Jump to content

yeetyeetyeeter

Member
  • Posts

    51
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Reputation Activity

  1. Informative
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to Arika in i pressed a few keys on accident and now everything looks weird   
    left shift + left alt + print screen
     
    you used the hotkey to turn on high contrast mode
  2. Like
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to Ahoy Hoy in im searching for a good microphone   
    Thats a pretty heft budget just for talking to friends on discord. 
    At that budget you can go to ways. Buy professional grade XLR recording equipment or got high end consumer USB stuff.
    USB
    Pros - Simple plug and play most of the settings to control the mic are ever on the microphone or computer software.
    Cons - No upgradability. No extra features its just a microphone.

    XLR
    Pros - Upgradability. everything is interchangeable so if you dislike one part you can change it easily.
            - Higher quality components
            - Extra features, normally has headphone ports and speaker ports with independent volume controls
    Cons- Bit more knowledge required to set up (plenty of guides on YouTube many of us on the forum can easily explain)
            - More stuff. Instead of a single mic with a usb cable for a XLR system you need a interface to convert the analogue audio to digital for the computer


    USB
    High End - Shure MV7 - €285* Theres not much more high end in the USB world then this
    Mid - Rode Podcaster €204*
    Mid - AT2020 USBi - €187
    Mid - Rode NT USB - €164
    Low mid - Rode NT USB Mini - €97 
    Low Mid - Shure MV5 - €109 This and the rode above both solid little microphones but not a huge improvement on quality over the off brand versions below
    Low Mid - T Bone 500 USB - €78*Improvement over the 420 but you dont get the stand and case etc but theres a built in stand into the mic design
    Low - Tbone SC420 USB - €58*If you got sixty euros this is killer. Really good quality for the price. comes with a little stand pop shield a case and even more stuff. How is this finically profitable

    XLR System
    Audio Interface
    High end - Yamaha AG03 - €120 *- Aimed at streamers and podcaster. Single microphone input plus a instrument and a 3.5mm jack input for phones laptops etc
    High end - Rode AI 1 - €116 *- One mic input and a headphone output. Great noise floor can really turn the gain up on this and have no hiss. 
    Mid to high - Focusrite Scarlett Solo - €97 *- One mic inpput and a instrument input. Headphone output. Solid working horse, popular brand. Got to love that red colour.
    Mid to low - Behringer UMC202HD - €65 - Does the job not best quality but good enough for 99% of situations. 2 Mic inputs headphone out lots of knobs to control them both.
    Low - Berhinger UMC22 - €42 - Baby brother to the 202. One mic input this time less knobs. Be careful though Behringer have terrible customer support and poor QA testing.

    XLR Microphone
    High - Rode Procaster - €171 *
    High to mid - Audio Technica At2035 - €153
    Mid - Presonus PD70 - €131 - Bit meh similar quality to the pod mic but thirty euros more expensive 
    MId - Rode PodMic - €109 *
    Mid - Tbone MB7 beta - €97 *
    Mid - Audio technica AT2020 - €87

    Also need a XLR cable Thomann own brand cables are really good quality for money just work out the length you thing you need.

    Some of these products have bundles where you can save some money.
    Ive put * on products which I think are the best to go for
    With the XLR system if you get a high end microphone recommend not pairing it with a lowend interface. It would still work but be nicer to not cheap out on one bit.

    Some of these microphones need stands if you search mic stands you will find what your after work out if you want a small sit on desk or a clamp boom arm kind of thing.
    Thomann the company I've linked through out sell lots of good stands Some stands have integrated XLR cables so that may save some money if you get a XLR system.

    *Just because I say high end does not mean they are the pinacol of audio quality. The high mid low is based around the budget this stuff goes stupidly expensive quickly.
  3. Like
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to 5x5 in laptop for 500 euro   
    No problem. I know it's expensive but it's really the only usable one. Nvidia MX cards and Vega iGPUs aren't meant for gaming and can't really deliver good performance even in light games.
  4. Like
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to 5x5 in laptop for 500 euro   
    We have a winner
    https://www.mediamarkt.nl/nl/product/_asus-vivobook-x571gd-bq326t-1654010.html
     
    Cheapest laptop that can play games.
  5. Like
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to 5x5 in Lenovo Legion 5 good enough for game development   
    The AMD models yes, the intel models no. Ryzen runs cooler so it can sustain performance in high load scenarios.
  6. Like
    yeetyeetyeeter got a reaction from marmour in good laptop for gaming/game development   
    thanks alot 
     
  7. Like
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to marmour in good laptop for gaming/game development   
    Assuming you mean dollars/euros/GBP:
     
    Acer Nitro 5 with 4600H
    Dell G5 SE with 4600H and 5600M (runs hot with bad response times)
    Asus A15 with 4600H (runs hot with bad response times and generally poor display)
    HP Omen 15 if they release lower end tiers
    Lenovo Legion 5
     
    You probably want to look for a Ryzen 5 4600H and a 1650ti at this price point. Could maybe squeeze a 1660ti or 5600M. 
     
    All these suggestions are a bit bulky. If you want something more portable, Asus G14 Base spec, but it's more expensive for the same performance.
     
    For this price range, I would strongly recommend checking out Jarrod's Tech on YouTube. He has done extensive coverage of a number of these models. Notebookcheck is also good for written reviews. 
     
    From Intel, the Acer Helios may be worth consideration, or last year's legion Y540, but these options are more expensive.
     
    Hope this helps
     
     
     
  8. Informative
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to Haro in how to enable overclocking on gigabyte motherboard   
    No. A320 does not support overclocking. Either way there will be little to performance benifits. And ryzen doesn't really have a lot of overclocking headroom. 
  9. Informative
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to Oshino Shinobu in Re using windows 10   
    You can use the same installation media as many times as you want. You'll need a new key for each activation, but you don't need to reinstall the installation files on the USB. 
  10. Like
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to Hilltrot in upgrade from 1050 ti (around 300 euro budget)   
    I would suggest a 2060 if you can do it.  There are so many uses for the RT cores.
     
    If not, 1660s and 1660ti are your options for Nvidia.  
  11. Like
  12. Like
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to fUNKdUMPER in upgrade from 1050 ti (around 300 euro budget)   
    I recently bought the sapphire pulse radeon rx 5600xt , and its AMAZING! For the price.. its marketed as a 1080p champion card.. but lets be honest. I have been getting 300+fps in modern AAA titles on all ultra settings @1440p no problem. 
     
    the ONLY problem i see with this card.. is long term. the 6gb of vram is pretty much ALWAYS getting used all the way up to get the results mentioned above. it does it no problem.. but as new games come out and require more vram we will have to lower settings to keep up. 
     
    Amd released the bios update for the card and now i believe they just come with it preinstalled, but basically it made the card the same performance wise as a 5700 non xt. minus the differences in vram obv. but yea I love this card and reccomend it if you want to get the most performance and ONLY have 300 or so bucks.. if you want to get more performance or performance thats gonna last for 5+ years, or have more than 300 bucks to spend.. like 4 or 500 ish. get a 5700xt or gtx 2070 and up. 
    good luck !
  13. Like
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to ajaxburger in upgrade from 1050 ti (around 300 euro budget)   
    I know in the US you can find 1080's second-hand easily for around $300 USD which comes to about $280 EUR. Do some shopping around if you're patient enough and you'll find the right card. I've been running a 1070 I found on Craigslist for $200 for the last 2 years and can still run COD MW on just under max settings at ~100 FPS.
  14. Like
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to tank234 in upgrade from 1050 ti (around 300 euro budget)   
    For nividia cards the equivalent would be the 2070 super but those are significantly higher priced then the 5700xt
  15. Like
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to tank234 in upgrade from 1050 ti (around 300 euro budget)   
    I would say go with the 5600xt or the 5700xt. The 5700xt is a little bit over your budget but it is a really good card 
  16. Informative
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to inalone in moving os to ssd.   
    The typical way of doing this would be to shrink your C:/ drive to the size of the SSD, then clone the partition - if the C:/ drive is too small you'd need to start uninstalling programs, deleting files etc. so that it fits. Time wise, shouldn't take too long but depends on the hard drive, SSD and how large the partition you're transferring across is but it shouldn't take that long.
  17. Informative
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to inalone in moving os to ssd.   
    Essentially, your C:/ drive lives on a partition on your hard drive at the moment and if you want to transfer it to an SSD, you'd need to make it so that the partition is able to fit onto the SSD given the SSD's capacity (e.g. if you have a 1TB C:/ drive at the moment (which is where your windows install lives), and only a 250GB SSD, you'd need to make that 1TB partition into a 250GB one).
     
    When it comes to cloning software, someone else would have to chip in I'm afraid as I've never done that before, but for shrinking the partition I think Windows' built in Disk Management program is good.
     
    EDIT: Shrinking is just the first step though, as a Windows install is typically made up of 3 partitions I think, including the bootloader, so someone else would have to chip in for how to properly transfer the full Windows install across.
  18. Informative
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to NineEyeRon in moving os to ssd.   
    Removing programs etc is windows stuff.
     
    Then Disk Manager to shrink the volume, again windows stuff so simple.
     
    Clone with Macrium Reflect, free download.
  19. Informative
    yeetyeetyeeter reacted to NineEyeRon in moving os to ssd.   
    Take your time and take care, don’t do anything your not comfortable doing.
  20. Like
    yeetyeetyeeter got a reaction from inalone in moving os to ssd.   
    ok thanks alot for that.
    ill wait for someone to explain what the better software for this is and how to do it.
×