seems ready for a Zen2 die shrink quote:N6 uses the same design rules as N7 and enables designers of chips to re-use the same design ecosystem (e.g., tools, etc.), which will allow them to lower development costs. By contrast, N7+ uses different design rules, but also provides more advantages than N6 when compared to N7. You'd think it would be the other way around, but that would actually make sense.
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# ? May 2, 2019 09:28 |
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My understanding is that Zen2 is rumored to launch on N7. N6 is the same process but denser. It appears to be suitable for a low-effort die-shrink much like the 2000 series. The thing is that there's also a N7+ process which apparently requires redesign. Older roadmaps show Zen3 on N7+ due for 2020. I have to say I'm out of my depth here so maybe someone can shed some light on N6 vs N7+? Anyway, seems a nice problem to have.
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# ? May 2, 2019 09:32 |
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I sure hope the dies for Rome/Threadripper use N6 then.
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# ? May 2, 2019 10:14 |
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Combat Pretzel posted:I sure hope the dies for Rome/Threadripper use N6 then. You still need new masks so probably not unless they decide to do a refresh. I would expect Vermeer and Renoir to be fabbed on N7+ or N5 depending on availabilty since common tooling won't matter for new designs.
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# ? May 2, 2019 14:11 |
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They really should hurry up with Ryzen 3. I'm too tempted to build a current Intel machine instead because this computer feels so slow.
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# ? May 2, 2019 16:56 |
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Lambert posted:They really should hurry up with Ryzen 3. I'm too tempted to build a current Intel machine instead because this computer feels so slow. This very much feels like a "wait for computex". If nothing is launching until Q3 (July-September) there has to be a fairly large announcement at Computex, even SIGGRAPH makes little sense.
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# ? May 2, 2019 19:08 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 23:50 |
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I really hope the new Eypc gen has similar backwards compatibility so Dell doesn't drag their feet getting the new chips out the door. I have a looming project that could really benefit from doubling the core density
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# ? May 2, 2019 20:02 |