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corrado33

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Everything posted by corrado33

  1. You can absolutely use a physical KVM, or you could use a KVM software like Synergy or the free version Barrier. (Both are cross platform.) https://github.com/debauchee/barrier Personally, I've had more luck with barrier than synergy. I've never noticed any latency.
  2. Isn't the steamdeck the king of handhelds right now? (And has been since it came out?) Why not go for that?
  3. I wouldn't go with the 770 if you ever want to play any older games at all. As for AMD vs NVIDIA, it depends. Do you value raytracing? Do you want to have access to DLSS or other NVIDIA specific features? Go with NVIDIA. If you don't care about those things, go with AMD. The AMD card will give you the best FPS if you don't care about raytracing.
  4. You will see no noticeable difference between a stock clocked chip and an overclocked chip with your workloads. If you want stability, stay at stock speeds.
  5. What you really want is a mirror, not a sync. With that said: There is no better tool for the job than rsync. No tool is going to be able to resolve two way conflicts without interaction from you. And it's not basic, it's extremely powerful, most people just don't know how to use it. You can absolutely tell rsync what to automatically do in the case of conflicts. Save both files (rename 1), keep the newest, keep the largest, etc. etc. You just have to look into the options. Any tool you download will likely use rsync under the hood anyway.
  6. If you zip the zip or use another compression format to encase the zip google won't detect the file. Source: I once tried to email myself an autohotkey script (that I wrote myself). Google was... not... happy... (It was a script to autoclick the thumbs up on zwift.)
  7. True enough, but "having all the pieces" is a prerequisite for a puzzle being a "good" puzzle. lol
  8. Seems to be very few reviews of them on youtube. None of the puzzle youtubers I watch have done anything with them. Everything online seems to be their own promotional stuff and any "reviews" I can find are just reviewing the kickstarter. (However, those reviews are positive... at least?) That said, they already have a product out on amazon (which is further than most kickstarters get), (and it's super cheap) so why not just buy one and try it? I mean, it's a puzzle, so long as it goes together I can't really think of anything that'd be wrong with it.
  9. Yeah, the biggest one being "high risk of bricking your card."
  10. There is a setting in afterburner to "unlock" the power limit. You have to go check that setting.
  11. You can delete all the pre-installed stuff, and if you can't, you can just root or whatever it's called for android and delete it. Getting an entire new phone and installing a custom OS on it seems a bit...extreme for just "wanting to delete a few apps." Just put them in a folder on the 8th home screen page and forget about them like the rest of us.
  12. Worse things have been done to motherboards. Yours is probably fine.
  13. Honestly man with a 1080TI (same as my card) you could get by just going used. Get a couple generation old intel chip and save yourself a bunch of money. I did the same upgrade as you did years ago and ended up with a 9900k and that's been great for anything I'd want it for. You can get a 10700k cheaper than a 9900k, although 11th gen seems to be the sweetspot right now. There really is no need to go modern nowadays as even older builds have nearly the same performance in games.
  14. Sounds like a great way to end up with a dead GPU. You can unlock the power limit in settings in afterburner.
  15. To do something like this requires a lot of expense for what is, at best, a very slight improvement. What, exactly are you trying to achieve? Norway is a relatively cold country, surely it's not heating your room too much.
  16. Did it work when you tested it on the mobo box? You're not testing it on TOP of one of those metallic ESD bags are you??? That's.... not a good thing. ESD doesn't mean "non conductive" it's actually quite the opposite. ESD bags are actually supposed to be conductive. Testing a mobo on top of them is definitely a bad idea.
  17. "Wants a phone that gives the user full control over the phone, down the the filesystem and hardware." "Immediately wants to put android on it." Just buy a freaking android phone??? Like, what are you trying to do here? If you want the android experience.... just.... buy an android phone????
  18. Given this sentence, nothing. You upgrade when you want higher performance in something. Not when you "think" you need to upgrade. Absolutely NOTHING will be taking advantage of DDR5 anytime soon. It takes AGES for software to catch up to hardware advances. Most programs STILL aren't taking full or proper advantage of multi-threading.
  19. Pretty sure that's normal for wifi, especially when someone else connects/downloads something. Dis why we don't game on wifi.
  20. Disconnect everything except one stick of ram, no drives, your GPU (since your cpu doesn't have integrated graphics), no fans, no USB, nothing connected to the internal headers (except the power switch) and try again. If that doesn't work, clear the CMOS (read your mobo manual for how to do it.) The try to restart again. Starting the first time you'll see the computer restart a few times by itself to do memory training. Did you make sure all of the power supply connectors are connected correctly? The 24 pin? The 8 pin CPU power? The GPU power?
  21. Any data recovery service will attempt to recover data off of any sort of old HDD. Just google "Data recovery services in my area" and call them. You'll likely want some place local so you can physically take the drive there. It will not be cheap.
  22. I'd say likely a power plan issue. Something along the lines of the game being set for "highest performance" which takes away processing/gpu power away from the background applications.
  23. Most modern GPUs will still boot and give you a message that says something like "Please plug in the power connectors to the GPU." It could be the motherboard, it could be the CPU, it could be the CPU mounted poorly in the mobo. (Do amd chips still have pins?) Could be you reversed your GPU power cables.
  24. You were gaming and had a cam application open and the CPU was bouncing around from 0-20%? I.... doubt that. Maybe a single core, sure.
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