That LED is the thing I hate about that card, as I don't have any other RGB and it really stands out when I have to open my case upInstalled my soundcard.
Good job red was already my colour scheme because there's a red LED on this thing.
That LED is the thing I hate about that card, as I don't have any other RGB and it really stands out when I have to open my case upInstalled my soundcard.
Good job red was already my colour scheme because there's a red LED on this thing.
An original Schiit Modi at work and Schiit Bifrost at home. No complaints other than the Bifrost takes a little while to actually enable after it's powered on.What sound box specifically?
I used to be a bit fussy about soundcards but after my recent one broke couple of years ago I haven't gotten a new one, just been using the integrated which is fine enough but I'm always curious what others are using.
There are new GPUs coming this year. We have no specs, no prices, not even an ETA. Rumours are all over the place and not worth much currently. But it is reasonable to assume that they are going to be faster than current offerings.Currently I have:
i5-6600k(not overclocked cause I am dumb)
16GB of RAM
MSI GeForce GTX 1060 6GB 6 GB GAMING X Video Card
So, I think it's time to upgrade my video card and I am horrible at figuring out what to buy. I have a gsync monitor so Nvidia is what I'm going to want and I'm not really interested in spending more than $600CAD. Was looking at EVGA GeForce RTX 2060 Super SC Ultra Gaming. Is that a good option? Should I wait for something else?
Thanks! I think I'll probably hold off for now then. At the moment, there is no real urgency - I don't think there's anything coming out in the short term that will drive me to upgrade. Might as well start setting aside some money for a new CPU/motherboard and do it all at once.There are new GPUs coming this year. We have no specs, no prices, not even an ETA. Rumours are all over the place and not worth much currently. But it is reasonable to assume that they are going to be faster than current offerings.
My best guess: we'll have them in 5-8 months, but Nvidia is not really under pressure or in a hurry.
A 2060S is a good upgrade over a 1060. Chances are high that you'll start to run into CPU bottlenecks with that card though, especially if you plan to play above 60hz.
Still, focusing your budget on a new GPU is better than getting a new CPU now.
Should you wait? Idk, mainly depends on how unhappy you are with your performance right now.
That's the one I had as well.Well, I used to use a Xonar U7 (for many years)... until it just broke.
Used to have Fiio E10K for many years before changing it to a Topping D30 +A30 combo last year. Nothing wrong with the fiio sound quality wise, it's just that my current headphone (ATH-R70x) needs a bit more power than the fiio can give.What sound box specifically?
I used to be a bit fussy about soundcards but after my recent one broke couple of years ago I haven't gotten a new one, just been using the integrated which is fine enough but I'm always curious what others are using.
Sort by lowest price, read the reviews, I usually pick the one with pretty low temperature and noise on load. (Under 73c and 40 dBA on load). Guru3d, techpowerup, kitguru have comprehensive gpu reviews if you want to check them out.What's the go-to 2070 super ?
This is a jungle of choices just for one card.
I've used EVGA since my GTX560Ti so I'd go for any of these.What's the go-to 2070 super ?
This is a jungle of choices just for one card.
There shouldn't be too much of a "CPU" performance difference between both. The 3400G has the better on board graphics though, so that should save you some money.I've been asked for a recommendation for a build (mostly CPU+MOBO+RAM+GPU(if needed)).
It will be used mostly of office work and some image/audio editing. I was thinking of recommending a Ryzen 3400G or an i3 9100 but I'm not really sure what to recomend.
I originally was tempted to recommed a 3600/X or a 2700/X, but the fact that i needed to add a GPU (even if it was a low end one, any recommendation in this front?) was making me doubt.There shouldn't be too much of a "CPU" performance difference between both. The 3400G has the better on board graphics though, so that should save you some money.
That said, a 4 core CPU might not be the best option, dependent on how relevant that editing scenario is. An "old", but new 2700 or 2700x with eight cores and 16 threads might be the better budget option. But you'll need a dedicated GPU with that.
For the rest: A half descent B450 board (MSI tomahawk b450 max?), 2x4GB of DDR4 3000-3200MHz ram (or better 2x8; image editing can eat RAM), 500W PSU with bronze certification, 512GB-1TB SDD and you are set.
Nvidia 16-something, AMD 5000-something, or something from the previous gens, or the very bottom of whatever price aggregator is applicable in your area if you really want to save all of the money for the other parts.I originally was tempted to recommed a 3600/X or a 2700/X, but the fact that i needed to add a GPU (even if it was a low end one, any recommendation in this front?) was making me doubt.
Still i'll ask him how much he's willing to spend and then go with one option or the other.
In general what knch said, but hard to specify without more information.any recommendation in this front?
He seems open to the idea of a 2700 (or a 3600).In general what knch said, but hard to specify without more information.
Personally I'd consider a RX 570 4GB card for that scenario. A rather low end card, but worth a look if price is very relevant.
R5 3400G is ~180€ over here.
R7 2700 (non X) is ~ 145€
RX 570 with 4GB ~ 130€
That would be 95€ more expansive assuming mainboard, ram, SSD, case and PSU stay the same.
But you'd get a significant jump both in CPU and GPU performance. Is it needed? I don't know and your regional prices may be different.
The snob in my scoffs at you even considering associating a TN panel with the word good in any way. (Only have experience with Dell's IPS displays, which are great.)Soooo, I don't have a clue about monitors in general but I want to get a 144Hz one and can't think of too many reasons to stay on 1080p so here's the question - is this a good model/deal?
e: Not sure what's going on with the link, maybe now: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Dell-S2716DG-Anti-Glare-LED-backlit-Response/dp/B01784K78A
e2: welp, the 44% discount is gone already anyway.
chkdsk /scan /r /f
on both drives and... needless to say, I haven't found any errors.XFX Pro 650W 80+ Bronze, bought for my 2013 build, so it's 7 years old (same age as the drives).PSU seems like a good candidate. How aging it is exactly and what unit?
Yeah, I'm totally out of my knowledge area here! I've unplugged it from the power (to be more precise: I've simply turned the PSU switch off) out of rage and frustration from these continuous failures I've been having in the last few months, and that seemed like the most "final" thing to do to the PC, shy of throwing it out the window.Hard to say. If you ran a full memtest though it's pretty certain that it's not RAM (or anything on the mainboard related to RAM).
The whole "needs unplugging to run again" might be indicative of PSU troubles.
It's a pretty good gaming display.So with all this working from home (althought it might not matter since I might be in a sort of limbo soon), I've come to realize that my secondary monitor is getting old so I was thinking of buying a new (main) monitor so I can use my current monitor as a secondary monitor and save my old monitor as a backup.
I've been eying the: LG 27GL850-B 27" seems interesting, the only "bad" thing is the HDR (but it's not something that bothers me for now or the forseeble future).
Do you guys think is a good deal ? Or what would you recommed for that price (or lower) ?
Nothing official yet, sometime Q3 seems like a decent guess.Hey guys, do we know the current ETA for RDNA2/Ampere, or are we SOL 'cause of the COVID-19?
Looking to upgrade my GPU from my Vega 56 soon-ish, but nothing on the market is a significant enough upgrade under $400...
So while I am waiting to see final specs on the next gen consoles so I can, especially GPUs, better match them; this is what I'd currently be building. I don't plan on gaming above 1080p for a while so the gfx card may overkill, but I want to be able to max at 1080p anything I throw at it hence the 5700 XT choice.
CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3700X 3.6 GHz 8-Core Processor ($428.75 @ Vuugo)
Motherboard: MSI MPG X570 GAMING PLUS ATX AM4 Motherboard ($204.99 @ Amazon Canada)
Storage: Western Digital Blue SN550 500 GB M.2-2280 NVME Solid State Drive ($94.50 @ Vuugo)
Video Card: Gigabyte Radeon RX 5700 XT 8 GB GAMING OC Video Card ($569.99 @ Newegg Canada)
Case: be quiet! Dark Base Pro 900 Rev. 2 ATX Full Tower Case ($394.58 @ Amazon Canada)
Power Supply: Corsair RM (2019) 650 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply ($149.99 @ Canada Computers)
plus 16gb Corsair Vengeance DDR4-3000 RGB in 2x8gb from my brother-in-law who upped his ram recently.
Is the ddr4-3000 too low for such a build, given that I don't overclock?
You're not going to match console spec without RT hardware though. I even wonder what devs will do if there is some graphical feature they only bother to develop with RT in mind. Will they bother developing a fallback render method for whatever effects are missing?So while I am waiting to see final specs on the next gen consoles so I can, especially GPUs, better match them; this is what I'd currently be building. I don't plan on gaming above 1080p for a while so the gfx card may overkill, but I want to be able to max at 1080p anything I throw at it hence the 5700 XT choice.
The GPU I listed is basically a place holder anyway, as I want to see what AMD do with ray tracing in their next line of cards before deciding one way or another.ISee said:Less expensive case, better card, maybe up the ram frequency
Not a big deal, but it can make a difference.I've never really understood the RAM frequency issue with Ryzen CPUs, and what the sweet spot is.. Why say 3400+ vs 3000 is such a big deal
Okay, so for the most part the ddr43000 from my brother in law would be perfectly fine, but I could get improved performance from higher frequency. I will keep this in mind going forward, but free will help as a starting point Thanks for explaining itNot a big deal, but it can make a difference.
The infinity fabric is linked to the speed of your ram and so faster ram allows for faster communication between cpu cores, ram, cache etc.
Also faster ram with tighter timing will also improve cpu performance in some scenarios.
1) When would be the ideal time to buy? I've been hearing that you may want to wait on GPUs because NVIDIA has something new coming out in a few months? Are CPUs still fair game? I imagine SSDs and the like are probably just gonna keep going down, right?
There is really no ideal time to buy. Buy when you are comfortable is my personal advice. It's good to have a general idea when products will come out but don't go crazy over it. I'll give a quick breakdown and if anyone else is reading, please correct me if I'm wrong.
CPU. AMD and Intel are going to release new CPUs this year. AMD has really taken back marketshare within the enthusiast DIY community over the past few years and taken the fight to Intel in every category now (surge in laptop, ass kicking in servers).
Motherboards: Generally releases with new CPUs. AMD motherboards has been pretty good about supporting multiple generations while Intel you get two gens at most.
Ram: Far more affordable than in 2018,
SSD: Likewise has really become affordable in the last year or two.
GPU: Nvidia is king at the high end right now. Lots of good competition in the sub $450 GPU range between AMD and Nvidia. New stuff should be out in 2nd Half 2020.
2) How will the next-gen consoles factor into things? I built my rig in 2013, it was a mid-to-high-range spec for the time, and because the new-gen consoles released later that year and games took a bump up in specs, I wound up running everything on low in a matter of a year or two. Should I hold off until next year, maybe?
It's highly unlikely that a computer built this year is going to running on low in a year (can't predict it 100%) but engines are more scalable, PC isn't a bastard child anymore, the push for things such as DLSS will prolong your computer from aging. Holding off is the best option unless you can't. While there is still great progress in raw power, it's taking longer and longer so things don't get as outdated.
3) Are the standards pretty well set where they are right now? I mean things like NVME, DDR4, etc - is there anything that would require me to buy a whole new motherboard on the horizon or am I good to replace parts as needed for a while?
Only thing off the top of my head is DDR5 ram which will start coming for consumers next year and will require new motherboards and cpus. PCIE 4.0 is out on AMD now and intel soon. Maybe if Intel gets the support for the simplier ATX 12VO but that's years away.
TLDR - When you are ready to build, just come ask us and we will help you out.
New GPUs will come out this year, but I expect a huge price gap between low-mid and high+ cards and a general increase in price.1) When would be the ideal time to buy? I've been hearing that you may want to wait on GPUs because NVIDIA has something new coming out in a few months? Are CPUs still fair game? I imagine SSDs and the like are probably just gonna keep going down, right?
Consoles, as with this gen., will set the foundation that you'll have to orientate around. The big factor is that we do not know if consoles will finally make a jump to "general" 60 fps in games. If they do, than "matching" console specs might be an easy and cheap solution for many people.2) How will the next-gen consoles factor into things? I built my rig in 2013, it was a mid-to-high-range spec for the time, and because the new-gen consoles released later that year and games took a bump up in specs, I wound up running everything on low in a matter of a year or two. Should I hold off until next year, maybe?
DDR4 is now pretty "oldish" and I fully expect a switch to DDR5 during the next gen console life-cycle. But not this or next year.3) Are the standards pretty well set where they are right now? I mean things like NVME, DDR4, etc - is there anything that would require me to buy a whole new motherboard on the horizon or am I good to replace parts as needed for a while?
Perhaps problems in productions or logistics due too the current situation.Is there some sort of monitor shortage or something?
https://www.scan.co.uk/shop/computer-hardware/monitors/monitors-nvidia-g-sync
Every time I think about getting a new one, there's hardly any in stock.