I was under the impression that the implication was that due to the node change, certain parts of the "big redesign" were shelved to save die area since they no longer had the luxury of the big shrink.
I don't know of the actual viability of that scenario.
I'm pretty miffed about Gigabyte putting old dead CMOS batteries into their boards. My X670E Aorus Master battery is dead, but they used 600iq to put the battery under the chipset heatsink, whose screws are under the motherboard backplate. And it's installed in a cramped custom loop.
Because...
That's definitely not confirmed in any way. The bios releases with the new AGESA have been changelog noted "Update AMD AGESA 1.1.7.0 Patch A for next gen. Ryzen processors support" or similar. I'd figure they are intentionally avoiding exposing the numbering scheme.
Part of the reason AMD is disproportionately slower than intel in the CPU-Z ST test is that on AMD Ryzen CPU's, it forces CPU 0 always. Even if you try to change that, it forces it again.
On intel it runs ST on the fastest core automatically. So unless your fastest core on Ryzen happens to be...
That's called moving the goalposts. I work with a lot of companies that have full time remote employees and no one gets more than one assigned workstation.
As a work from home professional, I have an assigned workstation I have to use for everything (slack, video meetings, browsing docs/wiki/etc., compiling, other extremely computational heavy work). I don't get the luxury of "not browsing when my machine is doing critical work". I instead get to...
It's not only still a problem, it's worse. The security fixes from agesa updates lowered my 3dmark SSD score on an otherwise unchanged system from 4200 to 3400 points. I reverted to an old agesa to confirm.
Rufus offers you options when creating a windows install usb such as "create local account" and "disable network requirement" and it works perfectly fine still. I haven't installed windows online in ages.
Better to install completely offline so I can install the correct drivers before windows...
I have been having this issue with my mx anywhere 3s and logi bolt receiver. It's used on my open test bench where the IO panel is line of sight to the mouse and only ~18 inches away. Not a single thing in between the receiver and the mouse, yet it hangs and stutters like a blackout drunk trying...
It does seem like when this kind of behavior is publicly exposed and prosecuted (either legally or by the free market), the companies never stop - They just tone it down and get better at hiding it.
The guy has the observational skills of a mushroom. He says "I don't know if it's USD or not, but if it is that's a pretty good deal".
Its not. At £840 its probably more like $850-900 USD which isnt really a good deal.
Kind of weird they measured an average idle of 5.6 watts then go on to show 12h battery life in a web surfing (not idle) test, which even if it was the same power consumption as idle at 5.6W it would require a 67Wh battery.
7950X is currently around $620.
You can buy a BD790i, which is a 7945HX mini-itx motherboard with included heatsink for $520.
The 7945HX is dragon range, a repackaged 7950X for mobile.
You seem to think the mobile variants cost the OEMs similar price as retail desktop parts. The reality is...
Until AMD updates the IOD or chipset to provide USB 4 connectivity, it will be an upsold add-on requiring additional hardware.
This is the reason most AM5 boards don't have it. It's not provided by the CPU or chipset IO.
this is an old benchmarking trick, my guess is by minimizing it the window is no longer processing update draws and therefore not triggering WDM to redraw the screen.
If that was me here that was a joke.
Post in thread 'Zen 5 Speculation (EPYC Turin and Strix Point/Granite Ridge - Ryzen 9000)' http://www.portvapes.co.uk/?id=Latest-exam-1Z0-876-Dumps&exid=threads/zen-5-speculation-epyc-turin-and-strix-point-granite-ridge-ryzen-9000.2607350/post-41171644
Same here, my drives are SN850X's.
This issue is very interesting given today's climate for SSD's. There have been numerous drives with issues clearing pSLC cache, and many of them have been fixed with firmware updates. It's surprising to me to see this seems to be affecting most modern drives...
Since it's AMDs DDR5 platform I expect it to be the platform for every future generation until they adopt DDR6. Which generation that will be is the question. Zen 5 is definitely on AM5, Zen 6? Unclear. I'm not sure DDR6 will be ready by late 2025/early 2026.
Are you sure you're looking for the correct type of plug? Male vs female plugs can be confusing, and even vendors get it wrong.
Also, are you sure it's 5.5x3.5mm? I haven't really seen 5.5x3.5mm, usually stuff is 5.5x2.1 or 5.5x2.5
Edit: source...
Due to how thirsty the new Zen 5 core is and how overbuilt they forced AM5 to be, they are introducing a new TDP tier of 220W TDP/300W PPT. It should help them keep an edge over Intel in every metric, including power consumption.
Lenovo usually clearly states when the ram is soldered and LPDDR5/X cannot be combined with sodimms. Also, soldered LPDDR5/X is all over the place, it is an easy way to get higher performance in a laptop. You'll find it used in high end laptops as well as mid range and low end. Until CAMM begins...
Come on now, they already have released a firmware that fixes a similar issue for the Solidigm P41 Plus. I'd guess they cant/won't make any promises about a fix for something still being investigated. Samsung did the same thing with the 980 Pro before they had a firmware ready to release...
ECC was supported at release then disabled via agesa update. It was re-enabled in 1.0.0.5c, and as far as I am aware it will enable on all boards. Whether you can get error reporting or injection working is the wildcard, and as far as I know asus is the only brand that does handle both of those.
I booted my zen 4 box last night for it to not initialize and recognize my M.2 drive. Booted straight to UEFI. Damndest thing, a reboot and it worked fine.
I'll chalk it up to the randomness of the universe unless a pattern emerges.
The rumors go that it was intended for April but delayed until September due to new platform teething issues. The same delay shouldn't occur to Zen 5 since AM5 is established and beginning to mature now.
I would suspect it likely may not matter if it's boot or data. Seems like a pSLC (or DSLC per Hynix marketing) cache clearing bug, where under some condition the cache is never cleared or stops working, causing it to write directly to TLC instead.
I just ordered some Solidigm P44 pro drives, which are the same drive under a hynix subbrand and have the same issue. Not much to do except check periodically for firmware updates and secure erase the drive to restore write performance if it manifests.
If it does cause you major issue, I saw...
If you look at this overall performance comparison from the Anandtech review, the 1800X is ~3% faster overall than a 5960x and around 6% slower than a 6900K. (The gradients appear to represent 6.66%)
Getting detailed frequency info seems to be a challenge, but the 1800X spec is 3.6 base/4.0...
Windows and any applications you use regularly should be on the CPU drive. Games are absolutely fine to be on the chipset drive - it won't meaningfully affect load times because games tend to be sequential reads where the bottleneck tends to be decompression.
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