- Joined
- Sep 5, 2019
I think it's embarrassing that we went from the 10 series being loved for their efficiency to "you're getting crypto power bills no matter what"Move over Fermi. We got a new space heater in town.
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I think it's embarrassing that we went from the 10 series being loved for their efficiency to "you're getting crypto power bills no matter what"Move over Fermi. We got a new space heater in town.
It's a shame, it was always interesting to see what a new architecture can do when drawing power only from the PCIe slot, that's a weight class of sorts.I think it's embarrassing that we went from the 10 series being loved for their efficiency to "you're getting crypto power bills no matter what"
Oof. How bad are we talking here? I don't want to have to lug my new PC to someone else's power outlet just to run hashcat for a day.I think it's embarrassing that we went from the 10 series being loved for their efficiency to "you're getting crypto power bills no matter what"
There have been some mad sales recently on last gen parts. Good buy for anyone wanting to build or upgrade.PC sales are declining again after a brief pandemic-related boom:
Traditionally, chip makers have always made the most powerful thing they could in a given package and just expected you to draw as much power from the wall as you needed. But now that gaming PCs are reaching the power draws of major home appliances, I wonder how long this can last.
Sadly ultra wide monitors, the only thing I care about getting at this point seem to be holding in price.There have been some mad sales recently on last gen parts. Good buy for anyone wanting to build or upgrade.
Monitors don't seem to fluctuate much from what I've seen. Meanwhile last gen AMD 5000 CPUs can be had for around 50-200$ off.Sadly ultra wide monitors, the only thing I care about getting at this point seem to be holding in price.
There's actually been some massive sales on monitors recently. Just seems like ultrawides are special snowflakesMonitors don't seem to fluctuate much from what I've seen. Meanwhile last gen AMD 5000 CPUs can be had for around 50-200$ off.
Absolutely agree. Not being able to switch batteries also should be rendered illegal. The greens constantly screech about reducing "MUH carbon footprint" and companies simply react by screwing over their customers, skimping on packaging quality and leaving out essential accessories, such as the fucking charger block. How about, not gluing the inernals together, allowing people to easily service their devices? Maybe, just maybe, we would generate less electronic waste, if we didn't have to throw away a few year old phone, just because the shitty battery gave out.There absolutely ought to be a law for all mobile devices to be built like this. I tried replacing a broken USB port on a samsung tablet for a family member a while ago and basically destroyed the device in the process because they glued and plastic-melted it together.
I'd try to use that tablet. i5-7200U looks decent for a dual-core, faster than chips like the N4020 that are still being sold. 8 GB of RAM and 256 GB SSD are more than you get at the extreme low-end. I remember the days of 2-3 hours of battery life being normal so 5 hours is OK for me too.It's an x86 tablet, a HP Elite X2 1012 G2, besides it's truly obnoxious naming scheme it has an i5-7200U, 8 GB of RAM and a 256 GB SSD, and then a bunch of "business" features like a fingerprint reader, 4G modem, that kind of stuff. The battery runtime is truly atrocious at around 5 hours, I thought this is because the battery is nearing death but no, apparently this is normal. (It also have one of these "battery saver" features where you can leave the device plugged in all the time and it won't try to charge the battery past 80%, because you're gonna leave this thing plugged in most of the time is my guess) The screen is absolutely brilliant with ~12" 2736x1824 (3:2).
Interestingly enough, I kinda researched the business tablets like that one (or "convertibles" as they like to be called because you can attach a keyboard) and them being maintainable apparently is par for the course. Surprised me too. Didn't know because I never was interested in such devices.Not being able to switch batteries also should be rendered illegal
I'd try to use that tablet. i5-7200U looks decent for a dual-core, faster than chips like the N4020 that are still being sold. 8 GB of RAM and 256 GB SSD are more than you get at the low-end. I remember the days of 2-3 hours of battery life being normal so 5 hours is OK for me too.
I really want this to be true, real "competition" across the entire range.It's all but confirmed that the Radeon RX 7900 XTX will try to take on the 4090 with 24 GB of VRAM, while the 7900 XT will take on the 4080 16 GB with 20 GB of VRAM.
There is room for AMD to double Infinity Cache from 96 to 192 MB using 3D stacking, increase memory bandwidth, clocks, etc. if it wants to take on a 4090 Ti in the future.
I just wanted to say that I enjoy your posts about low-power computing even though I'm a God Damned Burger with cheap electricity on-tap.looking for a small 10" device with an insanely low TDP chip.
Thanks, I also enjoy collecting the information here. tbh, the energy costs are not necessarily always the primary concern. Energy is expensive here but more in the sense of if I had a 3080 Ti running 24/7 affecting my power bill, the theoretical difference between a 4.5W TDP chip and a 15W TDP chip .. of course doesn't really matter. It's also about minimalism and the idea to do the maximum with the minimum. There's something pleasing in having the system be "exactly enough" and getting the most out of cheap, low end hardware which usually also is low-power hardware and at least for my usage things don't really shift a whole lot over the years regarding how much more performance I need anymore as I try to keep all my systems trim, handwoven and free from bloat, so even a computer that's sub $100 used can still be useful for me. Also I really like small computers and silent computers and it's all connected to low power consumption. Can't usually really do a small, quiet computer with a 95W TDP CPU. That energy has to go somewhere.I just wanted to say that I enjoy your posts about low-power computing even though I'm a God Damned Burger with cheap electricity on-tap.