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mutedcurmudgeon

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About mutedcurmudgeon

  • Birthday Aug 09, 1997

Contact Methods

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Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Houston, TX
  • Interests
    PC building & troubleshooting, oil & gas industry, engineering, data analysis, LEGO, cars, racing
  • Occupation
    Petroleum Engineer

System

  • CPU
    Intel i5 13600K
  • Motherboard
    Asus TUF Gaming Z790-Plus WiFi D4
  • RAM
    2x 16GB G-Skill
  • GPU
    Asus TUF Gaming RTX 3070TI
  • Case
    Corsair Carbide Series 110R
  • Storage
    Crucial P3 2TB PCIe M.2 SSD
    Samsung 840 EVO 500 GB
    WD Red 3TB
    WD Black 1TB
  • PSU
    EVGA 850 GT - 850W
  • Display(s)
    Acer Nitro XV272U - 2560 x 1440, 144 Hz, 27"
    Aopen 27ML1U - 2560 x 1440, 75 Hz, 27"
  • Cooling
    Noctua NH-U12S Chromax - Black
  • Keyboard
    Corsair K95 RGB Platinum Edition
  • Mouse
    Logitech G402 Proteus Core
  • Sound
    Sennheiser HD6XX, Massdrop
  • Operating System
    Windows 11 Pro
  • Laptop
    MSI GS75 STEALTH 17.3" 144Hz - i7-9750H - NVIDIA RTX 2080 Max Q - 16GB - 1TB SSD

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  1. Like I told Orange, I'd rather stick with intel as from what I've been told the software I use in my industry is optimized for Intel. I see that Ryzen is clearly better from an overall standpoint, but as work comes first I'd rather stick with that. Most interested as to whether the 9900k is worth it over the 10th gen processors at the price point offered by Microcenter. My company is also picking up part of the bill, but only if I choose hardware within their specs, which Intel is one of.
  2. Just looking to get a processor that more suited for the software I use for work. I've been told by IT to find something Intel, as their processors play better with the workloads of the software we use in my industry.
  3. Hey guys, I've recently come to the conclusion that my current i5 4690k build is a bit outdated and that I need to upgrade a bit. I'm not super worried about being on the "cutting edge of performance" or anything, but I'd like to at least see a nice bump. I currently have a 4690k with 32GB DDR3. I use the computer mostly for gaming and simulations for work which are (from what the IT people tell me) optimized mainly for Intel CPUs, so I'd like to stay with Intel, despite the large performance gap currently see between the blue and red teams. I was looking at my local Micro Center and saw that the i9 9900k is only $320 over there right now, and will probably be even cheaper in the next month or so with Ryzen 5xxx series and black Friday/cyber Monday deals on the way. At this price point is the 9900k worth getting? Or should I just opt for a 10700k (10900k is a bit out of price range, the most I really want to spend on a CPU is ~$400) when the deals come around? (if I can get one) Just looking for some quick pointers, I've been out of the PC building game for quite a while and I'm not too knowledgeable on the more recent hardware. Thanks for the help.
  4. Not sure if there is a real place to post this, so I apologize in advance, I just think this might be a cool idea for a project video for LTT. I love your more technical/experimental laid-back videos, like the SD card SSD, so I'm always thinking of ideas for new ones for y'all. A earlier this week I saw this video. The YouTuber attempts (and succeeds) at desoldering and then resoldering a nand-flash chip off of their iPhone's logic board. This got me thinking. I always remember when I buy smaller size RAM sticks they usually have extra places one the other side to put more chips. What if someone attempted to solder on more RAM? It's very hit or miss and I haven't been able to find any real information on it, but I thought it sounded kinda interesting and thought I'd share.
  5. Thanks for the suggestions! Looking into it with her right now, thanks for the help!
  6. Looking for some reccomendations for a laptop for a friend. I'm not really that well versed in the subject so I figured I'd ask. She has a budget of $800-$900(USD) and needs to be able to do some light photo editing and gaming (Skyrim, Fallout, FTL, Civ V/VI, etc), and for carrying to classes. Looking for something not super bulky, relatively light (<7lbs?) so it's easier to carry around. The graphics settings on the games don't really matter, (she isn't picky) as long as they can run on low/medium.
  7. What are your opinions on the future of cryptocurrency? Not trying to start wars just want to see what the community thinks.
  8. upgrade that gpu, that power supply too probably for starters.
  9. looks good. Good luck finding a 6gb 1060 though.
  10. You could just buy one and braid it yourself, it wouldn't be too hard I would imagine.
  11. the i5 because it's a quad core would be generally better.
  12. less than 25 cents a day, not worth it.
  13. RAM could be an upgrade if you feel like you need it, you won't see too much of a difference though unless you're doing content creation or something. It does look nice to fill those DIMMs though
  14. shouldn't be as long as there's the same amount of VRAM in both cards. But I don't think you have to worry about that with the 980ti.
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