Ah, and I thought I just heard coil whine from my graphics card but its you!![]()
No, its annoying but it doesn't damage the equipment, its part of how stuff works, it can be influenced by designing your circuit carefully but in some cases can't be avoided totally.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coil_noise
http://www.ukgamingcomputers.co.uk/capacitor-squeal-coil-whine-explained-a-63.html
hhttp://www.ukgamingcomputers.co.uk/capacitor-squeal-coil-whine-explained-a-63.htmlttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coil_noise
I'm on a 23 inch screen now from the 19 I had before and it's made a world of difference. Things are a lot easier to see on here. I had the same issue when the screen changed but doing a ctrl and using the mouse wheel made everything bigger and fit more and for me it's made a ton of difference with page browsing and reading in general.
That doesn't work so well when you get into high DPI because the web just isn't designed for it and webpage just look plain odd. a 1440p has about 78% more pixels than a 1080p one.
Windows is getting better than handling it as are some apps but websites will remain a mess for a while...
The issue is that although you get fonts bigger as default in chrome, many sites seems to ignore this - facebook in particular is pretty small. I'll get use to it or anything problematic, I'll just drag on the 24" 1080p monitor on the right. Images of course look fantastic so do youtube videos uploaded in that format.
That's because Samsung wants you to buy one.
I've read that people use scaling to make things more readable when dealing with the higher resolution monitors but I'm not sure where the setting is located other than somewhere under display properties.
It's not increasing the font size per se more akin to zooming.
You have a FX chip, those use a digital which sensor no longer reports an absolute temperature value anymore, but a reading with a certain offset, which is unknown. It is estimated that this offset is between 10 - 20c.
http://www.alcpu.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=63&t=892
So 6c you see, add 10 or 20c and you should be in the ballpark.
You have a FX chip, those use a digital which sensor no longer reports an absolute temperature value anymore, but a reading with a certain offset, which is unknown. It is estimated that this offset is between 10 - 20c.
http://www.alcpu.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=63&t=892
So 6c you see, add 10 or 20c and you should be in the ballpark.
And probably the rest my i5-4590s is currently running at 43c and the AMD's are still a way behind Intel on the thermal performance.
Fired up my old Athlon X3 system for the first time 16 months. Forgot how much heat those suckers generate.
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