[QUOTE=B!N4RY;52545370]Hi guys, I'm enjoying some tea right now[/QUOTE]
Hi person, I'm enjoying Steak and Eggs right now.
I could fucking cry right now. I had a dead disk last night, so I thought fuck it, I have nothing to lose, so I ran chkdsk overnight. And by some fucking miracle, it actually worked. Then a couple hours later, I was a fucking idiot and left the hard drive in a shit spot, and now it's fallen and won't turn on.
Jesus fucking Christ.
[QUOTE=imacc2009;52548028]I could fucking cry right now. I had a dead disk last night, so I thought fuck it, I have nothing to lose, so I ran chkdsk overnight. And by some fucking miracle, it actually worked. Then a couple hours later, I was a fucking idiot and left the hard drive in a shit spot, and now it's fallen and won't turn on.
Jesus fucking Christ.[/QUOTE]
Did you at least get the stuff off the drive? No way it was gonna last very long in any case.
But yeah I know the feeling :v: I can't tell you how many times I've made a shitty-looking but working solder joint on some board with super tiny SMD parts, then I go back to clean it up and end up fucking something up. Shit sucks man :v:
So this happened today.
[t]http://horobox.co.uk/u/reag/2017-08-07_19-29-12.png[/t] [t]http://horobox.co.uk/u/reag/2017-08-07_19-30-07.png[/t] [t]http://horobox.co.uk/u/reag/2017-08-07_19-30-47.png[/t]
[img]https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/743457172986572804/rzawkuVc_400x400.jpg[/img]
Imagine using your rented server as a proxy to try and login to someone elses account, thanks random 17 year old indian kid for reminding me that name.com has 2 factor auth.
You'd think that but some people are right tools, eitherway still funny.
[QUOTE=pentium;52547882]Hi person, I'm enjoying Steak and Eggs right now.[/QUOTE]
Hi again, I am now enjoying some baguettes
[editline]7th August 2017[/editline]
fuck forgot to turn off my personal vpn
[QUOTE=Dr. Evilcop;52548164]Did you at least get the stuff off the drive? No way it was gonna last very long in any case.
But yeah I know the feeling :v: I can't tell you how many times I've made a shitty-looking but working solder joint on some board with super tiny SMD parts, then I go back to clean it up and end up fucking something up. Shit sucks man :v:[/QUOTE]
Yeah, I'd been getting sector errors before, so this was literally just buying time until I had somewhere to back it all up. Unfortunately it hit the floor just before I managed to get all the important files off of it.
It's clicking and spins down right after spinning up, is it time to lose hope?
oh it's a seagate by the way lol
[QUOTE=chipsnapper2;52547266]I can't believe Intel is fucking dead
[IMG]https://i.imgur.com/jcqlp84.jpg[/IMG][/QUOTE]
Wow they can't even spell
THATS EPYC!!1!ONE!!1!11!
[editline]7th August 2017[/editline]
I feel like a room full of old men tried to get "down with the kids" and this was the result
Intel literally managed to name their processors "Core". That's like naming your car brand "Motor" in terms of stupidity. At least Epyc doesn't make it unnecessarily hard to search on Google.
[QUOTE=gman003-main;52549237]Intel literally managed to name their processors "Core". That's like naming your car brand "Motor" in terms of stupidity. At least Epyc doesn't make it unnecessarily hard to search on Google.[/QUOTE]
EPYC is still a mediocre name, both Opteron and Naples sound better.
[editline]7th August 2017[/editline]
Even Zeppelin sounds better, though I understand why they might want to avoid it as a product line.
Yeah Intel's naming today is a total fucking mess. The new 12" MacBooks are shipping with "Core i5" processors but they're just an incremental upgrade over the same dual-core Core m5 in my 12" MacBook. Way to muddle the i5 name.
Also holy fuck I never realized what a mess it is to say "dual-core Core i5". Yeah using the word Core in the name is dumb.
In my job I have people ask us why their system isn't performing right and it's because they're on a dual core when we want a quad core.
"But it's an i7"
"....what, how?!"
Proceed to find Intel makes a dual core i7. mfw
Only in laptop geared components. Some all in ones have them too.
Intel really needs to make sense out of their product lineup. They've gotten too greedy with the market segmentation, and the diluting of upper-end brands.
This is how I would label things if I ran Intel:
First off, fuck the "Core" brand. That mark's like a decade old, and probably would be rendered void if anyone actually called us on it. I'm going to be lazy and use the name "Kerno" for the new brand, because that's Esperanto for "core, kernel, central bit" and I have to make use of my degree [I]somehow[/I]. If I actually ran a multi-billion-dollar company, I'd clearly do more than a minute's thinking about this name.
People like the letter+number thing, so let's run with that. We'll use T for tablet chips, M for laptop chips, D for desktop chips, and X for server chips. Within that, we'll use 2 for dual-core chips, 4 for quad-core chips, 6 for hex- to octa-core, and 8 for deca-core and up. So Kerno t2 is an ultra-low-power dual-core, Kerno m4 is a low-power quad-core, and a Kerno d6 is six-to-eight cores in a desktop socket. The number-to-cores mapping might be different for the X series - if so, we'll use odd numbers, not even, but if not, we might just go beyond one digit for the server chips. (Bonus: the "dX" moniker mimics D&D dice names, subtly hinting at gaming while not being too gaudy for businesses. We can obliquely reference this with stuff like box art having simple platonic solid wireframes according to the model. BAM. I am a marketing genius here.)
Oh right, sockets. Anything in the D line uses an 1500-ish-pin socket, anything in the X line uses LGA-2011. No "why can't I upgrade from one Core i7 to another?" bullshit with motherboards. If you want a wide workstation CPU,you get an X-series chip and motherboard. And the "enthusiast" Xeon-but-we'll-call-it-a-gaming-chip will have some extra engineering done to use the normal desktop socket, because when we're charging $1000 for it, we can afford to make a CPU die that works in either.
Anyways, model numbers (the stuff after the letter-number lineup part) are four digits, only three meaningful. First one is the socket - so a d6-3500 uses Socket 3000 (yes, I'm going to call the sockets that, because the pin count is useless info to the end user but compatibility is essential info). The second digit is the slot within the lineup, monotonically increasing in clock/core count. And the third is the architecture revision - eg. 0 is architecture, 3 is optimization, and 6 is process, within a socket-compatible uarch.
A final suffix of "X", at least within the desktop line, means it's top of the line. That's it. Everything can overclock, because why not? We can lock that down at the chipset level if we want to make more money. (To argue with myself: maybe the X line can be the one with better TIM, so it can handle high power better. Just a bonus for the top-end customers.)
Look how easy this is. I could come here and brag about my new rig with a Kerno d4-1730 and (despite the fact that I literally just made this up) you could reasonably conclude that it's a quad-core, pretty highly clocked but not to the point of costing too much, and it's an upgrade from the d4-1700, but not much of one. You could know that I could upgrade to a d6-1930X if I wanted to run Crysis 4 better. Shit's just that simple.
And anyone in the marketing department who wanted to call a dual-core chip a t6 so it sounds better will be forced to mine bitcoins with an abacus.
I launched Sonic Generations for the first time, and figured I'd check the included configuration wizard fir-
[t]http://i.imgur.com/wg8385H.png[/t]
:wideeye:
[editline]7th August 2017[/editline]
Did they hire some flash game dev to make this?? Why did this ship with the product??
[QUOTE=gman003-main;52549581]Intel really needs to make sense out of their product lineup. They've gotten too greedy with the market segmentation, and the diluting of upper-end brands.
This is how I would label things if I ran Intel:
First off, fuck the "Core" brand. That mark's like a decade old, and probably would be rendered void if anyone actually called us on it. I'm going to be lazy and use the name "Kerno" for the new brand, because that's Esperanto for "core, kernel, central bit" and I have to make use of my degree [I]somehow[/I]. If I actually ran a multi-billion-dollar company, I'd clearly do more than a minute's thinking about this name.
People like the letter+number thing, so let's run with that. We'll use T for tablet chips, M for laptop chips, D for desktop chips, and X for server chips. Within that, we'll use 2 for dual-core chips, 4 for quad-core chips, 6 for hex- to octa-core, and 8 for deca-core and up. So Kerno t2 is an ultra-low-power dual-core, Kerno m4 is a low-power quad-core, and a Kerno d6 is six-to-eight cores in a desktop socket. The number-to-cores mapping might be different for the X series - if so, we'll use odd numbers, not even, but if not, we might just go beyond one digit for the server chips. (Bonus: the "dX" moniker mimics D&D dice names, subtly hinting at gaming while not being too gaudy for businesses. We can obliquely reference this with stuff like box art having simple platonic solid wireframes according to the model. BAM. I am a marketing genius here.)
Oh right, sockets. Anything in the D line uses an 1500-ish-pin socket, anything in the X line uses LGA-2011. No "why can't I upgrade from one Core i7 to another?" bullshit with motherboards. If you want a wide workstation CPU,you get an X-series chip and motherboard. And the "enthusiast" Xeon-but-we'll-call-it-a-gaming-chip will have some extra engineering done to use the normal desktop socket, because when we're charging $1000 for it, we can afford to make a CPU die that works in either.
Anyways, model numbers (the stuff after the letter-number lineup part) are four digits, only three meaningful. First one is the socket - so a d6-3500 uses Socket 3000 (yes, I'm going to call the sockets that, because the pin count is useless info to the end user but compatibility is essential info). The second digit is the slot within the lineup, monotonically increasing in clock/core count. And the third is the architecture revision - eg. 0 is architecture, 3 is optimization, and 6 is process, within a socket-compatible uarch.
A final suffix of "X", at least within the desktop line, means it's top of the line. That's it. Everything can overclock, because why not? We can lock that down at the chipset level if we want to make more money. (To argue with myself: maybe the X line can be the one with better TIM, so it can handle high power better. Just a bonus for the top-end customers.)
Look how easy this is. I could come here and brag about my new rig with a Kerno d4-1730 and (despite the fact that I literally just made this up) you could reasonably conclude that it's a quad-core, pretty highly clocked but not to the point of costing too much, and it's an upgrade from the d4-1700, but not much of one. You could know that I could upgrade to a d6-1930X if I wanted to run Crysis 4 better. Shit's just that simple.
And anyone in the marketing department who wanted to call a dual-core chip a t6 so it sounds better will be forced to mine bitcoins with an abacus.[/QUOTE]
Please apply for a job at Intel.
I'm pretty sure Adobe Media Encoder is at fault for this: I'm exporting a bunch of videos shot on a Canon DSLR that outputs H.264 files. When exporting on Adobe Premiere Pro or Media Encoder, what tends to happen is that when I export using the YouTube presets (or any H.264 export preset), it will randomly crash my desktop for some random reason. All of the screens go black, USB devices (keyboard, USB hard drives, etc.) no longer light up, but the computer itself continues to stay "on" with the fans spinning, etc. and not reboot. When I export things using DNxHD instead, it works fine. It doesn't crash what so ever. When I transcode the DNxHD into the YouTube preset (or any H.264 preset), it crashes yet again. This is really annoying and I have no idea what is causing it. I doubt it's my desktop since everything else I do on it works fine (i.e. web browsing, playing GTA V). I already tried doing CPU-only for exporting and not use GPU acceleration. I've checked everything inside the desktop.
I'm pretty sure it's just Adobe's H.264 encoder having bugs with the new Ryzen CPUs or some other issue. I am on the latest versions of Adobe software but haven't looked into updating any other firmware items.
Also I found out that my motherboard settings for the RAM frequency was set to auto so my 3200Mhz RAM wasn't really in use. So I set it to a higher frequency and for whatever reason, the desktop doesn't POST properly after changing it. I'm probably doing something wrong here..?
For reference, I have the "G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) 288-Pin DDR4 SDRAM DDR4 3200" sticks so they should be able to go that fast but something on the motherboard isn't letting it.
Does your RAM supports XMP? If it does, just use one of its XMP profiles and the correct timings will be automatically set
[editline]7th August 2017[/editline]
also the baguettes here are quite nice
:snip:
[QUOTE=pentium;52550078]snipped[/QUOTE]
what
Nevermind that.
[QUOTE=B!N4RY;52550066]Does your RAM supports XMP? If it does, just use one of its XMP profiles and the correct timings will be automatically set
[editline]7th August 2017[/editline]
also the baguettes here are quite nice[/QUOTE]
I looked for it and it turns out the RAM does have XMP but the motherboard I have does not. Well this is annoying. I guess I will have to do all of this overclocking manually then..
As I continue to Google this stuff, I will have to look into the bios again and probably have to enable XMP somewhere.
So AMD's new naming scheme isn't limited to CPU's....[URL="https://github.com/RadeonOpenCompute/ROCm"]ROCm[/URL] [sp]Rock 'em[/sp]
[QUOTE=TrafficMan;52549610]I launched Sonic Generations for the first time, and figured I'd check the included configuration wizard fir-
[t]http://i.imgur.com/wg8385H.png[/t]
:wideeye:
[editline]7th August 2017[/editline]
Did they hire some flash game dev to make this?? Why did this ship with the product??[/QUOTE]
This was first Sonic Team's proper PC game since forever so I'm surprised this was the only shitty part of it.
[QUOTE=Megalan;52550203]So AMD's new naming scheme isn't limited to CPU's....[URL="https://github.com/RadeonOpenCompute/ROCm"]ROCm[/URL] [sp]Rock 'em[/sp]
This was first Sonic Team's proper PC game since forever so I'm surprised this was the only shitty part of it.[/QUOTE]
They get points bonus for comic sans
Adventure 2 also used comic sans
trying to find a image returns, for a search of "Sonic Comic Sans", returns comics of Sonic and Sans (ness?) [sp]Stop using bing you fuck[/sp]
[img]http://i0.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/facebook/000/423/154/45e.jpg[/img]
"here you go sir, your plank of data is ready"
I don't know about you but loading those into a rack would be SO satisfying, like sliding a tank round into the chamber
"Ruler format"
[QUOTE=kaze4159;52550434]I don't know about you but loading those into a rack would be SO satisfying, like sliding a tank round into the chamber[/QUOTE]
All they have to do is add a handle on the end and a mechanism that makes it release lightly pressurized fog every time you pull it out and it could be some bonafide sci fi shit
[QUOTE=SEKCobra;52501338]Not anymore, my Z270 board doesn't have MyLogo support. Really annoying since I had a unified splash screen design since my first PC, even Gigabyte had a tool for it.[/QUOTE]
[t]https://s3.wasabisys.com/tenryuu/astrid/2017-08/17-08-08_20-14-27-ShadowForm.png[/t]
:cool:
[QUOTE=Scratch.;52550514][t]https://s3.wasabisys.com/tenryuu/astrid/2017-08/17-08-08_20-14-27-ShadowForm.png[/t]
:cool:[/QUOTE]
Oh hey it's on X370 too.
[t]https://www.helifreak.club/image/20170808104447848.png[/t]
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