I have two hdds on racks..
Do you need extra hardware to do a Hackintosh?
A heisenberg compensator? Or maybe a fluid link.
I have two hdds on racks..
Do you need extra hardware to do a Hackintosh?
OK thank you MS for screwing with Windows yet again.
Creators update just dropped here and they removed the ability to scale text on icons and other elements...... FFS how do we change those things for those of us who can't read the default fonts?
Have they taken the slider bar out of the display options?
(I've still got that on Win10, but I'm not on the creators update)
For Windows 7, I'm having to mess about with font size/icon size manually as one of the programmes we uses at work hides options at standard size, but other programmes take up to much screen at the magnification needed). - Of course, it doesn't help that the monitors we're stuck with won't go higher than 1280*1024![]()
Have they taken the slider bar out of the display options?
(I've still got that on Win10, but I'm not on the creators update)
For Windows 7, I'm having to mess about with font size/icon size manually as one of the programmes we uses at work hides options at standard size, but other programmes take up to much screen at the magnification needed). - Of course, it doesn't help that the monitors we're stuck with won't go higher than 1280*1024![]()
read a few comments around the net that Microsoft is still having a few heads aches with the issue of scaling because of having to support 4K and higher monitors.
Can imagine it's quite a head when have to cover the range from some-one with a cheap laptop running a 14" screen at 1440x900 to someone with a high video card a UHD display. Then you have people running 16:9, 16:10 aspect ratios and if you've got a MS Surface 3 or later it's 3:2 and finally the poor victims still on 4:3
think allowing users to put in a custom % rather than the slider probably gives a lot more control. Sure if you want to really scale then sliding all the way in wonder direction is one thing but if you're looking top at a particluar point is can easier just to type 116%.
Should also still be do it fairly easily even if one can't totally read the the screen.
Just having a quick wiki read it, the 64bit version of XP was originally developed to run in Itanium systems but once the AMD brought out the 64bit versions of Athlons people started to move away from them (it was a pretty expensive platform).
Itanium.. yeah I still don't know what Intel was thinking, going from a REALLY REALLY REAHEAHEALY well supported architecture with a gigantic user AND developer base to something entirely new which had no software, no hardware, no compilers, no killer app, NO NOTHING and then assume people would change over because it was made by Intel... and indeed, then AMD gave them a big kick where it hurt most..
AMD's glory days may be behind it, but forcing Intel's hand with the x86_64 extension was the right move and the consumer PC market is all the better for it.
More than enough, I run a FX 8350 with a GTX 780 and it works fine on a 750 watt PSU, before the 780 I used an ASUS HD 6970: This beast https://www.asus.com/Graphics-Cards/EAH6970_DCII2DI4S2GD5/ which uses even more power, PSU is a Be Quiet! Powerzone 750
The only thing I would look into is the mainboard, 8350's draw a lot of amps and need a good VRM* I use an Asus Sabertooth which has a 12 phase VRM that can take 235 watts.
*voltage regulation module
More than enough, I run a FX 8350 with a GTX 780 and it works fine on a 750 watt PSU, before the 780 I used an ASUS HD 6970: This beast https://www.asus.com/Graphics-Cards/EAH6970_DCII2DI4S2GD5/ which uses even more power, PSU is a Be Quiet! Powerzone 750
It is mainly because CPU's are multifunctional so they don't do anything really well else it would mean something else gets cannibalized, GPU's only do a limited amount of calculation types, however they are REAHEEAAHEAAHEEEEEAAAALY good at them, like mining crypto coins, no CPU is good at that, also the computing power needed to calculate 3D stuff is staggering..
@ Tetra that board will do well.
GPU's have come a long way, the last decade or so they've developed at an insane rate but like CPU's I expect them to hit a performance platform quite soon as well.
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