If and when I figure out how to solve this "shitty L3 cache" issue on Skylake X, this AMD vs. Intel gap is gonna be even larger - as large as it was prior to Zen.
I'm interested in the actual pricing of the 7980XE and whether Intel decides to stop being a douche and solder them.
My guess is that it's gonna be more than the $2000 stated because it seems everybody fucking wants it and there will be very little supply in comparison to the 12/14/16-core parts due to yields.
So you'll end up in a situation worse than it is right now for the 6/8/10-core Skylake X's where it's all sold out and you can only buy it at a mark up from scalpers.
Skylake X has launched almost exactly 1 month ago. And they still can't stay in stock for more than a few hours at a time.
I rebuilt my 5960X rig in a new case with a new cooler and an NVMe SSD. Gonna switch to it as my main machine in a few days. No LEDs at all, but has a window. And it looks really nice.
But if I try to force any lights into it, it looks tacky.
OTOH, my Skylake X build is RGB'ed from top to bottom with glass windows and looks really nice.
So if I do end up doing an 18-core upgrade later this year (or an entirely new build), I'll need to pick either no lights at all, or RGB everything. The problem with RGB is that there are no high-powered RGB fans to put on my radiators.
I don't recommend that people, especially curious non-scientists, use sci-hub to quickly and easily access almost a… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/890650809595121665
The 5960X is also the biggest chip I have that's soldered. So I can push the thermals to see what that cooler is capable of.
I already dropped 5 - 10C over my H110 with this rebuild on the exact same overclock.
Though part of that was probably because I redid the thermal paste. I think I had a bit too much before. And it was like that since 2014 when I first built it.
@MarkGarcia One thing about that is the cover on the bottom seems to be one piece. So if you put in a 360 rad, you need to remove the entire cover.
On the 400C and 460X, there's a gap that will fit a rad + fan. And if you want to do push-pull on the bottom, you only need to kick out the HD cage and shroud. The PSU shroud can stay.
My Skylake X build is the 460X RGB. I liked it so much that I went with the 400C (the non-tempered glass version) for this 5960X rebuild.
@MarkGarcia Different trade-offs for mounting the rads as exhaust vs. intake.
But based on the videos I've seen as well as basic physics, given that CPUs run the hottest and the most likely to overheat, it's better to mount them as intake.
Give them fresh cold air. Fuck the rest of the shit in the case.
Since I like small cases, it's basically impossible to find a case that can mount a rad on the top unless it's really tall. So the front is the best. Nobody needs drive bays anymore.
Also, putting the rad in the front means you move half the point of AIO failures away from the expensive parts of the build.
When AIOs leak (which is incredibly rare), they almost always leak at the tube connections.
Under what circumstances can I expect my C++ program to use denormalized numbers? Are they enabled by "default"? Where default means like, if I take a random Linux machine x86 that there is a very high chance, that they are enabled...
I want to write txt by using 'echo' command on prompt, but ' character is problem. Has anyone done this? ex:) echo 'http://localhost:8080/yahoo.log' >> result.txt
@jaggedSpire Assuming Mike is Mike Morhaime then he's still there (he's president of the company), and assuming Frank is Frank Pearce, well he's in the mini series of videos so I would assume he still works there.
I don't care too much about the bandwidth of my boot drive. As long as the latency is down, I'm happy. It's not like I'm constantly copying files back-and-forth. If I need to do that (and I do for certain things), then I fire up a ram drive.
Ram drives also the have the advantage of not eating the life of the SSD.
aye, I'm about to do exactly that for performance metrics, i've got to generate profiles for multiple apps, all of them read from the disk... I want to eliminate that from the test in a lot of ways
especially because they are the same input/problem/answer, but the formats are different for each one
I find the ram drive useful for making snapshots of my source code. I just copy the entire directory (about 10 - 20GB including all the object files and binaries) into the ram drive. Then I run a script which removes all the build artifacts. Then I compress and archive.
If I run the clean up script on the main copy, I'll need to rebuild everything and that takes like an hour.
Being able to copy 20GB of stuff in 10 seconds as opposed to 1 minute is primarily why I chose NVMe over SATA3. The other reason being that my M.2 slot only supports NVMe and not SATA.
if I was building a machine either for myself / or my company... I wouldn't run any computer anymore without an independent ups
small price to pay to stabilize and clean your input power source
the powersupply coming out of the wall.. is dirtier... and not as clean as you would think
I actually had a problem with some kind of weird em field discharging consistantly (think it was the compressor in the fridge) that would knock the power out on the monitors
we used to use this tool at work, that would generate a charge to discharge... as if it was a rubber conveyer belt that builds up charge ... and discharges it into the PC/ Scanner / chip reader etc
@roscoe_casita Thing is, most are pretty much a switching power supply, so the "sine wave" is really a stepped square wave. A few expensive ones include filtering to clean that up, but most don't.
@roscoe_casita Yeah, it's fundamentally silly and quite wasteful that we convert 12 VDC to AC to transmit to the computer, then immediately convert that back down to 12 and 5 VDC again--with power supply losses on both conversions. A friend of mine once helped design and build a UPS that sat inside the machine and supplied DC directly instead. Worked well, but wasn't very successful commercially.
@milleniumbug Actually, I take that back. When I travel, I do everything off a ram drive on my laptop. And I save encrypted to disk. Sometimes I don't even save at all and I sleep the computer. So if someone steals laptop, the act of shutting it down to take out the hard drive will destroy everything.
Getting a pointer from a different process over shared memory and reinterpret casting it into a different type and then reading from it. That's got more UB than words in this sentence.
@Mysticial Yep, I guess any alternative is doing it wrong, like constant allocating/De-allocating that space. Looks like the unique thing in your setup is the use of a lockless queue as opposed to one with locks?