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Crunchy Dragon

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  1. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon reacted to Middcore in what gpu is the equivalent of a double 1080ti set up   
    I mean, it's difficult to say what GPU is equivalent to SLI 1080 ti's, because SLI scaling was always highly variable from game to game, and it just plain doesn't work at all in most games now and isn't going to work in any future ones.
     
    The 3080 ti and 6950 XT are about 200% of the performance of a single 1080 ti according to TechPowerUp's relative averages. Of course, SLI 1080 ti's would never give you twice the performance of a single 1080 ti even in games where SLI worked. 
     
    SLI 1080 ti's is totally pointless for gaming now. If you have such a setup and want to upgrade, you should basically be comparing the performance of new cards to a single 1080 ti, because the performance of a single 1080 ti is all you're ever going to get. My personal rule of thumb is that a new card needs to be at last 30-40% stronger than the old one for the upgrade to be worthwhile. 
  2. Like
    Crunchy Dragon reacted to Spotty in Moderators Anniversary On The Forum   
    The multi quote button is the worst button and you can't change my mind. 
     

     
    > See spam reply
    > Go to press the ... mod menu button to hide the post
    > Row of buttons shifts to the right as the multi quote button lazily loads in to existence
    > Click mark as solution on spam post
     
    Fuck whatever stupid thing makes the multi quote button load seconds late. Probably JavaScript. I'm blaming JavaScript.
  3. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon reacted to Tog Driver in Moderators Anniversary On The Forum   
    Are you okay?
  4. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon reacted to Agall in Smoking Barrels - LTT's Unnofficial Gun Club!   
    Primary Arms or Holosun for the optic, red dot or micro prism. I generally sight in at 50yrds and true at 200yrds. There's some other budget optics companies, those are just what I generally stick to now a days.
     
    Streamlight or Olight for the light (people will screech about suggesting Olight, but in the near dozen of their weapon lights or EDC lights I've bought, I've not had any issues). Lights can be a really expensive rabbit hole, me recently replacing the light on my go-to AR with a Cloud Defensive OWL, being a light I bought a few years ago for like $350. Even budget lights can get expensive if not everything you want comes in the box, like m-lok adapters.
     
    Sling is a matter of preference, but I stick to the Blue Force Gear 2 point slings personally, quick adjustable and probably comes with QD points.
     
    For magazines, just don't buy no-name brands and you'll be fine. Magpul pmags or STANAG mags, it really doesn't matter unless you're straying far from the norm and buying see-through ones with fancy colors. Any standard lower will accept any STANAG pattern mag just fine (my KE Arms KP-15 lower really preferring Magpul pmag gen3's specifically, but its advertised as such).
     
    The rest aren't worth it unless you feel like spending a lot over time testing various min-maxed parts that really don't make a difference compared to training. Even a low tier PSA rifle is hard to beat in value (something that at least has a free floated handguard), where a lot of the times, you're better off spending more on ammo than on the firearm itself.
  5. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from Needfuldoer in 3ds repair worth it?   
    Assuming the scuffs are just cosmetic, they shouldn't have much impact on device longevity.
     
    I don't think it's a terrible idea to buy a newer model 3DS, just because it'll be more recent and the battery will probably be healthier, but I don't know how much it'll matter with something that old.
     
    Personally, I would probably save the $50 and put it towards the new model further down the road.
  6. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon reacted to OhioYJ in Standoff doesnt fit   
    There are stand-offs that are different thread types. Are these the stand-offs that came with the case? Are you sure the threads are good? Nothing has been cross threaded?
     
    Also many times if you move a stand-off you may actually need to use a wrench or driver to tighten it down. Many times the unused thread holes are coated over, so things may not thread in by hand easily the first time. 
  7. Funny
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from Lightwreather in uh   
    I prefer creeking my music personally
  8. Funny
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from kirashi in uh   
    I prefer creeking my music personally
  9. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from GoStormPlays in uh   
    I prefer creeking my music personally
  10. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from kirashi in Remote Desktop   
    You present a risk by opening the port in the first place. RDP is an encrypted protocol, but you can allow unwelcome traffic by opening 3389 in your network firewall.
     
    The most secure option is use of a VPN, there are a couple that let you self-host a VPN server and install a client on other devices, so your VPN connection will take you inside your home network, from which you can access all your network resources and do what you need to do. I've used SoftEther VPN for this in the past, but there are other options. OpenVPN is another popular choice.
    Port forwarding is essentially opening a port in the firewall. The port being open is what allows traffic to come and go through the firewall, via that port.
     
    RDP is awesome, but there are much better options for remote gaming. I would look into a cloud service like GeForce Now for your games, and keep RDP around for accessing files and media, but still run it through a VPN.
  11. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon reacted to CommanderAlex in Limited time to use LTT Backpack Discount & Can't use on Gift Cards   
    I don't think it's LTT related but I'm pretty sure most discount coupons cannot be applied to gift cards since you basically get free money if you did. 
  12. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon reacted to Skiiwee29 in Moderators Anniversary On The Forum   
    What you talkin bout....
     

  13. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from problemsolver in More Frames?   
    Competitive shooters and especially esports tend to be more CPU-heavy than GPU-heavy.
    It's more likely that your performance is being held back by your CPU rather than your GPU.
     
    What games are you playing, what settings, resolution, and refresh rate are you playing at, and what framerates are you getting?
  14. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon reacted to Blue4130 in More Frames?   
    On low settings, you really don't need much GPU. You need more CPU to feed the frames. You upgraded the wrong part for your situation.
  15. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from CommanderAlex in More Frames?   
    Competitive shooters and especially esports tend to be more CPU-heavy than GPU-heavy.
    It's more likely that your performance is being held back by your CPU rather than your GPU.
     
    What games are you playing, what settings, resolution, and refresh rate are you playing at, and what framerates are you getting?
  16. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from podkall in More Frames?   
    Competitive shooters and especially esports tend to be more CPU-heavy than GPU-heavy.
    It's more likely that your performance is being held back by your CPU rather than your GPU.
     
    What games are you playing, what settings, resolution, and refresh rate are you playing at, and what framerates are you getting?
  17. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon reacted to Kilrah in Copy & paste thought exercise   
    If you copy your documents etc it'll be fine, if you try to copy the entire drive... likely it'll break, and if your goal is for the new drive to replicate the old it's drive cloning software you're after.
     
    As usual it's always best to state what you actually want to achieve.
  18. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from RONOTHAN## in More Frames?   
    Competitive shooters and especially esports tend to be more CPU-heavy than GPU-heavy.
    It's more likely that your performance is being held back by your CPU rather than your GPU.
     
    What games are you playing, what settings, resolution, and refresh rate are you playing at, and what framerates are you getting?
  19. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from Dedayog in More Frames?   
    Competitive shooters and especially esports tend to be more CPU-heavy than GPU-heavy.
    It's more likely that your performance is being held back by your CPU rather than your GPU.
     
    What games are you playing, what settings, resolution, and refresh rate are you playing at, and what framerates are you getting?
  20. Funny
    Crunchy Dragon reacted to soldier_ph in Moderators Anniversary On The Forum   
    Mods be like: "Last Christmas I gave you a Warning point but the very next day I took MOTF away"
  21. Funny
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from soldier_ph in Moderators Anniversary On The Forum   
    All I want for Christmas is MOTF to get unlocked
  22. Funny
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from soldier_ph in Moderators Anniversary On The Forum   
    They were ordered
  23. Funny
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from soldier_ph in Moderators Anniversary On The Forum   
    Followed orders.
  24. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from leadeater in Raptor Lake P-Core only SKUs   
    Agreed.
     
    Maybe if these had 12-16 core variants with more cache, they'd be decent bang for buck in 6-8 years on the used market, but outside of their targeted market of small businesses and essentially small cloud/server applications, most of us regular folks won't really have a use for these chips.
  25. Agree
    Crunchy Dragon got a reaction from leadeater in Raptor Lake P-Core only SKUs   
    Being a Xeon CPU, they're also not going to work on the consumer platform. Xeon support in consumer motherboards has been incredibly hit or miss since Skylake, and practically nonexistent since Kaby Lake. Intel's doc states support for C262 and C266 chipsets, which might mean these will appear in smaller servers and higher end workstations, akin to the older Dell PrecisionTowers and Lenovo ThinkStations that ran server chipsets and Xeons.
     
    The boost clock is nice, but one thing a lot of people overlook with running a Xeon is that it tends to take more work for them to actually reach the maximum boost clock. I have a Xeon E5-2690v4(2.6Ghz base, 3.5Ghz max boost) and that topped out at 2.9Ghz running Cinebench R23 for the full 10 minutes.
     
    Xeons are designed to be workstation and server powerhouses, so their behavior when you put them to work reflects that moreso than your typical consumer/enthusiast-grade CPU that's typically meant to run as fast as possible all the time. Occasionally, you can do some funny things to a Xeon by tinkering with BCLK, but that can also induce instability elsewhere in the system.
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