- Joined
- Jan 18, 2017
I misquoted, I meant to reference @The Mass Shooter Ron Soye but totally fucked it up. Many aporogies.What is the supposed relation?
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I misquoted, I meant to reference @The Mass Shooter Ron Soye but totally fucked it up. Many aporogies.What is the supposed relation?
The sink works well for a lot of things, then I let it dry out in the sun.What tools do you guys use for deep cleaning a pc? So far, I have this list:
- Vacuum (XPOWER A-2Pro vacuum)
- 99% isopropyl alcohol (for GPU)
- Honeywell PTM7950 (for GPU)
- Thermal Grizzly Graphene Pads (for CPU)
- velcro (for wire management)
So far I'm thinking, what else is needed for a deep clean? And for the GPU memory thermal pads, which ones would you guys suggest?
Well, it probbably won't hurt to try one more time. Will install the RAM again and just play the waiting game
Bear in mind you need to heat-cycle PTM7950 several times before it will perform to spec.I ordered some Honeywell PTM7950, I'll run some before and after tests and post results here when the time comes. If anyone has some benches they would care to see, let me know. I'm currently using Arctic MX-6 on an AMD 7945HX3D.
I mgiht try that as a last resort. My BIOS was never updated (drivers are from 2022 according to MSINFO). Would I just need the latest one from 2025?Before you send those memory sticks back, last thing you can probably try is updating the BIOS (unless you are uncomfortable with that). MSI's website claims a BIOS update (from back in 2022) has "Fine-tuned memory compatibility". 24GB and 48GB modules seem to be a new non standard capacity, so that's my best bet on the issue.
Just download the newest stable release. I can back up what the guy you quoted was saying, 12/24/48 GB modules were not widely supported on release and sometimes needed a BIOS update. Hopefully that's all you need and the RAM works flawlessly after that.I mgiht try that as a last resort. My BIOS was never updated (drivers are from 2022 according to MSINFO). Would I just need the latest one from 2025?
So in the end it turned out to be the nephew of the famous GPU repair guy.
tl;dr his sister married an army alcoholic, they have kids and drives her to catatonic state, then hangs himself. Kid from that marriage is okay until he grows up to try weed, falls in with the wrong crowd, becomes a satanic hippie, kills mom
https://youtube.com/watch?v=HSTWmQMkZEw
YTDown.com_YouTube_AMD-chiplet-GPU-7900-XTX-starting-to-fai_Media_HSTWmQMkZEw_004_360p.mp4
Might be good mainly because of the memory (is it single-channel? lol). There are cheaper UFFs and other boxes with the same quad-core Tiger Lake on ebay for less, but usually 8-16 GB RAM. I've seen this form factor before, but never used it, and don't know how well it's going to work without the monitor it was made for. Can you do display out over the USB-C port (that is also for power) or do you need to dock it to the Dell monitor stand? So anyone interested in it better research the thing some more before buying it.Here an interesting deal from Dell Refurb, a funky ultraslim form factor that fits in a type of Dell monitor stand.
CPU - 1x Intel Core i5-1145G7 (4-Core, 2.60 GHz)
Memory - 32 GB (1x 32GB)
HDD - 256 GB (1x 256 GB SSD)
$230
Admittedly I'm speaking out my ass on this but I believe the meta is to use lm when using the original heat spreader, an upgraded heat spreader, or a direct die block. When it comes to an aio, fan cooler, or standard gpu shroud; ptm or duronaout is recommended. I mean, you can use lm on those coolers/parts of the cooler but the risk of lm spilling out or causing damage to the cooler is greater.If you’re already going to the extreme length of delidding for direct die cooling, why wouldn’t you do liquid metal? Unless it actually performs better, but I don’t think I’ve ever seen any data for that.
Looks a bit like a laptop after you've removed all the unnecessary parts. If that Dell only needed USB-C(maybe the power adapter as well) to function it would be pretty neat.I've seen this form factor before
It looks like a digital signage PC, but with less ports, which isn't a good thing even if single cable operation could be neat.Looks a bit like a laptop after you've removed all the unnecessary parts. If that Dell only needed USB-C(maybe the power adapter as well) to function it would be pretty neat.
The sub-$500 entry-level PC segment will disappear by 2028.
- Ranjit Atwal, Sr Director Analyst at Gartner
I hate to break it to you but that was dead everywhere except America. Unless you where planning on buying a facebook marketplace special, there was no way in hell you could build anything half decent for under 500.then maybe the sub-$500 PC is "dead"
The Gartner press release doesn't specify a country, or how decent the computer is, just declares sub-$500 entry-level dead by 2028:I hate to break it to you but that was dead everywhere except America. Unless you where planning on buying a facebook marketplace special, there was no way in hell you could build anything half decent for under 500.
After actually reading it, I see they address the "AI PC" penetration.PC memory costs are expected to peak at 23% of the total bill-of-materials (BOM) up from 16% in 2025. “This sharp increase removes vendors’ ability to absorb costs, making low-margin entry-level laptops nonviable. Ultimately, we expect the sub-$500 entry-level PC segment will disappear by 2028,” said Atwal. “In addition, rising AI PC prices will delay the projected 50% market penetration of AI PCs until 2028.”
For nerds to put in their 3d-printed racks and jerk off to 5 px/s locally generated images.What was that NPU for again?