Haha. This is cool:
http://store.steampowered.com/app/62...ing_Simulator/
Printable View
Haha. This is cool:
http://store.steampowered.com/app/62...ing_Simulator/
I got a 1080 about 5-6 months ago....I was tempted to get a ti, but that was just silly.
That's only a few % improvement for many hundreds of $.
But it would go well with the i7.
Though if you had that combo, you'd be small-dickin it without an M.2 drive and RGB lighting and DDR5 and custom hardline water cooling.
Thought about an M.2 drive.
Fuck RGB lighting - I've got all lights off on mine
and
Fuck DDR5
and
Fuck custom hardline water cooling.
The only "problem" I have now, is having an i7 4790k, 32GB of DDR3 RAM, and nothing to do with it. Suppose there's craiglist. Maybe I can get a handy out of the trade.
Do you also have a surplus of crab meat in your fridge and a miniature train set?
Real crab meat and Lego. Close enough.
There’s news around the campfire that states that Intel will release its own line of GPUs in 2020. Now, I thought that Intel bought into nVidia right around the time when AMD bought out ATI, thus creating a mighty fine CPU-GPU duopoly. Seems that’s not the case and Intel wants to go play in the sandpit.
Intel has been cruising a bit in the last few years, while AMD’s professor line has not really given Intel a reason to try harder, and with Ryzen on the market, all Intel has to do is release a new processor generation with just a bit more speed at a more competitive price and they’re magically on top again. It seems like they’ve got a lot in reserve for the moment in the CPU market, so where will this lead in terms of GPU development?
I’m thinking that they will come out swinging in the workstation GPU segment, and follow soon after with a decent range of gaming GPUs, but nVidia will quickly respond and lead us into a nice arms race for the next five years. We will have an affordable GTX1380 by then. Hopefully. Let’s see, huh?
I imagine cryptomining has something to do with this. Gaming PCs are no longer driving that segment.