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Zando_

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  1. Agree
    Zando_ reacted to Needfuldoer in Upgrading 4690k to 4790k for Warzone 2.0   
    It looks like i7 4790k-s are going for around $100 right now. If they were $20 I'd say go for it and see what happens, but for that price I think you're better off investing in a platform upgrade.
  2. Agree
    Zando_ reacted to RONOTHAN## in Consequences of undervolting (other than crashing and artifacts for GPUs)   
    Is the program just slowing down like crazy? That is a phenomena known as clock stretching, it can happen depending on how undervolting is done. Clock speeds will remain high, but performance tanks out of nowhere. Ryzen CPUs do it a ton if you set a negative voltage offset, and Intel chips can do the same (albeit not as commonly).
     
    If it's giving different results though, that just sounds like it's unstable, which for a CPU overclock I've seen happen a couple times.
  3. Like
    Zando_ reacted to Digitaldave in Fitting a 3-slot 4090 on a micro ATX Asus B450M-A   
    I'll give it a try right now and get back to ya'll!
  4. Agree
    Zando_ got a reaction from Fendrick in Frustrated with the gaming first approach to modern hobbyist computing.   
    Most people who care about what goes into PCs are playing games on them, and most people look for the best perf/$, so thus the focus on gaming performance. If that isn't your passion in PCs, finding other niches is pretty easy. Puget Systems consistently publishes benchmarks with full focus on creative and workstation render tasks, Level1Techs is a great source for enterprise/server hardware, ServeTheHome for even more focus on home server stuff, etfc. Lots of great spaces without a focus on games. 
  5. Agree
    Zando_ reacted to RONOTHAN## in Frustrated with the gaming first approach to modern hobbyist computing.   
    To be fair, most people in the custom PC market are gamers first, so the assumption is that if you're on here asking for help specing out a rig, you want something gaming focused. The people who do need something more production focused generally go for a pre-built workstation from someone like Puget, HP, Dell, etc. for a warranty and support rather than building it yourself. There are exceptions to that rule definitely, but for the most part you fall into one of those two camps. 
  6. Agree
    Zando_ reacted to Morgan MLGman in Zero RPM mode - silent VRM killer or doesn't matter?   
    VRMs are designed to withstand temperatures up to about 120C for a very long period of time - temps when the GPU is idle or is around 60C are nothing for the VRMs. You've got nothing to worry about. They only get hot when there's a lot of power coming through them - in those instances the GPU is hot as well, so the fans spin up.
  7. Like
    Zando_ reacted to Bombastinator in What things should I avoid in my first pc build?   
    Static electricity.  It can eat your components and shorten their lives without you even noticing. 
     
    Fear.  As long as you carefully follow the instructions and don’t improv it’s a lot like tinkertoys. (Legos?) everything is modular.
     
    sloppiness.  Just because it’s modular doesn’t mean it’s fault tolerant.  If something isn’t working make sure you didn’t just fail to seat something correctly or plug it in to the wrong place.
  8. Agree
    Zando_ reacted to Levent in Not serious power related question   
    CPUs do not work like that.
     
     
  9. Agree
    Zando_ reacted to Eigenvektor in Here's A PC Question?   
    Except for loading the 8K image into memory, that use case isn't bound by storage performance. So a cache isn't going to make any difference except for load times. The load time will only be improved if the file you're loading is cached (i.e. it has been loaded enough times for the cache software to determine it should be cached) These use cases are bound by GPU and CPU performance more than anything. Storage performance might make a difference when loading things, but again, only if the files you're working with have actually been cached. Except for loading a level, not bound by storage at all. This is down to GPU performance and to a limited degree CPU performance. That's the one use case where storage performance can make a noticeable difference up to a certain point. You will definitely notice a difference going from a HDD to an SSD. You'll have a much smaller difference going from a SATA SSD to an NVMe SSD, so it's barely worth it. You seem to have the incorrect assumption that using a cache will magically make your computer faster overall. It will not. It will only speed up tasks that are bound by storage performance, if the files in question happen to be cached already. It'll not do anything for running games at 8K except potentially reduce loading times.
  10. Agree
    Zando_ reacted to TylerD321 in Elden Ring   
    You will be playing with controller most likely so I would keep that in mind. I would consider both the resolution at which you plan on playing it along with the refresh rate. At 1080p 60 fps either is fine. If you have it on steam, you will have it on any system you own, but if you buy for PS4 you will only have it on PS4.
  11. Like
    Zando_ got a reaction from Birblover12 in doubting my cpu purchase is it okay?   
    ^^^ Get a boot SSD in there and you're golden. Very nice spec, and it's cool to see a proper all-white build, those are often rough to assemble as white components are weirdly uncommon. 
     
    As for the CPU question:
    1. That CPU is fast as heck already.
    2. It isn't a -K chip, you couldn't overclock it if you did want to (not that there's much of a gain to be had on newer CPUs anyways). 
     
    CPUs have changed up a good bit in the last couple years, sounds like your friends are still expecting them to behave like older generations, so they're giving you info that's a bit outdated. 
  12. Like
    Zando_ got a reaction from Godd in doubting my cpu purchase is it okay?   
    ^^^ Get a boot SSD in there and you're golden. Very nice spec, and it's cool to see a proper all-white build, those are often rough to assemble as white components are weirdly uncommon. 
     
    As for the CPU question:
    1. That CPU is fast as heck already.
    2. It isn't a -K chip, you couldn't overclock it if you did want to (not that there's much of a gain to be had on newer CPUs anyways). 
     
    CPUs have changed up a good bit in the last couple years, sounds like your friends are still expecting them to behave like older generations, so they're giving you info that's a bit outdated. 
  13. Agree
    Zando_ reacted to Levent in doubting my cpu purchase is it okay?   
    If all you got is a HDD, then your friend is clueless about computers. That system looks fine other than lack of SSDs.
  14. Agree
    Zando_ reacted to Oshino Shinobu in Why do people say Toshiba hard drives are bad?   
    Do they? I've not heard people say they're bad. Toshiba are no more or less reliable than any of the other major drive manufacturers.
     
    You hear it about Seagate, but that's based on some seriously flawed "reliability" data that was released quite a long time ago.
     
    EDIT: Though if you have important files, you should be backing them up. Ideally keeping copies in physically different locations
  15. Agree
    Zando_ reacted to xAcid9 in Should I get a 12gb 3060 or a 8gb 3060ti?   
    Make sure it's actually 3060 Ti and not 3060 with 8GB Vram. 😆
     
     
  16. Agree
    Zando_ got a reaction from Eigenvektor in Should I get a 12gb 3060 or a 8gb 3060ti?   
    Do you have a task that needs VRAM more than a fast GPU? The 3060 Ti is faster than the 3060, unless whatever you're doing absolutely must have over 8GB VRAM, it should be better.
  17. Agree
    Zando_ reacted to Dukesilver27- in Should I get a 12gb 3060 or a 8gb 3060ti?   
    3060 Ti is about 30% faster than 3060, don't be fooled by the amount of VRAM.
    So, go with 3060 Ti, assuming that you're gaming.
  18. Agree
    Zando_ reacted to Radium_Angel in How good is TEAMGROUP DDR5 RAM   
    I've always felt that Teamgroup was solidly in the middle of the pack WRT their other offerings. Never had any issues, but never found them the best either.
  19. Informative
    Zando_ reacted to JamesdB in Alternatives to Netlimiter for blocking network activity on Windows   
    I guess but in a more convoluted way. Like Netlimiter just installs on Windows and runs on start up. You can set the default rule to "Ask" so that any time a new process tries to access the web it detects it, you get a pop up and you can choose whether you want to allow it or block it. It's super user friendly
  20. Like
    Zando_ got a reaction from WhitetailAni in AMD Announces 7900XTX $999, 7900XT $899, Arriving December 13   
    ?? Who told you this? I have GTX 780s still kicking, 9 year old cards. And an HD4870, a 14 year old card. That's in a Mac Pro, the original Nvidia GT 6300 (IIRC that's the model) from 2006 - so 16 years old - is still kicking but just doesn't support newer graphics APIs so I replaced it. 
    Wait for 3rd party benches to see how the cards perform + if there's any major launch issues.
  21. Like
    Zando_ reacted to Kilrah in General Intel HEDT Xeon/i7 Discussion   
    Ah yep I have that too. That was the time where you could be expected to have quad SLI and I guess 4x75W going through the whole board is a bit much 😄
  22. Funny
    Zando_ reacted to Crunchy Dragon in General Intel HEDT Xeon/i7 Discussion   
    Hey, the 5820K is only getting cheaper and cheaper. Realistically, it wouldn't cost that much to grab roughly 100 off Ebay and other sources.
  23. Like
    Zando_ got a reaction from Crunchy Dragon in General Intel HEDT Xeon/i7 Discussion   
    Peace of mind. I can slap in as many PCIe cards as I want and not worry about power draw. I assume the FTW K has it as EVGA loves supporting 4-Way SLI whenever possible, so they assume people buying their boards will probably slap in a bunch of hungry cards. They do have a pretty beefy Folding @ Home team as well I believe, so that's another reason to keep it even with the death of SLI.
    Someone did something similar here ages ago, I need to go back and find that post at some point. Breakdown of like 100+ X58 chips and which ended up having the best bins. The takeaway I got was that 45nm golden bins were golden, but overall the usual X56xx Xeons had the best chance of a pretty good bin.
     
    Also, got that new (to me) Dark up and running, all seems fine so far. Shipper left a 500GB XPG ATOM30 SSD in there by mistake, but they said I could keep it so yay free SSD 😃
     
  24. Like
    Zando_ reacted to Crunchy Dragon in General Intel HEDT Xeon/i7 Discussion   
    My Gigabyte X99-UD4 uses Molex for PCIe power as well. My X99-SLI didn't have any supplemental power from what I remember. My X299 FTW-K thankfully uses a 6 pin PCIe, on top of having two 8 pin EPS connectors.
     
    I really love having a connector for supplemental PCIe power. I don't know why, it just tickles my nerd brain.
    I could get dangerously far into that as a hobby. Perhaps even to a point where I have a pile of 5820Ks, with stats for every single one based on how well I did in the silicon lottery.
     
    Random tangent:
    One of the best instances of winning the silicon lottery I've ever seen was one of my buddies, who ran a 4790K at 5Ghz 1.4 or 1.45v on an air cooler with no lapping or delidding. Think he eventually sold that for something stupid to a hobbyist overclocker.
  25. Agree
    Zando_ got a reaction from Somerandomtechyboi in Do i need to uninstall something in device manager before upgrading cpu question in Windows   
    Nope! You can just pop the new CPU in and it should boot right up and work without issue. 
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