- 12 Posts
- 9 Comments
bizudeBtoHardware@hardware.watch•Team Group launches T-Force Siren GD120S AIO SSD coolerEnglish1·2 years agoI’ll be testing this next month, but I don’t expect it to outperform NewHail’s NH1 copper heatpipe heatsink by any significant delta.
We’re gonna need PCI-e 6 SSDs to truly test this AIO.
bizudeBtoHardware@hardware.watch•Special Chinese Factories are Dismantling NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Graphics Cards and Turning Them into AI-Friendly GPU ShapeEnglish1·2 years agoIs it just me, or do those photos look AI generated? In particular the photo of the guy holding the card.
bizudeBtoHardware@hardware.watch•Thermalright intros AXP90-X53 Full Copper CPU coolerEnglish1·2 years agoWill it actually be available, or is this just a “show” product?
I’ve asked them for samples of their pure copper products before (I review cooling), and every time I’ve asked they stated they are out of stock.
bizudeBtoHardware@hardware.watch•1440p Raster meta review numbers, with expanded list of GPUs.English1·2 years agoWhat a meta review does is open up the test configurations and environments, broaden the number of tested games, reduce biases, and minimize errors because of the significantly larger data set. In my view, the meta review data is more reliable because of all these reasons.
This is usually correct, but sometimes reviewers as a whole screw things up. The X3D factorio benchmarks are a great example of that.
bizudeOPBtoHardware@hardware.watch•ATTO benchmark's all 0s I/O and its effect on benchmark results (PCPP)English1·2 years agoIt’s when you write all zeroes to a drive. Some folks do this to securely wipe a drive.
bizudeOPBtoHardware@hardware.watch•ATTO benchmark's all 0s I/O and its effect on benchmark results (PCPP)English1·2 years agoBenchmarking can be tricky sometimes, and unfortunately as shown above sometimes manufacturers implement tricks to show better than realistic performance.
Cooler Master’s Atmos and Lian Li’s GA II Trinity Performance are the best AIOs on the market right now.
You know you pay for that in your electric bill, right?
I’m sure the $1 a year it takes to power that screen will be bank account breaking
These sort of comments are not welcome on /r/hardware