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Fluxmaven

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Everything posted by Fluxmaven

  1. Since it seems like a lot of these responses will be peripherals, I guess I'll toss in my original Logitech Trackman Marble from 95ish. I admittedly don't use it daily anymore, but I did semi recently and still like to pull it out from time to time. The Clueboard has also been in the collection for a while, and is coincidentally the board I'm currently using in my work keyboard rotation.
  2. It definitely helps out. I heat most of the 2nd floor with folding in the winter
  3. Finally some SSDs that are big enough for my "homework" folder
  4. Since you like Fractal cases, the Define 7 in storage mode holds up to 14 3.5" + 4 2.5" drives. The XL version bumps that to 18 3.5 + 5 2.5" drives. (you do need to buy extra drive trays to max out capacity) I have a regular Define 7 with 8 drives currently. Fits big coolers as well. My Thermalright True Spirit 140 Power fits with room to spare.
  5. It's a shame AMD doesn't undercut them and gain some market share. At least they have been less stingy with the VRAM. It's just that most people don't want to wait for the drivers to fine wine into something usable. They also suck for VR and F@H PPD is laughable. 7XXX series is barely better than last gen, whereas the 4XXX series Nvidia stuff has massive gains over last gen. I need to pull my A770 out and see how it's doing on the latest drivers. Obviously it's been like paying to be a beta tester, but every time I put it on the bench it's been faster. We've got a way to go before I'd call Intel a real competitor in the GPU space, but it's nice to have a glimmer of hope for a viable 3rd choice in the market.
  6. Nvidia thought what if we make our top end card the only one that really makes sense. Then just price the whole rest of the lineup so bad that people find ways to justify buying a X090. When 3XXX series was coming out everyone freaked out "2080ti performance for $500" with the 3070. We were coming off of a different wave of mining boom so 2080ti's were still selling for MSRP all the way up till just before 3XXX launch. People were just excited to finally get a real upgrade. 2XXX series introduced a lot of cool new technologies but it took a couple years for ray tracing and DLSS to actually be implemented or optimized well enough to actually use those features. Yet that generation came with a price hike over the 1XXX series. Not getting the 20gb 3080 felt like a real scam. Regressing from 11gb with the 1080ti or 2080ti for the 10GB 3080 didn't feel right. Shelling out for a 3090 didn't feel right. The 12GB 3080 was too little, too late to mend our broken hearts. If Nvidia could just stop jerking us around on VRAM and pricing
  7. The whole 4000 series has been a bit of a mess from the very beginning. When 4000 series was first on the horizon people were scared when the rumors of 600w cards came out. They were thinking it was going to be Fermi all over again. As it turned out, the 4000 series is actually very power efficient. People all cry about the memory bus and how cut down the card is, but for the average Joe buying a midrange card that just wants to game the 4060ti is fine. It performs in line with previous gen "70" cards at much lower power draw. What's not fine is that it's priced more like an upper midrange card. The whole product stack just seems off. If the 4060ti was priced at $300 for 8GB, $350 for 16GB, it would be a lot more palatable. Budget gamers aren't trying to do 4K 120. They understand that getting a lower end card means that they may need to tune settings to hit their FPS goals. However, when you drop $500+ you expect to be able to just crank everything up and not worry about it. If the naming and pricing was closer to this, I think it would be more in line with peoples expectations. 4090 = $1200 4080 = $800 4070ti -> 4070 = $500 4070 -> 4060ti = $400 4060ti -> 4060 =$300/350 4060 -> 4050 = $250
  8. As much as I'm not interested in a mouse like that, the review is great and told me everything I needed to know. I appreciate including the firmware update frustrations. It's nice to see an unbiased look at how the product performs. The tilt function is cool, but not new. Logitech has had that in several mice for a while. At least it has a cool name
  9. Don't you have a 4090? I thought you'd be way ahead since I was mostly just running the 4070ti. I did notice you finally running me down. Fired up the 3x 3090s for the last 4 hours of the comp to stay ahead
  10. Whoop forgot the foldathon was coming up... I already promised the boys I'd work on Team Cup this weekend. Still in with the 4070ti, but probably wont have any of the 3090s online if I want any hope of benching in the office without dying of heatstroke
  11. The ole AMD fine wine approach making it's way over from the GPU side of things I'll make the switch and see what I can squeeze out of my RAM once some non-beta BIOS with the new AGESA roll out.
  12. Having a Microcenter nearby is awesome. On top of a lot of their stuff already being competitively priced, they do huge markdowns on open box stuff. Typically their open box stuff is cheaper than used components and still have a full manufactures warranty. I've also built/upgraded/repaired PCs on the side as a hobby off and on over the past 15 years. Don't really bother with it anymore. To make it an actual career you'd need to sell a ton of PCs to replace a full time job with benefits. I think it actually gets harder moving into all new component builds as your profit margins get slimmer to keep the overall price competitive. You need to undercut established names in the prebuilt or custom space. Why would someone drop $1500 on a random Etsy store when they can buy a system with a warranty from a brand they have heard of? Not trying to dissuade you from pursuing this, just saying that it will be an uphill battle to make a living doing it.
  13. My first Crucial SSD was also an M4. Put this in my 2011 Macbook Pro that I had in college along with doubling the RAM capacity beyond what was "officially" supported I would probably still have it if I hadn't given it to a friend that was building on a tight budget about 5years later. Also agree, great job on the review. I still don't think most normal people should bother with gen5 yet, but on an HEDT platform with more lanes to pay with these would be sick for a blazing fast editing setup.
  14. Time to rice that thing out with a loud exhaust to scare off all the wildlife and Karens that keep jumping out in front of you
  15. Maybe a bit of bias considering I have two AM5 setups, but I think you made a pretty solid decision going AMD this round. The only reason I would consider balling out on an intel platform is if I actually cared about HWBOT The 13900KS with an Apex or a Dark is the way to go if you want to do serious overclocking. For a mixed workload the 7950X3D should be a pretty solid option for you. I agree with some of the other comments, the 7900X3D doesn't make much sense due to the nature of how it parks cores. It's literally the only part in the lineup that I can't see any justification for buying. As far as motherboards go, I've already mentioned in this thread that despite the Asus hate train, I am running them for both my AM5 setups. The Crosshair Gene was just because I really liked the look of the board . The ITX board I intended to go MSI, but my local Microcenter mostly stocks Asus, Asrock and Gigabyte. I still have the 5900X in an MSI X570 Ace. I've had that board since they first launched when I ran it with a 3900X. Aside from early bios slow boot times, it's been absolutely rock solid. I've even spilled coolant on it (thankfully powered off at the time) and it's still going strong.
  16. The 13700k and 14700k are the same base clock and the single thread scores in that leak are very similar. I just meant they will probably sprinkle 100Mhz on the higher SKUs and act like it's amazing. Also, I would never hold my breath on Intel actually working on IPC gains instead of just giving it more juice to feed the extra cores.
  17. I feel like for a refresh that's likely just sprinkling in a few extra cores here, or a 100Mhz there, it wouldn't justify a name change... Just call it the 13750K, 13950K etc. I'm willing to be blown away though... If the 14600K is a total beast without adding a bunch of power draw, I might pick one up for my z790 setup. Although if I did that, I'd end up giving my little sister the delidded 12600K.
  18. Yea I like having higher core count just to be able to multitask better. I have a ton of * running at any given time on my main rig and it just plows right through it. Obviously if you ONLY use a PC for gaming you can "trim the fat" and pare down to just the essentials and get a better bang for the buck with a CPU like this. That said, it's a Microcenter exclusive which means its really only a viable option for a small percentage of the population. Also Microcenter has crazy combo deals pretty regularly and often huge discounts for open box stuff... So a budget conscious gamer that is lucky enough to be near one, may very well be swayed by other deals that MC has to offer.
  19. I mean if your bored and depressed anyway, what's it hurt to try? I was thinking you were trying to land a decent paying job in IT. If you just want to work remote answering support tickets for a PC component manufacture, you don't need hardly any experience for that. Hell Corsair has just the job you're looking for right now https://edix.fa.us2.oraclecloud.com/hcmUI/CandidateExperience/en/sites/CX_1/job/7324/?utm_medium=jobshare Starting Pay: $15-16/hour which sucks, but it's better than sitting around being bored.
  20. Yea even if the only hardware you have is covered by someone else, I'd still run it. Because subs WILL get thrown out. I think the unofficial HWBOT motto is "if you can't beat them, report them".
  21. Mine will probably be going up soon... I just remembered to pay the speeding ticket I got recently. First one in probably 5+ years... Considering how I typically drive is honestly amazing.
  22. Gonna be brutally honest, I really doubt you're going to walk right into a decent position with one random cert and zero relevant job experience. Most likely would need to start at some BS bottom tier support position (think call center "have you tried turning it off and on"). At least for a year or two to build up some work experience. I worked in IT from 09 through 21. Started with zero certs and my Bachelors isn't in a related field. Was always quizzed in interviews and clearly just knowing what you are talking about holds a fair amount of weight. Having great references helps as well. I'm not saying people don't value certs, some companies get a real hard on for them (and will pay you to get them once you're on board). That said, any desirable position will get hundreds of applicants and they aren't even going to bother interviewing anything but the top candidates. I think bettering yourself and getting back into the workforce sounds like a great idea, but just be prepared to struggle a bit to get your foot in the door somewhere. Or be ready to take on a lower paying super entry level gig for a while.
  23. Fluxmaven

    RyzenRouter

    I considered building something like this when I did the last network refresh, but I knew I wouldn't spend the time to get it right and implemented so I went the easy route and just dropped in a UDM Pro. Build came out nice though. It's cool that you were able to stuff the PiKVM into the chassis.
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