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say_wat_now

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About say_wat_now

  • Birthday Mar 10, 1997

Contact Methods

  • Steam
    say_wat_now
  • Battle.net
    saywatnow#1766
  • PlayStation Network
    xXcertifidnoobXx (yes, that's spelled right)
  • Twitch.tv
    say_wat_now

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Redlands, CA
  • Interests
    Uhhh, computers.
  • Biography
    I like technology and have for a while now.
  • Occupation
    Network Technician

System

  • CPU
    i7-5820k
  • Motherboard
    Gigabyte X99-SLI
  • RAM
    16GB DDR4 2133MHz
  • GPU
    980
  • Case
    NZXT Source 530
  • Storage
    SSD 256GB / WD 4TB Black Edition
  • PSU
    Corsair HX850i
  • Display(s)
    Asus VE247H
  • Cooling
    Hyper 212 Evo
  • Keyboard
    crap
  • Mouse
    Corsair M65
  • Operating System
    Windows 10
  • PCPartPicker URL

Recent Profile Visitors

635 profile views

say_wat_now's Achievements

  1. 2 factor authentication basically make them hack something in order to hack another thing. Instead of just hacking the one thing in the first place. It does make it harder for bots but if someone is intentionally trying to get into your account specifically it most likely won't stop them if they're any good (and depending on the type of authentication the second one is). People should use it though in case of data leaks like Yahoo or Cloudfare. It helps. But not as much as it should.
  2. The 6700k memory controller supports DDR3L-1333, DDR3L-1600, DDR4-1866, and DDR4-2133 memory. So say I put in a 2400MHz stick of RAM with a 6700k processor. Will it be bottlenecked down to 2133MHz? And if it is I can overclock it to support 2400MHz? If I overclock my RAM through the UEFI am I modifying the memory controller support or am I modifying the speed of the actual RAM stick? i confuse, pls halp thnx
  3. Sorry for the wait for a response. Lua is a really cool language made in Brazil and it's more used as a shell or for embedded systems. It can be a pretty awesome programming tool. Ruby's a language made in Japan who just wanted to make a language that would be simple and effiecient. And it's pretty easy. It's mostly used by game developers now. Lua: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lua_(programming_language) Ruby: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruby_(programming_language)
  4. Mmmm, dat bezel doh Or lack thereof They need more monitors with little to no bezel. It's kind of ridiculous that monitors still have them in a majority. Monitors look so sexy without a bezel
  5. Hahaha Saaame. As I responded to someone else on here, I showed this to my high school computer teacher who grew up learning Assembly and the nostalgia hit him super hard. He's already spent hours on it just looking at it as I'm over here like, Java, C, Lua, Ruby helloooo haha But I find it so interesting the technologies they had to create in order for this code to even work (e.g. rope memory and basically redoing the Assembly language) Really cool stuff
  6. Definitely. I showed it to my high school computer teacher who had worked with assembly as a kid and nostalgia hit him haaaard hahaha
  7. Hahahaha With the languages available nowadays (e.g. C and all of its variants and Java) it would be compleeeetely outdated haha You could write this code in half the space with a newer language. But I get your point and that would actually be pretty cool if it wasn't used menacingly. Would be a cool project. Stick an arduino on a bottle rocket and send it to space
  8. The original Apollo 11 Guidance System (AGS) source code (in Assembly) is now available for download on GitHub! It was uploaded by user chrislgarry and was digitized by Virtual AGC and MIT (MIT holding the hardcopy at the MIT Museum). It was uploaded on to GitHub by a former NASA intern, Chris Garry. "This source code has been transcribe or otherwise adapted form digitized images of a hardcopy from the MIT Museum. The digitization was performed by Paul Fjeld, and arranged for by Deborah Douglas of the the Museum. Many thanks to both." Excerpt from README.md Many thanks, indeed. Here's a video of an emulation of the computer system on the Apollo 11 Here's Margaret Hamilton, Director of Software Engineering for the Apollo 11 project, standing next to the code for the shuttle. Link to GitHub downloads: https://github.com/chrislgarry/Apollo-11 News Sources: http://www.theverge.com/2016/7/9/12136204/apollo-11-code-github http://qz.com/726338/the-code-that-took-america-to-the-moon-was-just-published-to-github-and-its-like-a-1960s-time-capsule/
  9. Well I won't exactly be getting a title. It's just general IT basically because they're understaffed so I have to cover a lot of different aspects. That's what she told me anyway. Mainly overseeing networks under the "big boss (wo)man" and if new hardware comes in (server hardware, new desktops, install software, etc.) I install those. I live in Southern California. Inland Empire area.
  10. Hey, everybody. I'm going to be interviewed for an IT job for a local hospital soon and....I HAVE NO IDEA HOW MUCH MONEY I SHOULD ASK FOR! This is my first REAL job in the industry and I have literally no idea how much people get paid for that sort of a job. It's a pretty big hospital and, I mean, it's a hospital. I don't have a degree. I'm still a student majoring in Computer Information Systems. I have an A+ and a Security+ and am Cisco certified. I also plan on being Microsoft certified very soon. So how much should I ask for? What's a reasonable range? Thanks, - The Koolest Kid in Skool boiiiiii
  11. No, I set the voltage and base clock myself. My problem was that I didn't really know the ratio of increasing voltage to increasing clock speed. But I figured it out haha I brought it down to 1.1 volts running AIDA64 upon each reboot to see if it would crash.
  12. I recently purchased a 5820k (a very sexy processor indeed) for a rendering station. I overclocked it to 4GHz but I am kind of a OC virgin. This was...my first OC. Overclocked to 4GHz and raised the voltage to 1.3v. It didn't crash after running a slew of stress test for many hours so I imagine it's enough voltage. But is it too much? Is there such a thing as "too much voltage"? And if you have any suggestions or tips and tricks that would be much appreciated! Thanks for reading and possibly answering! I have a Gigabyte X99-SLI motherboard if that changes any perspectives.
  13. Buy it. Sell it again for more. Muahahaha
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