19Tb of storage... you do know you can just use a VPN to access p*rnhub don't you....? No need to download the whole thing!It just means I've got a 'last gen' high-end gaming PC![]()
19Tb of storage... you do know you can just use a VPN to access p*rnhub don't you....? No need to download the whole thing!It just means I've got a 'last gen' high-end gaming PC![]()
That's only the internal storage on the gaming PC.19Tb of storage... you do know you can just use a VPN to access p*rnhub don't you....? No need to download the whole thing!
Yes but what matters is it looks cool.It just means I've got a 'last gen' high-end gaming PC![]()
For discrete installs you can just get a mini-PC / NUC / MacMini and run games via cloud streaming.Yes but what matters is it looks cool.So you can have it in the living room. MrsG made me buy the pretty one, with the transparent panel and the internal lights. I just wanted a basic internet machine.
You had a computer at school.ZX81 when I was 11, it was my Dads but he let me lose on it.
Spectrum
BBC at school
Commodore 64
Amiga 500 & 600
Sega Saturn
PS1
XBox
PS2
PS3
PS4
PS5
I’m now 55 and still spend stupid amounts of time playing video games. I’ve put 204 hours in this years F1 and over 500 hours into Grand Prix Turismo 7.
Base clocks around 3000MHz, boost clocks upto 6000MHz (unless it's an Intel efficiency core, in which case it won't go above 5000MHz).Anyone know what sort of clock speed the latest CPU's and data busses run at? Been a while since I built a new PC.
And sexistI truly don’t mean to be judgemental or whatever but do guys at 50+ really play video games…?![]()
Didn’t have a lot of time to do so when I was younger as I worked away from home most of the time (for 1-4 weeks at a time)…and was too knackered most weekends to do anything but sleep due to 60-100 hour weeks.I truly don’t mean to be judgemental or whatever but do guys at 50+ really play video games…?![]()
Not moved on as much as I was expecting. One day they will get past the heat and limitations of RF and into light frequencies. That will be a whole new world of performance. Until then we will need a lot of water and cooling fins.Base clocks around 3000MHz, boost clocks upto 6000MHz (unless it's an Intel efficiency core, in which case it won't go above 5000MHz).
Best value/performance DDR5 RAM speeds on AM5 (i.e. Ryzen 7xxxx/9xxx CPUs) is 2 sticks of 6000MHz/MTs - but that's technically 'overclocked' and you just have to check what speeds are supported on the motherboards via the manufacturers' QVL lists. Due to limited memory controller/bandwidth on most AM5 motherboards, they can't handle more than about 5200MHz/MTs with 4 sticks.
Intel is a little different as their memory controllers are a bit better, and 7000MHz/MTs speeds are fairly standard...but they need that speed, and the extra boost clock frequency to keep up with the more efficient AM5 CPUs (that offer the same/better performance at about 1/3-1/2 of the power consumption).
PCIe 5.0 is now the norm, so most (non-office / non-budget) motherboards will have at least one 5.0x16 GPU slot and one 5.0x4/5.0x8 m.2 slot - along with 2-4 PCIe 4 and/or PCIe 3 m.2 / PCIe slots. Even the current generation RTX5090 GPU will not saturate a 5.0x16 PCIe slot (nor a 4.0x16 slot), so there's plenty of headroom for probably 10 years of GPU upgrades.
Latest motherboards also have more USB-C and USB4/Thunderbolt headers, and at least Wifi 6E (most have Wifi 7).
Sounds like I’m missing something Tony…Didn’t have a lot of time to do so when I was younger as I worked away from home most of the time (for 1-4 weeks at a time)…and was too knackered most weekends to do anything but sleep due to 60-100 hour weeks.
It’s only really been the last 6 or 7 years that I’ve bought a gaming PC for more in depth, longer gaming sessions…and the consoles were all for casual gaming where I only had an hour or so to jump in.
That's because you've lived through the megahertz wars, where every CPU had to have higher clock speeds to be 'better'.Not moved on as much as I was expecting. One day they will get past the heat and limitations of RF and into light frequencies. That will be a whole new world of performance. Until then we will need a lot of water and cooling fins.
Best value/performance DDR5 RAM speeds on AM5 (i.e. Ryzen 7xxxx/9xxx CPUs) is 2 sticks of 6000MHz/MTs - but that's technically 'overclocked' and you just have to check what speeds are supported on the motherboards via the manufacturers' QVL lists. Due to limited memory controller/bandwidth on most AM5 motherboards, they can't handle more than about 5200MHz/MTs with 4 sticks.
Really is stunning how resource hungry AI is, even with half precision models (FP16). When I first started building this rig, I thought I had future proofed with 4TB NVMe SSD and 96GB... I knew I would use 64GB, but 96GB... tons of headroom. not. At the beginning of the year, I had picked up an RTX 5080 OC (Asus) during the scalpers paradise just to work with something functional. But that card at 16GB VRAM is neutered heavily -- they really should have never made it. It should have had at least 24GB of VRAM to be useful. I'm certain the 'super' variant will resolve that.