madscribbler

joined 10 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Liquid cooling is safe. The liquid they use is non-conductive, so even if it leaks it won't hurt anything.

I run AIO on my rigs, 9900k and 14900k, works great. Much quieter than air.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

Expensive, but I use an asus GT-AXE 16000 and an AX-11000 in a mesh to cover my house with over 100 smarthome devices. The routers are top end, with features galore. They auto-switch devices to the most performant connection they can support. The 16000 has a 2.5Gbe WAN port, and 2 10Gbe ports, so it's future facing. It supports wifi 6/6e and my phone speed tests at over 1000MB/sec on it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

Expensive but I use an Asus acx-16000 which has a 2.5Gbe wan port (which I get 1.4Gbe bidirectional fiber) and 2 10Gbe ports. Wifi gets 1000MB/sec to my phone and it has every and any feature you can think of.

If you get one I'd recommend Merlin's bios too.

Also their AI mesh is good too. Well worth every penny. Handles 100 smarthome devices and runs at full bandwidth no problem.

Check out the Asus router emulator to see what it can do. It's going to make your nighthawk look like a joke by way of comparison.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

I use an asus GT-AXE16000 which has a 2.5 GBe WAN port, and supports 2 10GBe ports, wired to my computer with a 10GBe adapter. I have 1.4GBe bidirectional fiber, and get the full bandwidth to my machines that connect 10GBe.

It's wifi support is unbelievable. I use a AI mesh with it, and it covers the house, the yard (wifi sprinkler in the garage, and wifi pool and hot tub) and every smart device (around 100 total). Supports wifi 6, my phone transfers 1000MB/sec both ways over wifi.

Complete features, including an AI firewall that's stellar. Expensive, but very worth it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

14900k is only $50 more expensive than a 13900k (microcenter).

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

I have an ASUS RPG STRIX z790-e wifi and it's awesome. Clocks the 14900k at 6.2 for the pcores, and 4.8 for the ecores, dynamically boosts.

Has intel drivers for GNA and DTT, which allow for application optimization in the 14th gen, which gets 10-15% more performance in supported games (quite limited right now, but not on the game manufacturers to support - intel is actively adding games).

Great board, excellent support. Also supports non-standard memory configurations - I'm running 4 channel 128gb (4x32gb DDR5) and it's 100% stable, which is hard to come by.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Use this on your phone for photos. It encrypts them, hides them behind a 'audio management panel', or 'calculator', or other fake app which you long press on the title or some such, enter a pin, and it lets you into the photos, videos, apps and things you want hidden.

Hide Photos, Video and App Loc - Apps on Google Play

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

Use park control. It will show you which ones are e cores and let you steer toward pcores, ecores, or a combination depending on thread duration.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I have the same board. Boot drive tweak?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

Look into cyber power ups. I have 3, one for each array, and one for my PC.

I don't need 3, I bought one used it until the battery needed replacement, bought a second to have one for each array. Then changed my mind and wanted to return the 2nd one for a rack mounted one. Contacted Amazon, the second one I bought wasn't returnable, so they refunded it and let me keep it and sent me the rack mounted one instead.

They have a very long runtime and work great with the NAS arrays. Their USB cable tells the array to shut down.

They condition power too and level out surges and dropouts. They come with a crazy warranty covering the UPS itself and all the equipment connected to them, and are in the neighborhood of $200-300.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

I use an Asus acx-16000 which has a 2.5Gbe wan port with a 10gbe internal network and get the full 1.4Gbe of my bidirectional fiber.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

Depends on how much memory you want to get. I'm running 4 channel x 32gb (128gb total) on an Asus strix z790-e wifi, and it's unsupported. I can't get it to post at the rated 6000mhz, so I underclocked it to 5066 (it does post up to 5200mhz but 5200mhz shows errors in memtest386). At 5066mhz it runs all 4 passes of memtest86 cleanly.

It's gskill 6000mhz z5.memoey.

I did try corsair dominators (24gb each x 4 channel) and they wouldn't post at their rated 7000mhz either. But even underclockibg them at 4800mhz was unstable.

My advice is to stay with dual channel if you can, as those have more luck posting at xmp speeds.

There was no valid supported 32gb x 4 channel config from the manufacturer so I'm lucky it works at all. I had to have 128gb of RAM though so put up with the slightly slower speeds.

Asus lists the manufacturers and combinations certified to work with the board on the boards support page. Stick with those if you want xmp to work and not have to figure out a stable setup yourself.

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