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FredyBobJoe

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  • Posts

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System

  • CPU
    Ryzen 7 1700
  • Motherboard
    ASUS PRIME X370‑Pro
  • RAM
    CORSAIR Vengeance LED 16GB
  • GPU
    EVGA RTX 3070 ti and Zotac GTX 1070
  • Case
    Custom bench style case
  • Storage
    Intel 660p 2tb
  • PSU
    EVGA SuperNOVA 750 G3
  • Display(s)
    3x HP x27q 3x dell 22"
  • Cooling
    Thermalright Macho Rev. B
  • Keyboard
    Corsair K95 RGB
  • Mouse
    Razer Naga Epic Chroma
  • Operating System
    Windows 10
  • PCPartPicker URL

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  1. What process are you using to install them? If you are using a precompiled binary you may need to set them as executable.
  2. Other than if the machine you are remoting from is unable to keep up with the decoding requirements.
  3. That is likely pretty accurate but it would mean you have very little room for error with a 200w psu this can be fine but remember that there are things like fans or temporary power spikes (such as seen in many modern GPUs) that can put you over that number. Having a good quality GPU mitigates this. This is mostly a side note now if you have a 450w PSU then you will be absolutely fine. TLDR: PCPartPicker is estimating power usage not giving a recommendation for a PSU, add some extra headroom for safety.
  4. I like ubuntu server as an OS it has lots of guides and a large install base. I would caution against VMs as they tend to be more resource intensive than containers and if part of your goal is to get some sort of valuable experience it is my opinion that experience with containerization is more valuable than virtualization. My go to for containers is docker BTW. Both of the residential ISPs in my area have never had any issue with me having http/s traffic coming from my home, this is not to say that you are wrong, this is true in many places but also isn't true in many others.
  5. WireGuard or OpenVPN can work great for this. I use tailscale to remotely access my home network and have yet to notice speed issues. As a note on OpenVPN you may need to setup a dynamic dns service to get it to work for you, do you have any restrictions on what ports you can forward or relevant limitations in your router/firewall?
  6. FWIW I have fairly successfully run steam games off of an iSCSI share before with few to no problems, this doesn't work great if you want multiple hosts accessing the game files but as a way to add storage to a computer it can work *fine*. P.S. If you give even a little bit of reasoning as to why you think something won't work it becomes infinitely more valuable and will be perceived as far less negative.
  7. When I put your parts into a PSU wattage calculator (such as this one from newegg) it gives a recommended wattage of 330 watts, while I think these calculators tend to have a healthy bit of headroom on them you may want to be careful especially if your PSU isn't of the highest quality it may not like running near the top end of it's specification for long.
  8. In the commercial space this is frequently done with containerization like docker swarm or Kubernetes. Keep in mind that these are only for manager containers not actually doing the logic of breaking up a task such as video rendering. As another tidbit there are some programming languages that have great built in support for this type of thing, such as Julia.
  9. I have a Supermicro H8DGU-F (yes, I know it is old but I like the chassis it's in) with a riser card installed to allow up three PCIe x8 cards and a uio card. Whenever I install a card that is PCIe 2.0 or newer the motherboard won't post. Even if I take out the card the system will still not post until a CMOS reset. Does anybody know if there is some bios setting I am missing or something? Thanks!
  10. If you are OK with the price I second Ubiquiti, they have great UI and have been expanding their lineup to include things like video doorbells, you can mix and match a little bit, use a cheaper switch or cheaper cameras where they are less critical.
  11. Just to add a little more depth, those are rj45 jacks, these are what are generally caller ethernet ports but "ethernet" also implies some further protocols and electrical standards. So as mentioned by Lurick how those ports are wired is hard to say without testing. It is not uncommon for the different color jacks to mean that one port is wired for phone and the other is wired for internet, so try both before writing them off. One last thing, if you have access to the router you may be able to change what the other end of the cable is plugged in to, for example if one of those ports is for phone you may be able to change it to internet.
  12. So I have a pair of Steelseries Arctis 7 wireless headphones, while they have good range, I can't reliably move between floors in my house. Does anybody know how hard it would be to replace the antenna on the transmitter with a stronger one, I am pretty sure they are 2.4ghz so finding an antenna should be easy. Is there any chance this could work and does anybody know what the inside of the transmitter looks like? Thanks!
  13. How many fans are on your hyper 212?
  14. Can you clarify, is this error in the CGI program or the router's configuration webpage?
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