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AndDevin

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  • Posts

    4
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Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male

System

  • CPU
    AMD Ryzen 3700X
  • Motherboard
    Asus Crosshair VIII Hero
  • RAM
    G.Skill Trident Z RGB 16 GB (4 x 8 GB) DDR4-3200 CL16
  • GPU
    EVGA GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER 8 GB XC ULTRA GAMING
  • Case
    Fractal Design Meshify C
  • PSU
    Corsair 850 W 80+ Platinum Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply
  • Keyboard
    Steelseries Apex Pro
  • Mouse
    Steelseries Rival 650
  • Sound
    Steelseries Arctis Pro + GameDAC
  • Operating System
    Windows 10 v2004
  • PCPartPicker URL
  1. Oh shoot! I actually found this thing that I bought and am going to try out. It looks more promising than others that I came across and it doesn't add additional clutter on the front side of things, so I'm hopeful.
  2. Hey, did you ever find a decent solution to this? I'm facing the exact same problem. It's funny because there are some older boards that have two gen 1 headers but it seems that most modern motherboards only have one. I'm happy with my 7000D, but I'm sad I overlooked this incompatibility. I'm happy the Dark Hero has so much rear io but I wanted the front ones to work.
  3. Bummer. Thanks for the reply. I guess I'll submit a ticket on Asus' website and hope it does something.
  4. Hi there! I have this WiFi card in my PC. This router is what I'm using. I'll post the rest of my PC details at the end of the post. I'm trying to get Wake on Wireless LAN (WoWLAN) working and have been for about two months now. I've done a lot of searching and made a lot of settings changes. On the adapter itself, I've set it to not turn off to save power and to allow the card to wake from sleep via magic packet. I've also ensured my power plan settings don't interfere with the feature. I've also allowed it via BIOS. I searched and found this thread which basically explains my same situation, right down to using a WiFi 6 capable card. What seems to be happening, despite my best efforts, is that the WiFi card is powering down as a part of the sleep process. Watching the active connections on my router shows my PC drop off as soon as it enters sleep mode. Obviously, if the PC isn't showing on the network, a magic packet will never make it to the destination. Any ideas what I could be missing? What I'm working with:
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