!hardware
@lemmy.mlhttps://www.phoronix.com/news/AMD-RDNA-3.5-ISA-Documentation
I recently bought an external PCIe enclosure so I could make use of a specific PCIe device in an editing setup. One of the nice things about this particular enclosure is that it also happens to come with an m.2 slot for NVME drives as well.
Usually when I edit with my home set up, I'm provided with the storage by the client, and even if not, at the very least, video media, plus backups takes up a lot of room and NVME drives are expensive so I'd usually opt for something cheaper as the actual location for the footage and assets. I figured then that it might be take advantage of an NVME drive of a smaller, more affordable capacity and use it just as a location for video render cache that I just clear after every project wraps. The high speeds of these drives seems like it would be a good fit for this purpose.
However I've heard that SSDs, including NVME are famously short lived and have particularly short life spans in terms of number of write operations. Is that still the case and would the constant writing and clearing of relatively small video files actually be kind of the worst use of one of these drives?
I’m looking to leverage the Thunderbolt port on my desktop to get more USB ports.
Looking around and most Thunderbolt hubs are for laptops and have hdmi and Ethernet and such that I don’t really want.
Does anyone have a recommendation for a simple hub?
Some Type-a and c ports world be lovely.
(I am a noob. I have many misconceptions. I am willing to listen however, so please be kind)
I wonder if:
My question: which (mini) PC manufacturers are kind, reliable, trustworthy?
My trust issues are:
I find it difficult to believe that I am buying anything of quality whether or not I am not paying a lot (briefly I had a period of hope where I thought that perhaps paying more in general would be a good thing as far as quality is concerned, and that hypothesis did not hold up)
I find it difficult to believe that most products created in China/Asia-more-generally are built with kindness in mind (kindness for the worker, kindness for the consumer, kindness for everything in between): e.g. see the plethora of absolute shit that floods Amazon, Temu, etc.)
The second point, on China, deserves clarification:
I only mention China specifically because computer hardware in general is designed and produced there, and when mini PCs are concerned, most manufacturers are based in China: e.g. Beelink and Minisforum
it is not an issue of worker skill or product quality: I know I can get excellent goods that are worth far more than what they actually sell for (e.g. Chi-fi earbuds!), and that almost everything is made in Asia
I work for a company that produces goods in China, and "we" ""make"" (I make nothing) good stuff! Part of our edge comes from comes from the fact that my company's owner is Chinese and puts in a lot of care into working with factories that are kind (to their workers: clothing manufacturers are often shit to women and pay them less, because misogyny is a thing everywhere) --- they wouldn't have to put in this care if it wasn't a problem to begin with
my trust issue is ultimately due to: I think most persons working in the production chain for most goods that western consumers consume are unhappy, regardless of where they live (e.g. from the people who do the final delivery to our doorstep, to the people who initially mine the raw materials)
most of this anger is well-justified: e.g. my government and companies operating out of my country are in general, callous, but especially when it comes to Asians and Africans; some of this anger is due to how convenient it is for local leaders to make the "other" a problem, as a distraction
anyway, getting distracted, but my point is that: if a product I buy is being made by unhappy people, then I am going to be cursed for using it: it will be full of toxic chemicals they had to endure while making it, it will be full of their spite they have for me not paying enough for their hard work, etc. the list goes ever on
(Sorry for this insanity.)
https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/intel-scraps-18a-process-for-arrow-lake-goes-with-external-nodes-likely-tsmc
Out with the Intel node, in with TSMC.
https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/intel-launches-lunar-lake-claims-arm-beating-battery-life-worlds-fastest-mobile-cpu-cores
Aiming for the battery life crown.
https://www.tomshardware.com/raspberry-pi/raspberry-pi-5-powers-personal-cloud-server-in-a-custom-laser-cut-case
And it comes with a cool laser-cut case!
https://www.anandtech.com/show/21542/end-of-the-road-an-anandtech-farewell