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zakruti.com » IT - Software » Gamers Nexus
HW News - AMD Zen Vulnerability, No More Blower, & Human Malware vs. PC Industry

HW News - AMD Zen Vulnerability, No More Blower, & Human Malware vs. PC Industry

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
Hardware news this week includes on-the-ground reporting on the human malware conditions in Taiwan (and the US, AMD Zen vulnerabilities, and more. Sponsor: Thermaltake Toughram on Amazon SUPPORT OUR FACTORY TOUR SERIES!
Date: 2020-05-06

Comments and reviews: 10


When ISPs have limited plans, they charge less money. They have a right to slow speeds or otherwise limit the connection based on usage. Internet usage is billed. If AT&T for instance owns many cross country lines, they charge money for all the traffic that flows on those lines, so if you as a user consumes more data, your ISP PAYS more money because of it, because they have to PAY companies like AT&T. Do pings to see all the different companies your signal goes through in trying to get a specific server (that server has to have ping enabled. Yeah, your ISP pays to get your data to that server, along with returning data to you. Payments for internet usage are based on traffic loads. How much data passed on my line from your company, your company being an ISP, and me being a carrier who moves data around the world. Your attacks against ISPs get old. They don't make huge profits.
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Regarding Datacaps, the only time it ever made sense was with Cell coverage. There at least used to be a congestion issue in there due to the limited bandwidth available over the air. Wifi over a router connected to any modem on any kind of wire-based connection like DSL, FiOS, or Cable, are all free of any such problems and have never and nearly impossible to ever have any chance to hit any kind of similar congestion issues. It's always blown me away that my friend just outside Boise, Idaho has no internet options at all that do not have ridiculous Data-Caps implemented into the plans. Blows me away how much of the US has this same problem.
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I just dealt with the epic farce that is coming back from overseas right now. I promise you, you're more likely to pick up the human malware at the airport back home than you are in Taiwan. It's a cluster of epic proportions. You can look forward to getting mixed together with every flight that arrives, waiting in a 3-4 hour line packed real close to all of them, and then getting sent out into the world. It doesn't matter how you answer any of the questions, there is no filtering, you're still getting clumped in with everyone else. I'm really glad this is mostly political finger-pointing, because if it were a real threat, we'd all be dead already.
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Glad my ISP does not have a cap. Same can't be said for cellular though. I laugh how they keep pushing how fast LTE is and how much faster 5G will be. I can blow through my monthly cap by simply running a speed test, I'm not even joking. I did 2 speed tests within a month and the 2nd speed test blew over the cap. It will indeed be interesting to see what happens to the American ISPs after all this though. If they don't have congestion (which I doubt they will) by lifting all the caps, people will really be able to call them on their BS when they go to reinstate them.
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Folding Home Client is broken on Debian 10. I'm working on it but don't have a fix yet. Do not install / do unininstall FAH Control. It requires an old version of python-gnome2 that is not available. Install ocl-icd-opencl-dev -- I have version 2. 2. 12-2_amd64 This fixes a problem where the client doesn't start. Use sudo systemctl restart FAHClient. service At this point the client starts and client. foldingathome. org is accessible. However it's not using any CPU time and not making progress.
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You knwo what would be interesting to see more often? Blower-style coolers with multiple layers of radiator fin stacks. The cooler would be _blower-style_ with plumbing connections, so when water goes through it the heat is carried away like a traditional radiator, _except_ in the form of a 2. 5 slot design. While probably expensive and proprietary, for SFF systems where space is limited using the footprint of a graphics card for additional radiator surface area would be kind of dope.
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Uninformed people make bad decisions and youtube's censoring of corona virus is preventing people from getting information about this serious threat to us all. Youtube is a corporation run by evil, or at the very least sold out to China, people. I truly hope some other platform comes along and sends youtube to oblivion. We don't need their kind of undemocratic practices in democratic countries. Go back to your owners country.
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Why is this something new, guess thats why amd lovers get so defensive and butthurt when someone talks down about amd, they are well known to have issues bios ect ect. This is what happens when you release product after product before making sure its ready for market. Theres alot more then building the best fastest chip with the most cores amd BETTER LEARN THAT. Kepep buying amd you amd lovers enjoy buying the issues.
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I got the Fios on the mid tier package plan and i get i consistent 15mbs+ down and up 365 days a year (even with the power out it works running of my generator. I had Comcast before and i was lucky if it was even working on sunny days or got 500 kbs down/up on there best tier. The speed test said you got 5mbs, but nothing would ever download past 1mb. At least dial-up was a consistent 28kbs.
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Please don't take F H as a joke just to test your unstable overclocked hardware! If errors emerge while F H is running, the Work Unit becomes completely useless and has to be redone from the start! If you're looking to fold, do it on stable hardware! Any type of overclock (DRAM and VRAM especially) massively impact stability of compute workloads!
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