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zakruti.com » IT - Software » Gamers Nexus
HW News - Intel LGA1700 Socket, Xeon CPU 'Ban'/Unban, GTX 1650 Ultra Rumors

HW News - Intel LGA1700 Socket, Xeon CPU 'Ban'/Unban, GTX 1650 Ultra Rumors

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Rating: 4.5; Vote: 2
Hardware news this week talks Intel LGA1700 socket plans, data caps for internet connections, Intel's temporary ban and unban of sales to a China-backed firm, Other news items include Intel halting and unhalting shipments to Inspur, due to US Pentagon directive. Also in Intel news, some LGA1700 and Alder Lake-S information. The NVIDIA GTX 1650 Ultra is further rumored, perhaps taking a page from the book of the RTX 2080 die that was brought down to a 2060 (KO) die previously. Further Nintendo has commented briefly and indirectly on the Joy-Con drift issue for its Nintendo Switch and ongoing class action, and data caps get more discussion. We'll also be talking about T-Force's marketing for its Cardea ceramic drive.
Date: 2020-07-06

Comments and reviews: 10


Why has there been basically ZERO news on AMD's upcoming Ryzen 400 series desktop CPUs? Every time I search for new info, every single article is talking about APUs and laptop parts, which I couldn't give a rat's ass about. I am in DESPERATE need of a new gaming rig and I want to know if I am going to be able to build a new 4000 series Threadripper rig before December of this year or if I'm going to have to bite the bullet and build a 3960X rig...which I really, REALLY don't want to do this close to the supposed release of the 4000 series parts.
We already know that the upcoming Nvidia Ampere cards that I intend to use are going to be monsters...nobody can seem to agree on whether the top card will be a 3080 Ti or a 3090 , but we have a general idea of what kind of performance we are looking at and we know that the high-end cards (which are the ones I'm after) will be releasing first and releasing this year (yay!). But nobody seems to know ANYTHING AT ALL about the Ryzen 4000 parts, and I can't find a single article that is even from this year that talks about the 4000 series Threadripper CPUs. Are the Threadripper parts going to release at the same time as the mainstream Ryzen 4000 desktop CPUs or are they going to come to market well after the mainstream chips (as in sometime towards the 2Q of next year)? Do you guys have ANY info on this stuff?

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Dear Steve, my Corsair ironclaw wireless WHICH YOU PROMOTED started having a doubleclick issue on the left button, I'm not blaming anyone now for bying this especially considering that I like the looks and the ergonomics a lot , but what comes to mind that 12 years ago this problem was not so persistent ,the switches despite being rated for 10M clicks (or being unrated at all) lasted actually longer without manifesting any wear. So my question really is: a callout video to GAMING mice manufacturers when exactly ? The price of gaming mice grows each year per feature(which are mostly bells and whistles), but this problem that plagues today's mice is ridiculous considering that the switches that are rated 50M don't even last a fraction of that amount. Why should we pay more just like we do with gaming keyboards now that are receiveng more attention with their replacement switches, but with mice we got faster polling rates , more precise sensors, but as soon as your switch goes bad, if you're not good with the soldering iron , you're just deemed to buy another Gaming mouse that will last even less than the previous one.
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TBH and fair, REAL aircraft grade aluminum IS much stronger and costlier than anything you'll typically encounter for civilian use. Automotive aluminum alloy is considered high grade since 6061 series aluminium is an excellent balance of strength and corrosion resistance, hence their widespread use for wheels, body panels and structural components. Aircraft specific grades are 20 and 70 series, typically 2024 or 7075 for anything structural such as the body frames, panels, wings, etc. There aluminium alloys are approximately as strong as mild steel but with the lightness of aluminium alloy.
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I noticed that there is a footnote after the T-FORCE claim of an 18% reduction in heat on their SSD when used with a case fan. I figured that maybe you forgot to make mention of it, but alas the source document provided no real clarification. From the TEAMGROUP website: The related data are the results of the internal tests conducted by the TEAMGROUP T-FORCE laboratory. The actual temperature changes may vary depending on the test environment. Thanks for that stunning clarification. Was this T-absolute? Delta-T over ambient? What units were used? When will these companies learn?
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gpu scheduling works great in most games i play on the old system im on, x5675 4.42ghz, even some that have issues on some newer systems... dual 1070(a mini, and amp push the limit extreme..yeah..weird..but its what i got and i live on ssi so... yeah....)
i have found it seems to actually bring my min fps in gta v up a, and yes, it does have an effect, working using the 450.99 and later drivers option has a noticeable effect on some titles, not much if any on others, but it does seem to help boost min fps for my config... perhaps its more sli friendly then expected?

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Actually there is a grain of truth in that less heat produced claim; since Flash is capacitive in nature and silicon has a positive resistive temperature coefficient, the higher temperature the module operates at the more energy is required to perform the write, all things being equal. The difference, in all practical conditions, is going to be lost in the system noise and having an extra fan around is definitely going to eat more power than any temperature differential can possibly save up on that flash.
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I wonder if HEDT will ever disappear, or if it will just remain and instead of it being 8 or 10 cores+ like it was for a long time, it will just be, however high chip makers can package, beyond the needs of gamers. You'd think like Ryzen 3000 if you could make a single platform that supports everything, isn't that the ultimate? Still split it out on the motherboard/chipset like B550/X570, but keep it on a single socket, economies of scale no?
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The private sector utterly fails to deliver fixed line internet in any kind of well priced, efficient manner and instead simply gouges it's customers to remove as much money as possible while providing as little as possible. Other than just being a terrible outcome for customers this severely damages the rest of the overall economy as every household and every business pays too much for communication.
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Is there a good reason to want a big.LITTLE design in desktop CPUs? Power efficiency, while nice to have, isn't really a priority and I don't think it's worth the compromises. For example, because every core needs to support the same instruction set and Tremont doesn't support AVX-512, Intel had to disable AVX-512 support even on the Sunny Cove core in Lakefield.
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The UK has so much competition with ISPs it keeps prices slightly reasonable. The network is run by openreach which was a division of BT (UK used to have one government owned communications network). Other companies effectively rent network and openreach fix and install local access. It s far from perfect but a load better than what you have.
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