Remember when the PS3 was banned? I thought it was a joke. And then the airforce made a supercomputer out of a cluster of PS3s…
Remember when the PS3 was banned? I thought it was a joke. And then the airforce made a supercomputer out of a cluster of PS3s…
That’s (Starfield) probably just run to run variance. The difference is so small it might as well be margin of error.
That’s (Starfield) probably just run to run variance. The difference is so small it might as well be margin of error.
Dark mode and a dark wallpaper? The OLED screen is pretty bright, but since it’s OLED any pixels that aren’t lit also aren’t using power.
I kinda doubt the difference is coming from CL36 vs CL30, but rather 7600 having to run at 1/2 UCLK.
Those 5600CL36 bundles probably perform better than 7600CL36 because of that.
Well matjeh already answered, but IMO it represents a real workload IF you run it on the GPU.
There’s a table out that shows the 14900 and 7950X scoring around 2.2k pts, which is like 1/5th of a 4060’s 10k pts. The 4090 scores just under 35k pts.
Running CB24 on this beast of a system will show up where the best CPU currently is vs the best GPU score considering the article said the A6000 Ada can score over 90% above a 4090 in certain workloads.
Would have been nice to see CB24 running on both the CPU and GPU.
Kraken Point coming after Hawk Point is supposed to bring Zen5 + RDNA3.5.
I was hoping the OLED model would come with a higher resolution screen but I guess Valve is also waiting for a more capable APU before they increase the resolution.
Obviously there is, otherwise the game wouldn’t be running at all on RX5000 and GeForce 10.
PWM brightness too.
AM4 has been incredible, but I have fond memories of Socket 7. Supported everything from the OG Pentium all the way to 300MHz variants. And it worked with CPUs from Intel, IBM/Cyrix, AMD, and WinChip.