I found a bunch of reviews celebrating the air in the side out the top design which seems a shame. The radeon pro line will be out of budget I expect.
Use case is numerical modelling. A bit niche I suppose, maybe crossfire/sli isn't a thing these days.
Maybe bite the bullet and watercool it...
The faster 6000 cards are 2.5 or 3 slots wide. If we ignore those and only look at 2 slot it looks like the 6800 is an option.
I'd like two of them, installed right next to each other, without one overheating. So air in from the end and out the back.
Are there any models that will work in that...
Great context on the drop in popularity of tygon there, thanks!
Distilled water w/ copper/nickel/brass/steel and some silver wire worked ok for a few years, never got around to working out which anti-corrosion additive would stay in solutionand not attack the tubing or O rings. It may have...
Working out how to at present. I like the look of the aqua computer controllers. Controller, pump, fans and some sort of power supply outside the case, all based off water temperature. Currently stuck on powering it without adding a whole ATX PSU.
My recollection with compression fittings is that the tube twists as you tighten them down. That makes it difficult to get the fittings screwed in to the right torque without leaving twist in the tubing that tries to unscrew the fitting as it warms up. That seems inherent to compression...
Aside from the hard plastic movement which looks far more bother than I can deal with.
I was thinking barbs + tygon + jubilee clamps. Used to use black tygon and compression fittings but the latter are a bit of a pain to attach. Mostly interested in flexible + resistant to kinks, will be...
Ah, that's convincing. Cool, thanks!
edit: turns out to not matter. The spec sheet claims 0.5A of 5V, i.e. 2.5W. The search term "12V to 5V converter" finds loads of things that can be attached to a molex to run the controller off 12V. It doesn't have to be built in.
Anyone know if the 5V molex input is used? Trying to find out if I can run one of these off 12V alone.
Edit: Also, any problems running D5 pumps off these? There seems to be aquaero branded d5 pumps and some comments about EK ones not working with the controller
Edit: Found a review at...
802.11ac (circa 2016) can nominally push that. Note that you need both the access point and the machine connected to it to be capable of such, and latency is still going to be bad relative to cables.
Network hardware gets surprisingly expensive. I like the ubiquiti range, which is somewhere...
Can obviously sink 800W through water. It's a big heatspreader and beyond that it's just having enough radiators to pick the water temperature. I don't know if you can do that sort of heat load through nitrogen, guess it depends how fast you pour it into the pot.
I'm new to this generation...
Sad that they're having a bad time with power supplies and IT security. Didn't know they made power supplies but the latter is bad.
Gigabyte have made solid boards for years and as far as I can tell are still doing so. Reliable as opposed to flashy. The recent led enthusiasm may be a bad sign...
The cable referenced above handles turning them both on at the same time but doesn't say anything about a voltage between the two '12V' rails. I'm having a hard time finding out whether that's a problem in practice, consensus seems to be "looks bad, but doesn't obviously break things".
I have...
I'm trying to work out how to power a threadripper multi-gpu workstation. Looks like the CPU can pull 800W and the cards 400W apiece, so that blows past the 1600W limit on the most expensive ATX PSU I can find (a Corsair one).
The options seem to be downclock/power limits or fewer GPUs. There...
I'm confused by the degree bit. It reads like "I dropped out, but if I didn't, probably would have passed" which seems a bad thing to lead with on a CV.
A degree is helpful but not necessary for finding work in software. A portfolio is likewise helpful but not necessary. With neither, you're...
It's not in the remit of the UK government to block an acquisition of a UK tech company that wants to sell. If we try that branch of communism, tech companies will incorporate elsewhere to avoid the risk of being blocked from exiting.
I think Nvidia has a rough road ahead. AMD's GPUs are...
I think the answer has to be "it's fine". Though I don't make desk chairs for money.
The chair doesn't weigh as much as the person, so upside down compression from self weight isn't a problem.
The chair mechanism is either springs, which won't care, or pneumatic (conceivably hydraulic) which...
There are some boot camp things where you pay some amount and get training, then go off and try to find an employer. I was skeptical but it worked for a friend crossing over from marketing, so maybe.
I did the intro to python course on codecademy. Not great, not terrible. Free.
Lots of books...
Just a thought experiment
- how long does it take to type the extra words you'd like to see
- how many emails are written each year
- how long does it take to read the extra words and check that don't contain any information
- how many people read each email
Multiply up the numbers, think of...
The tests for whether you're an employee or not are subtle and strongly geared towards deciding you are an employee. Needs legal / accounting advice to find out which you are reliably.
I'd suggest taking a role as an employee instead. Far less hassle.
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