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Zkuq said:

Dunno if anyone cares, but Cities: Skylines II is free to play for the weekend: https://store.steampowered.com/app/949230/Cities_Skylines_II/ If you do try it, do know that some of the default settings are poorly optimized and it runs much better if you google which settings to lower. Otherwise the game's been improved a lot since its release, but it still has some rough edges for sure.

JEMC said:

I forgot to add in the news that tomorrow is festive over here and there'll be no news. A tragedy, I know, but I'm sure you'll manage until Monday.

Oh, Spain too? Nice! We have our Independency Day here in Finland on Dec 6, not that it's a very interesting day in practice. But a day off is always nice!

Nice. We celebrate the date our current democratic contitution became law, after 40 years of dictatorship. So, while we both celebrate different things, we both celebrate freedom.

And thanks for sharing the free weekend for Cities Skylines 2.

Bofferbrauer2 said:

One question to you guys:

My secondary SSD in my laptop is dying. Well, maybe not dying, but slowing down to the point of blocking the entire PC, even things that are only on the system drive get affected by the slowdown. And with slowing down, I mean, without any exaggeration, Floppy Disc speeds, where it gets pings of over a couple seconds for chunks of data that are less than 100kB in size.

I bought a new one to replace it (2TB WD Black SN770, which I got for 114€ on Cyber Monday), but my question is: Should I simply take out the old one and replace it with the new one or should I try and delete everything from the old drive first (or even reformat it) before exchanging the drives? So far in 30 years, this is the first time a secondary storage drive died on me, so I'm not quite sure how to proceed on this one.

If you're worried about someone else accessing the data in it, you can always break it once replaced. SSDs are easier to break than the old HDDs.



Please excuse my bad English.

Currently gaming on a PC with an i5-4670k@stock (for now), 16Gb RAM 1600 MHz and a GTX 1070

Steam / Live / NNID : jonxiquet    Add me if you want, but I'm a single player gamer.

Around the Network

Intel Foundry Fails To Impress Once Again, 18A Process “Yield Rates’ Are Reported To Be Only 10% Making Mass-Production Impossible

https://wccftech.com/intel-foundry-fails-to-impress-once-again-18a-process-yield-rates-poor/

ASUS unveils ROG Strix XG32UCG 4K 160Hz & FHD 320Hz Dual-Mode gaming monitor and 6K ProArt panel

https://videocardz.com/newz/asus-unveils-rog-strix-xg32ucg-4k-160hz-fhd-320hz-dual-mode-gaming-monitor-and-6k-proart-panel

ASUS teases PG27UCDM, the world’s first 27-inch 4K OLED

https://videocardz.com/pixel/asus-teases-pg27ucdm-the-worlds-first-27-inch-4k-oled



                  

PC Specs: CPU: 7800X3D || GPU: Strix 4090 || RAM: 32GB DDR5 6000 || Main SSD: WD 2TB SN850

The ASUS pic explaining their monitor names took me out. LMAO



Most embarrassing for nVidia

Apparently, all cards with less than 12GB are struggling.



HoloDust said:

Most embarrassing for nVidia

Apparently, all cards with less than 12GB are struggling.

That's... really bad for a game that supposedly uses ray-tracing at all settings levels. Nvidia should excel at that, but I guess the lack of VRAM is really starting to hurt.



Around the Network
HoloDust said:

Most embarrassing for nVidia

Apparently, all cards with less than 12GB are struggling.

Embarrassing? No. The desired outcome? Yes. People will just run out an replace their underperforming Nvidia cards that lack VRAM with new Nvidia cards that barely have enough VRAM. This reminds me of the HUB follow up video on the RX 6800 and RTX 3070. Similar to this graph, the 6800 had pulled ahead of the 3070 in raytracing due to lack of VRAM. The 6800 has 16GB and the 3070 only had 8GB.



Impressive.
There is a market for this kind of card, but no one seems to pay attention to it.



HoloDust said:

Most embarrassing for nVidia

Apparently, all cards with less than 12GB are struggling.

"Struggling" by choosing the highest texture pool, even if its benefits are negligible.

I'm not a fan of these fixed texture pools (the Resident Evi games use them, too). They take away the VRAM, even if the pools are mostly empty. If they would also offer a 30-GB-texture pool, RTX 4090 and 7900XTX would struggle, too.

Most games run fine with a low texture pool, even while using the higest textures.

PCGH tested with a low texture pool, also 2560x1440 and hyper settings:

Last edited by Conina - on 06 December 2024

Hiku said:

Impressive.
There is a market for this kind of card, but no one seems to pay attention to it.

China is a wild place when it comes to PC hardware.



Please excuse my bad English.

Currently gaming on a PC with an i5-4670k@stock (for now), 16Gb RAM 1600 MHz and a GTX 1070

Steam / Live / NNID : jonxiquet    Add me if you want, but I'm a single player gamer.

Hiku said:

Impressive.
There is a market for this kind of card, but no one seems to pay attention to it.

There is a huge market for that kind of card... One that AMD and nVidia have ignored for years.

That's the HTPC market... But I guess the HTPC market has sort of shrunk over the years as everyone embraces stupid, horrible sound bars+internet streaming over a true surround sound solution using high quality UHD blu-rays. /rage

Go back to the recent year of 2010 I had an Intel Atom D550+2GB DDR3+256GB SSD. - Due to that motherboards PCI slot (Note: Note PCI-E) I dropped in a half-height, single slot, passively cooled Radeon 4350 512MB card. PCI. It actually performed alright, until it needed to stream anything from system memory.
http://www.hisdigital.com/un/product2-561.shtml

It was fine for video decode/encode and even light gaming. Overclocked like a champ as well, my other option was a Broadcom Crystal HD chip to handle that task, which my convertible netbook with an Atom processor had at the time.

Actually still got that PC, it's what I used to make my own pixel shaders to optimize Oblivion/Fallout/Bioshock to get maximum performance out of the system.

Over time I have cycled the hardware, upgraded, replaced, refined... But since the Geforce 1030 came out, that part of the system stayed the same... Because there is simply nothing really better in the half height, passively cooled, single slot market.

I can't even buy heatsinks for GPU's anymore to convert GPU's to passive like I used to with the Radeon HD 6670 which had half height designs.

I feel there is far less options in the low-end space... Even less options for us who like to modify their GPU's.

******

The other big market is actually the entry level market.

The CHEAPEST way to get into PC gaming is actually buying an old outdated Dell/HP/Lenovo workstation PC.
I.E. You can get a cheap Intel i5 10500 PC with 16GB of Ram for about $400 AUD or a i5 9500 for about $250 AUD... But they also tend to be Slim PC cases which will only accept a PCI-E half height card... And that is what really limits you.

I think the fastest Half Height card is the 4060 non-Ti with 8GB VRAM... But it's double slot and actively cooled.
But the market is flooded with Geforce 710's, 1030's and 3050's which are trash IMHO.

GPU market needs a correction, which isn't happening while nVidia's market cap stays ballooned and they continue to peddle to A.I.

Sorry. This was much more a ramble/tangent than I originally anticipated, I just hate the GPU market right now... Regardless of market segment. (High end over priced or non-existent low-end.)



--::{PC Gaming Master Race}::--