I currently have a phenom 2 quad and an Asus motherboard and 12gigs of mismatched ram and a evga 580.
I play everything from civ 5 to crysis 2.
I am helping to produce a web series a few friends and I have been working on for a few months so after effects and premiere is what I'll be working with mostly
my biggest question is if I can acheive the same exact overclock with them will I be getting the $40 dollars worth of performance out of getting the newer chip
I am planning on upgrading my cpu and motherboard I have ddr3 and a 580 but im still running an old Phenom II X4 and an old asus motherboard.
I don't know whether to get a 4670k or a 3570k
I will be doing a bit of video editing and gaming
Any advice would be awesome!
I just bought an IPS monitor and I've been using a VGA cable. The monitor is only 1920 by 1080 and I was wondering if a DVI cable will be much of a quality increase
If you listen to music that is stored locally "Poweramp" is the best music player.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.maxmpz.audioplayer&feature=nav_result#?t=W251bGwsMSwxLDMsImNvbS5tYXhtcHouYXVkaW9wbGF5ZXIiXQ..
I have an AT&T Optimus G which hardware wise is exactly the same as the Nexus 4. If you rom the phone its insanely smooth, but I have to say on build quality the HTC ONE is epic.
The Nexus 7 is a Nexus device, Google is still supporting the Nexus S which came out before the iPhone 4, that being said there are way more high end games for iOS compared to Android. Also the Nexus 7 was released last year in July.
If you are able to, try streaming from something like PLEX, or use handbrake to make the files 720p. Most of the time compressing movies more doesn't help much, and can actually hurt the quality and size, if its done wrong.
The draining idea is because older NI-MH NI-CD batteries would form a "memory" of being discharged partially all the time. What is more damaging to lithium-ion/lithium-polymer batteries ie. the new ones, is actually draining them all the way. Lithium-ion batteries are rated for about 200 recharge cycles, and lithium-polymer batteries are rated for about 500 recharge cycles. The reason iPhone/Macbook batteries last longer is that they have been using lithium-polymer batteries.