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Thread For Tech Quickie Video Suggestions

Not sure if done before, but difference between raster/vector (Photoshop/Illustrator),
Or what situations are appropriate to use Premiere vs. After Effects for a Youtube channel

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What about Neural Networks? How do they work? How can they be used? I heard they could be useful for developing some sort of artificial intelligence...

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Thin clients. How do they work?

I can't make heads and tails of the long documents available on the internet. I am looking into it because I am researching on the deployment of multiple computers in a cost effective way and I came across this.

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Could you look into the different wireless frequencies for wireless keyboards and mice? which has less interference, 2.4GHz, 5GHz, 5.8GHz.

There might be more that I'm not aware of. a vid might actually promote more higher frequency K+M if the higher ones have less interference, freezing and lag issues. 

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Sorry. Just have to post this since it will be buried in YT comments. Saw the Techquickie on Powerbanks. Loved Linus' reaction as he was saying what he's listening on Audible now (at the end of the vid).

 

Suggestion: microSD classes, speeds and suggested brands. Which one are best for phones, cameras and other devices.

 

Example: most phones can only be expanded up to 64gb (unless it's a newer model). What's the difference between Samsung's evo, evo+, etc... then Samsung vs Sandisk if using microsd card as main storage for frequent input/output. Like if you move all your apps to it and use it like main memory.

 

Thanks.

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There are too many vids to check for dupe suggestions so ill just post what i know lol.

 

1:RJ45 Internet cables, the differences between cat5, cat5e, cat6, cat6e and cat7.

2:Internet over the mains Explained.

3:Active and passive speakers explained.

4:raspberry pi explained.

and finally one that has always confused me the most

5:Luke Explained, what is Luke? a robot engineered to respond to linus? maybe a CGI? Luke is one of the many mysteries of this planet, that confuses scientists who  stay up at night thinking . . . "who is Luke?" "what does he do?" . . . .maybe its too much for five mins . . . .

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Sealed heatpipes with their 'fluid' versus unsealed heatpipes.

 

Take a heatpipe-based heatsink.  Do some benchmarks and temperature measurements on it.  Cut/dremel the heatpipes open.  Do some benchmarks and temperature measurements.  Tell us if the heatpipes being sealed makes any difference whatsoever. 

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The "mklink" command and how to use it to save space on say, an SSD?

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Greetings LMG Team,

 

I'd love to see an episode about the differences between GPU Boost 2.0 and 3.0, as well as a "How to use GPU Boost 3.0"

 

Thanks in advance from Germany,

 

Pijotre

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  • Pc Bottlenecks

(a lot of people use it wrong so it would be nice to educate the people)

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On 9/12/2016 at 4:58 AM, Gnunu said:

The difference between volts and watts.

==============================================================================

EDIT: Linus, if this is out of place please move it to another thread with Gnunu's comment. I spent way to much time typing this.

==============================================================================

 

Skip the stuff in parentheses unless you're trying to criticize what I'm saying. I know what I'm talking about, but not everyone can understand higher level concepts at face value, I know I can't it took some good teachers. Everything in parentheses is simply a correction or addition of information to make the following explanation more realistic. I have bolded all information in parentheses so you can easily glaze over it and get to the point at the next sentence (Seriously, skip this shit).

 

"Volts" are a unit used to measure the difference in electrical potential. The measurement for volts that most people are familiar with is actually the difference in voltage between 2 sources of electrical energy (delta V). The potential difference occurs when electrons are held in a higher density in one location relative to another location because the 2 bodies of electrical energy would prefer to share a common energy state (through the higher energy state body releasing electrons to the lower energy state body).

 

A "watt" is a unit of power. Power is the measure the amount of energy changing per second (actually per unit of time to be precise). Here is an equation: P = E/t = (integral of force with respect to time)/t = deltaV*I = (I^2)*R = (V^2)/R = a bunch of other things I can't think of off the top of my head.

 

I will now explain it in a way hopefully most people can understand if you didn't understand voltage or power from the previous statements:

 

A ball is on the ground. You pick up the ball. You drop it. It falls to the ground. What happened?

This is what happened, the ball did not have much energy when it was on the ground, but when you picked it up you gave it the ability to fall. This change in elevation is called potential energy because even though you haven't dropped the ball yet, it has a higher potential to fall. In other words it has more potential to do something (this "something" is work... not important in this scope). This means when you increase the elevation of the ball, the ball has more energy. Think of a higher voltage as raising the ball higher above the ground. Simply put, there is more that can be done.

The force that allows the ball to fall (to do work if you're nitpicky) is one of the 4 fundamental forces. The 4 fundamental forces are gravity, electromagnetism, weak nuclear force, and strong nuclear force.

From the perspective of force/energy, the difference between the ball example and voltage is that the ball drops because of a force generated by gravity, and voltage is similar to a force that's generated by electromagnetism (there would need to be a current - amperage - for there to be a force).

Voltage (the delta V kind, not the absolute kind) is just electrons wanting to move to a place where there are less electrons just like the ball wants to fall to the ground. Just because there is a voltage difference doesn't mean anything is happening just like when you hold the ball its not falling even though it wants to. The potential is there even though nothing is necessarily happening.

 

This leads nicely into the next topic: power

Power (which is measured in the unit called "watt") is the measure of how fast energy changes (to another system(s)... again, topic for another time). Looking back at the example with the ball, power from electricity is similar to how fast the ball falls at a given instance in time (the elevation -aka potential energy- changes at a higher rate the faster the ball falls). The power rating of an electrical component is how many amps it draws at its peak rated voltage capability. P = deltaV*I where P is power, deltaV is voltage, and I is amperage aka current. An amp is the unit for current. Current (when dealing with electrical components) is the rate at which the electrons move through the component (I could have gone deeper down the rabbit hole explaining that an amp is the number of coulombs that move per second and that 1 coulomb equals the magnitude of charge of 1.6*10E19 electrons, but that would distract from the scope of the explanation).

 

Since you mentioned this on a tech website I assume you are referring to overvolting and TDP.

TDP is measured in watts because it refers to how much power the component eats when its operating as hot as it'll go under the worst expected cooling scenario. The reason the component gets hotter when it draws more power is because of the following relationship: Resistance = Voltage/Current. That equation means that as the voltage increases and the current has to increase to keep the resistance constant. Resistance in an electrical component generally won't change in any significant manner unless you heat the component up so much that it starts to kill itself, that's why I said the resistance stays constant. As current increases, more heat is generated by the object the current flows through. You know how when you slowly rub your hands together they don't get hot, but when you move your hand really fast together they get hotter? The way current produces heat is very similar to that. The less current there is, the less the electrons barrage the component they move through. The more current there is, the more the component is effected by the moving electrons. The component expresses this friction like event in the form of heat. This heat is energy that was wasted moving through the component rather than getting through and doing whatever it does to do work before getting to the other end of the system. I'm no expert on computer hardware, but somehow the concept I just described allows your computer components to work harder when you increase maximum power draw capabilities. The only way the components would be able to do this is if somehow the overall resistance dropped. I don't get it when you start going that deep into the operation of the hardware since increasing the max power draw is not overvolting, but power increases and P=V*I so the current has to increase and that forces either the voltage to raise (not overvolting here so this can't be the case) or the resistance has to drop... I have no idea how the resistance would drop.

If overvolting is as simple as it sounds, it is simply the card allowing a larger voltage through itself and therefore allows for more current (and therefore more electrons to do whatever it is they do to make your computer work).

 

Hopefully that helped because I spent way too long writing that.

Edited by ATFink
This is a long post

CPU: i7 4790k @ 4.7 GHz

GPU: XFX GTS RX580 4GB

Cooling: Corsair h100i

Mobo: Asus z97-A 

RAM: 4x8 GB 1600 MHz Corsair Vengence

PSU: Corsair HX850

Case: NZXT S340 Elite Tempered glass edition

Display: LG 29UM68-P

Keyboard: Roccat Ryos MK FX RGB

Mouse: Logitech g900 Chaos Spectrum

Headphones: Sennheiser HD6XX

OS: Windows 10 Home

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A brief history of Intel, Nvidia and AMD Processor and GPU architectures. 

Please quote our replys so we get a notification and can reply easily. Never cheap out on a PSU, or I will come to watch the fireworks. 

PSU Tier List

 

My specs

Spoiler

PC:

CPU: Intel Core i5-6600K @4.8GHz
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-U14S 
Motherboard:  ASUS Maximus VIII Hero 
GPU: Zotac AMP Extreme 1070 @ 2114Mhz
Memory: Corsair Vengeance LPX 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR4-2400 
Storage: Samsung 850 EVO-Series 500GB 
Storage: Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB
Case: Cooler Master MasterCase Pro 5 
Power Supply: EVGA 750W G2

 

Peripherals 

Keyboard: Corsair K70 LUX Browns
Mouse: Logitech G502 
Headphones: Kingston HyperX Cloud Revolver 

Monitor: U2713M @ 75Hz

 

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Using bookshelf speakers with a cheap amp like the lepy 2020 versus "computer speakers" versus "gaming speakers", sound quality? bass? gaming / gaming advantages?

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Multi phase electricity? I know it's not really tech related but it's not wayyy out there.

i5-6400, 8GB DDR4, GTX 960 (1070 coming soon)

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  • 2 weeks later...

Can you do a Tech Quickie video about Windows Storage Spaces? And maybe how well it compares to traditional RAID?

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Would you guys consider doing a techquickie on "Miracast". More about the standard, where it came from, how it works and if their was a battle between it and another standard that we never saw? 
ie. how does it work on pc and why did apple choose to go Apple Air instead?
What are some draw backs, risks or common issues?

Big thanks from us guys down in Australia

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