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oitsjustjose

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  1. I'm using some Masione keyboard I found in at our local bargain store. It's super damaged but it only costed me $10. Why I want a new one? Because I'm a college student, and writing essays on this keyboard HURTS! D:
  2. Alright, so I've got a general question that I was looking for some input on: I've recently built my desktop with a 4790K, and the GPU I chose was a single EVGA GTX 760 FTW, which has 4GB of GDDR5. My monitor is an Asus PB278Q QHD monitor, and I've also got a 32" 1080P TV that I use as a second display above it for videos or other junk. I recently bought my friend's EVGA GTX 760 FTW (it is identical to mine, box, documentation, BIOS version, everything) and I threw it in my rig and SLI'd it with absolutely no issue, but I did so as provisioning for me getting a second PB278Q, so that essentially my entire setup will be 2 x PB278Q's side-by-side with the LG 32" TV above, centered. Do you guys think these two 760's will still be good enough to push all that screen real estate? Any suggestions as to what I should have hooked up where? Each PB278Q has an HDMI 1.4 port (1 being used by a console), a display-port and of course DVI and VGA (bleh), and the TV only has HDMI input. Each GPU has an HDMI (1.4 also, I believe), Display port, and two DVI (one being digital only, of course). The GTX 760 by itself was plenty of performance for me, would I be better off disabling SLI so that each GPU could push its own power to each QHD display, or would the performance hit of only have 8 lanes (due to SLI) being used on each GPU be too great to be able to do this? I don't play a lot of heavy games, but I may eventually and do occasionally, so I'd like to avoid as many hits to performance as possible while still pushing to 3 monitors. Thanks in advance!
  3. I'm thoroughly impressed Zotac, I've never thought of you guys as a company to provide such high performance and overclockability!
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