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Dutch_Master

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Everything posted by Dutch_Master

  1. Okay, I missed the SBC part (I'd assumed this was a Chinese x86 clone board). What M.2 drives are you using, are they NVMe/PCIe or SATA? The key (sic ) is the key of the drive: NVMe drives only have one notch (M-key) while SATA drives have 2 (both B and M-key). A pure NVMe slot does not support SATA drives.
  2. It's in the BIOS. Read the manual for your board to learn how to get access to said BIOS and where you can find the setting itself. Do note: older systems do NOT support bifurcation of PCIe slots! If it's not in the manual, your board doesn't support it.
  3. If you compress the data, it'll take (way!) less then 100GB of storage. Encrypting it makes it safe(r) for storage on public servers, but increases the size. Use the tar command on any Linux distro (including TrueNAS Scale) to create a compressed file for your data. HTH!
  4. If you're comfortable with potentially loosing files, or a non-bootable PC, then by all means make a RAID0 with these drives. If your data has any value above zero to you, then avoid RAID0 like the plague Your message implies you have more of those drives, why not create a RAID5 or even RAID6, this allows for redundancy (of 1 resp. 2 drives) while still increasing storage capacity. HTH!
  5. No, that's part of the heat dissipation. It's a thermo-pad (not rubber!) that conducts heat from the M.2 drive to the mainboard so it's easier to dissipate.
  6. Consider a PicoPSU unit: plugs directly into a 20/24pin PSU connector, has limited external power connectivity otherwise (mostly just 1 SATA and/or 1 Molex) but only takes a small hole for the DC-barrel jack for a laptop power brick. Comes in a range of power sizes, from 90 to 200W output.
  7. Go for the deal. A 12600K is a significant upgrade over your current CPU and allows for more FPS and/or higher settings for your games. A water cooler on your current CPU just doesn't offer the same performance boost.
  8. Did you enable bifurcation for the PCIe slots used? If not, do so
  9. For starters, boot a Linux Live CD-R to see what's actually in the system. You don't need a harddrive for that. Next, install the system-OS SSD from your old system and see if it recognises your new PC components. After that, just add more drives. It's likely your data can (and will) be reused. As for the licence key, accept a test licence for now and upgrade to a new key once you've obtained that. Or install Linux outright, no paid-for S/W key required
  10. Yeah, it's still April 1st somewhere in the Universe
  11. Well, it explains why the video was dropped a day early
  12. I know, I live in one of those despised European socialist countries (founding member of NATO, and all predecessors of the current EU, home of the International Peace Court as well as several International Criminal Courts. Not to mention the biggest flower auction on the planet and only 2nd to the US in agriculture exports, key transport hub in NW-Europe and inventors of the Exchange system now dominated by Wall Street. And the first multinational company, the VOC. But to Americans, we're the loathed socialists ) What we got in return of our tax-euro's? Don't ask me, this guy knows: https://www.youtube.com/@NotJustBikes And this from that other "socialist" country, Germany: https://www.youtube.com/@TypeAshton Please explore their channels, and many like them, for a North-American view of European solutions to problems the US and Canada also have.
  13. Well, it is the Off Topic section, so whaddaya expect?
  14. NTSB report on bridge collapse near Pittsburg, PA, with animations and actual footage of the collapse: It's easy to conclude the root cause of the collapse was lack of maintenance on the part of PennDOT. But that leaves the question: why didn't they maintain the bridge as they should, especially after nearly 8 years of alarming reports on the rapidly deteriorating state of the bridge? If you know the answer, let us know too!
  15. 1. Correct: SAS controllers can communicate with SATA drives, but not the other way round. 2. Depending on future upgrade plans, you may opt to spread the load from the drives over more then a single HBA. There are mixed HBA's, that have both internal and external connectors, the latter to connect to a disk shelf. Or as Linus demonstrated in an earlier video on his NetApp rack, a string of disk-shelves. For your case, a 16-drive internal and a mixed 8i8e HBA (dual external ports) might be sufficiently interesting to investigate. Buy from reputable sources or if you're shopping on Aliexpress, make sure the shop exists for over a year minimum. 3. Obviously, you need cables with connectors that suit both the HBA as well as the backplane. They might be SFF8643, but there are different standards in use so pay close attention which connectors you need. HTH!
  16. Two relatively cheap upgrades are the CPU and GPU, obviously. Your X570 board should (note the emphasis!) support a 5700X CPU. That's 2 cores/4 threads more at better efficiency, easy win. For GPU, consider a 6800XT. Again, much more efficient and most likely higher FPS too. I won't upgrade/add RAM, especially if you plan on a platform upgrade in the near future. Look at RAM utilisation during gameplay, if your system doesn't use all 32GB of it, more RAM won't do much except raising the price of the upgrade, which would actually be better spent on the platform upgrade
  17. What you need is a test bench. Here's one possible source: https://www.aliexpress.com/w/wholesale-pc-test-bench.html Hunt around for the best deal, I've seen them for sale at 20 USD in the past but apparently not anymore. You might have better luck!
  18. You have every right to be upset about this as well as being vocal about the situation you were put in by no fault of your own. However, stay civil and courteous, especially on public platforms like this. Not doing so will actually harm your case should it ever get out of hand and you'd have to resort to the Court system. Best of luck!
  19. Basically everything, save the case itself perhaps. What's your budget for the upgrade? PS: did you read this one? https://rog-forum.asus.com/t5/rog-desktops/upgrading-the-rog-g20-recommended-buying-list/td-p/710293
  20. What this indicates is that your ISP has a network hub in Nagpur and that's where you connect to the web. Ask the ISP to change your network access to a local hub instead, or choose a different ISP if you can.
  21. Had a quick look, several serial/parallel cards, some mainboards, soundcard and associated stuff. Strictly speaking e-waste but some (most?) are good enough to put on some local marketplace and see what retro-people wanna pay for it. I don't think they're PCI, probably ISA bus.
  22. Congrats, you are the very first on my Ignore list Don't bother replying, I won't see it and thus, not be tempted to respond.
  23. Reading consists of more then just regurgitating words or even letters in the right order. Understanding what's been said is even more important. You obviously didn't, hence, you asked
  24. No, what they said was that the GPU needs 3 "bays" while the old one only uses 2 "bays". Each "bay" used to cover a PCI/PCIe slot, but most mainboards account for the extra size of present day GPU's so don't have a physical slot associated with that "bay". These "bays" are the metal brackets at the rear of the case, where the GPU slots into the mainboard.
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