wizardofid
Honorary Master
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- Jul 25, 2007
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Nope bios, you can physically adjust core count in the bios and park e coresProcess Lasso?
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Nope bios, you can physically adjust core count in the bios and park e coresProcess Lasso?
Yeah that's why I said we need more optimisation not under developmentWell it isn't the entire story for the longest times software lagged behind hardware a bit, it has dramatically caught up with hardware and in some instances well ahead of hardware. Ray tracing is the perfect example, it isn't even true ray tracing, it is a hybrid system and software had to physically limit the amount rays because hardware can't held it. It is one of the reason, why I haven't jumped on the RT bandwagon, the performance sucks, AMD and nvidia made their bed on RT being a thing and being able to have hardware capable to run it well, backfired, now they are forced to focus on the slop that is AI, to compensate for the lack of progress on the hardware front.
RT is a dead end, shifting to dsll and FSR is just masking the real problem and we are paying for it now...
I like the idea of e-cores, as long as the software implementation around it is done properly.Nope bios, you can physically adjust core count in the bios and park e cores
Yeah personally don't care much for it other than running cool and it does.I like the idea of e-cores, as long as the software implementation around it is done properly.
SAPPHIRE Launches PhantomLink Series for a Seamless NITRO+ Ecosystem with Cable-Free Connectivity
Almost everything on matrix is overpriced.Matrix Warehouse PC budget build:
Estimated Total: R6,390
- CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 3400G Processor with integrated Vega graphics
- Motherboard: ASRock B450M-HDV R4.0
- Memory: 8GB DDR4 3200MHz
- Storage: 256GB SSD
- Case and PSU: ATX Case with built-in 450W power supply
Can this pricepoint be lowered?
8gb ram hardly runs windows 11 with chrome openMatrix Warehouse PC budget build:
Estimated Total: R6,390
- CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 3400G Processor with integrated Vega graphics
- Motherboard: ASRock B450M-HDV R4.0
- Memory: 8GB DDR4 3200MHz
- Storage: 256GB SSD
- Case and PSU: ATX Case with built-in 450W power supply
Can this pricepoint be lowered?
Dude.. May as well buy a house instead.32gb minimum
As a lifelong gamer, I spend a lot of time thinking about how to push gaming experiences forward across CPUs, GPUs, software, and games.
My team and I have been working hard to evolve AMD FSR 4 and bring it to more cards.
We power over 1 billion gaming devices worldwide. It’s a responsibility we care deeply about.
This July, RDNA 3 players will experience FSR Upscaling 4.1, delivering sharper visuals and smoother gameplay than ever before.
I’m grateful to our fans. Your enthusiasm and ideas inspire us to keep pushing gaming forward.FSR Upscaling 4.1 on RDNA 3 will be ready out of the box for Radeon 7000 Series players in over 300 supported games at launch.
And for our RDNA 2 players, we have something exciting coming in early 2027. FSR Upscaling 4.1 will be coming to your cards as well, bringing sharper visuals and smoother gameplay to even more gamers.
We cannot wait to show you what is next. Stay tuned

You don't need a 1300w power supply, 850w is way more then enough. Also the 4tb hdd would be deadly slow, unless it's for something you don't mind not accessing much.I'm in the process of building a new PC and I would like your opinion on the components I have selected.
Use case:
- Gaming (Three hours during the week and maybe 8 hours on weekends)
- 3D Rendering (Blender and other softwares)
- Video Editing (Da Vinci Resolve and Premier Pro)
- Hosting Virtual Machines for hobbyist for my homelab
- Software development here and there
I think those are the highest demanding tasks I will be running on the PC.
I would have loved to have at least 64GB RAM but I will see that later based on the demand and hopefully they will be cheaper by then.
View attachment 1909266
If you going video editing and rendering, nvidia is pretty much the gold standard GPU wise, blender especially, and cutting some corners here and there, you really should be pushing for 64gig ram, for your planned usage.I'm in the process of building a new PC and I would like your opinion on the components I have selected.
Use case:
- Gaming (Three hours during the week and maybe 8 hours on weekends)
- 3D Rendering (Blender and other softwares)
- Video Editing (Da Vinci Resolve and Premier Pro)
- Hosting Virtual Machines for hobbyist for my homelab
- Software development here and there
I think those are the highest demanding tasks I will be running on the PC.
I would have loved to have at least 64GB RAM but I will see that later based on the demand and hopefully they will be cheaper by then.
View attachment 1909266