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2FA

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  1. Informative
    2FA got a reaction from Windows7ge in VFIO GPU Pass-though w/ Looking Glass KVM on Ubuntu 19.04   
    It only had the option of Auto and Disabled, probably since it's a single node.
     
    CCDs are the building blocks of Zen/Zen+/Zen2. Each CCD contains two CCX with a CCX being comprised of several cores sharing L3 cache. Zen/Zen+ maxed out at one CCD per chip but Zen2 increased that to two CCDs per chip.
    Looking at that topology, I'm not sure if it's better to use one thread per code or all on the same CCD. I'll have to test that.
  2. Informative
    2FA got a reaction from Windows7ge in VFIO GPU Pass-though w/ Looking Glass KVM on Ubuntu 19.04   
    3900X is a single chip with two CCDs, one NUMA node. I checked and Memory Interleaving is enabled by default.
  3. Like
    2FA reacted to Windows7ge in VFIO GPU Pass-though w/ Looking Glass KVM on Ubuntu 19.04   
    Index
     
    Introduction
     
    1. Requirements
     
    2. Recovery
     
    3. Enabling & Verifying both Virtualization & IOMMU Groups.
     
    4. Installing Applications & Downloading Drivers
     
    5. Blocking the Kernel Driver(s)
     
    6. Configuring Virt-manager
     
    7. Installing VirtIO Drivers
     
    8. Looking Glass Configuration
     
    9. Scream Audio
     
    10. Performance Optimization
     
    11. Troubleshooting
     
  4. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from Dabombinable in Firefox Lazy-Loading Images   
    They just have a different versioning number on the iOS build, it's not out-of-date.
     
    You have it backwards, Firefox isn't going to stop supporting Youtube, Youtube is claiming it's going to stop supporting Firefox. I wonder if it has to do with the fact that you're using the old Youtube UI.
  5. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from JustWantTech in Intel drops PCIe 4.0 support for Comet Lake Desktop   
    PCIe 4.0 is more important for servers than desktops thanks to NVMe and 40/100Gbps networking.
  6. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from LAwLz in Firefox Lazy-Loading Images   
    They just have a different versioning number on the iOS build, it's not out-of-date.
     
    You have it backwards, Firefox isn't going to stop supporting Youtube, Youtube is claiming it's going to stop supporting Firefox. I wonder if it has to do with the fact that you're using the old Youtube UI.
  7. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from Dylanc1500 in Firefox Lazy-Loading Images   
    They just have a different versioning number on the iOS build, it's not out-of-date.
     
    You have it backwards, Firefox isn't going to stop supporting Youtube, Youtube is claiming it's going to stop supporting Firefox. I wonder if it has to do with the fact that you're using the old Youtube UI.
  8. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from Karones in Intel drops PCIe 4.0 support for Comet Lake Desktop   
    PCIe 4.0 is more important for servers than desktops thanks to NVMe and 40/100Gbps networking.
  9. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from TVwazhere in Intel drops PCIe 4.0 support for Comet Lake Desktop   
    PCIe 4.0 is more important for servers than desktops thanks to NVMe and 40/100Gbps networking.
  10. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from GDRRiley in Intel drops PCIe 4.0 support for Comet Lake Desktop   
    PCIe 4.0 is more important for servers than desktops thanks to NVMe and 40/100Gbps networking.
  11. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from Tamesh16 in Intel drops PCIe 4.0 support for Comet Lake Desktop   
    PCIe 4.0 is more important for servers than desktops thanks to NVMe and 40/100Gbps networking.
  12. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from GOTSpectrum in Intel drops PCIe 4.0 support for Comet Lake Desktop   
    PCIe 4.0 is more important for servers than desktops thanks to NVMe and 40/100Gbps networking.
  13. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from JoshB2084 in Intel drops PCIe 4.0 support for Comet Lake Desktop   
    PCIe 4.0 is more important for servers than desktops thanks to NVMe and 40/100Gbps networking.
  14. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from Crunchy Dragon in Intel drops PCIe 4.0 support for Comet Lake Desktop   
    PCIe 4.0 is more important for servers than desktops thanks to NVMe and 40/100Gbps networking.
  15. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from leadeater in Intel drops PCIe 4.0 support for Comet Lake Desktop   
    PCIe 4.0 is more important for servers than desktops thanks to NVMe and 40/100Gbps networking.
  16. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from Arika in Intel drops PCIe 4.0 support for Comet Lake Desktop   
    PCIe 4.0 is more important for servers than desktops thanks to NVMe and 40/100Gbps networking.
  17. Like
    2FA got a reaction from Arika in A careers forum?   
    And the LTT forum is such an oasis of experts?
  18. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from Unhelpful in A careers forum?   
    Or go to the more popular /r/itcareerquestions.
  19. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from Arika in Takeshobo, manga creator sueing Cloudflare for offering service to sites that host pirated content   
    That and the original is .org, not .com.
  20. Like
    2FA got a reaction from oeci in Best free (preferably open source) type 1 hypervisor   
    XCP-ng is pretty okay.
  21. Like
    2FA got a reaction from GDRRiley in Google Stadia in desperate need of promised "negative latency" mode   
    The ArsTechnica review didn't have issues with latency on Ethernet, only on WiFI. Another point of potential delay is packet inspection done by firewalls. I don't know how aggressive the source's corporate firewall is but that could potentially be a cause.
  22. Like
    2FA got a reaction from Taf the Ghost in New accusations against NordVPN   
    I only use a VPN so my ISP doesn't see my linux iso torrents. Also, your mention of no security from these isn't the most accurate. There is a lot of unencrypted parts of network traffic that can give a lot of information, for example DNS, which if you're on a public wireless network could potentially be an issue, especially with rogue APs which aren't as uncommon as one may think. I think you're conflating security with privacy, they're related but not exchangeable terms. I use the Google Fi VPN on my phone because it's transparent and encrypts those packets on public networks for me (not the same VPN I mentioned in my first sentence). I get where you're coming from but you're trying to speak absolutely when the topic is in fact not absolute.
  23. Like
    2FA got a reaction from Taf the Ghost in New accusations against NordVPN   
    A lot of VPN providers accept cryptocurrency which you don't have to obtain through an exchange. Simply pay someone random with cash without exchanging personal information and there is effectively no trail. That's the decentralized part of cryptocurrencies that public exchanges make people forget about. Hell, Mullvad VPN accepts cash payments through mail (which by the way does not require a return address). They also claim to point their logs to /dev/null (which is a data blackhole for those that aren't familiar with *nix OSes).
  24. Informative
    2FA got a reaction from amdorintel in New accusations against NordVPN   
    I have a Pixel 3a and use Google Fi as my mobile network provider. The "VPN" simply encrypts the data without spoofing your IP, it is purely meant for security.
  25. Agree
    2FA got a reaction from straight_stewie in New accusations against NordVPN   
    I only use a VPN so my ISP doesn't see my linux iso torrents. Also, your mention of no security from these isn't the most accurate. There is a lot of unencrypted parts of network traffic that can give a lot of information, for example DNS, which if you're on a public wireless network could potentially be an issue, especially with rogue APs which aren't as uncommon as one may think. I think you're conflating security with privacy, they're related but not exchangeable terms. I use the Google Fi VPN on my phone because it's transparent and encrypts those packets on public networks for me (not the same VPN I mentioned in my first sentence). I get where you're coming from but you're trying to speak absolutely when the topic is in fact not absolute.
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