Video idea for yall, Ask chatgpt to build you a pc, I actually tried this yesterday and it was fairly decent as you might expect with only minor notes i would have about getting every bang for buck spent
This is why I go premium (brand and above 80 bronze) on the PSU and then everything else is down to the remaining budget. Not having the risk of your room or home set on fire is a lot better than RMA bad parts.
@@Bladsmith Here in Australia you can very occasionally find 500GB pcie 3 M.2's like a team group or Kingston for around $30AUD which is like in the 20€ ballpark i believe stepping up to around $45-50AUD gets you into the 1TB range kinda crazy that I got my old 250GB 850 Evo for $135AUD back in 2016 and now that sort of storage is priced less than a fan
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="545">9:05</a> as a 1080Ti gamer who wanted to record in AV1, I had Newegg's email alerts active for when the A310 ECO first went on sale. Whether Intel intended it or not, the A310 is a phenomenal companion card for older powerhouse GPUs many people still run. It enables new encoding or transcoding technologies, it can take over the load of driving auxiliary monitors, and it doesn't even need a power cable. My 1080Ti will be in my machine for eternity because of the A310. I friggin' love this little thing.
@@PinotNoir_ Windows has supported running drivers from multiple GPU vendors since WIn7, and I've been running both cards simultaneously in Win10 since the A310 released in January. My 1080Ti drives my center screen and renders the game, and the A310 drives my two extra monitors and handles the AV1 encoding. The one problem I have is Intel's driver not detecting that ReBar is enabled on my motherboard, but that doesn't matter because the card doesn't need it for encoding. Intel's driver pops up a little warning saying ReBar is off when I first log in, and that's it. Whatever other performance or compatibility problems Intel's drivers have with gaming are also irrelevant, since the A310 isn't running the game, just encoding what OBS feeds it. I can't speak to the fan noise some people complain of though because my case has good enough dampening to silence all of the fans inside it. Just have to be sure your motherboard has a PCIe slot that fits the card and provides it the x4 lanes it needs to work. Fortunately the card is single slot so it can fit next to anything.
@@ChortleChortle thanks for the explanation! i always assume that different card from different vendors won't work because of SLI and Crossfire thing, so using a310 just for the encoder really never crossed my mind. well i'm using mITX, so only 1 PCIe slot, but i'm planning to upgrade my system anyway :D
"Did they literally just take an existing chassis, drill four holes in it, thread them, and put it on?" Oh Linus, why do you think there are brackets for a 5 1/4 inch optical drive? That is what tipped me off, considering the front panel.
"Would you eat at a 3-star restaurant on Google Maps?" I might if it was an asian restaurant. The number of places near me with amazing food but ratings that are dinged because the decor is outdated or the service is that purely functional type you get when people don't care about tips... I love those places. They're always packed with locals.
I'd still do it on my local kebab restaurant. Most people that give 1 star reviews there are pretty much frequent customers that complain that a bun was in the oven for like a minute too long once, so something where you'd usually still give 3 stars at least. But had the same with a rather cheap server provider, used them for years, at some point I randomly saw the reviews on 2 stars because people didn't pick prepaid contracts but subscription instead and then complained that they had to pay again after the first term was over and that it'd be a subscription trap. If I learned anything from user/customer reviews it's that you're better off reading a few positive and negative ones that actually go into detail but always keep in the back of your head that those might have a bias/telling half truths at best regardless.
There is a place near me that is always full. is badly lit and walls grimed top to bottom in absolute filth, besides the fridge is a webbed up cockroach that has been there for more than a year, I've gotten sick from them more than once and one day I might even die there one day. I still go back there weekly
Google reviews are almost exclusively reserved for people that like to bitch and moan about some of the most insignificant stuff or only remember the details that benefit them. Very few people go somewhere and think to themselves "I want to leave a google review, these guys do a good job.".
Nah, post a series of polls on the forum and get users to pick favourite or least favourite that they've bought (they'll have a idea of what people buy from affiliate link data), then compile the worst, best and what linus would choose without looking at the results.
@@ArdaU there's tons of 5 star rated products, so no it doesnt make more sense. not to mention people gravitate toward negative content so thats why this works
The KSP2 situation sucks because the devs actually cared, they literally brought on modders from the first game for some of the stuff, and it just got the axe. They're should be a law against continuing to sell something that was early access after firing all the devs and shutting down the studio.
I actually had been wondering what happened with KSP2. I'd heard it was a buggy, resource hungry mess when it came out and figured 'well I'll play it in about 2 years when either I get a more powerful rig or they've fixed it up some. But then it was like it'd fell off the face of the earth.
@@PlatypusVomit the first release was terrible. completely unplayable even on a brand new rig. the current release is playable, but its not as feature complete as ksp1. i think i said elsewhere you can mod ksp1 to the point where it actually has all the features ksp2 was supposed to have.
Thus far it hasn't been cancelled and they say they are still going to support the game. It's not the first time they've taken the project away from one of their studios and given it to another But still... It doesn't look good. There hasn't been any official communication about it for awhile, and as far as I'm aware they haven't handed it off to another studio yet. So I'm pessimistic, but not to the degree that I have entirely given up on it. But as of now they say that they still plan to support the game, so I'm not sure that banning the sale of the game is justified.
I got a low profile A310 for my Plex server (a 2nd gen Ryzen Lenovo workstation) because of the power constraints, the low profile and the AV1 compatibility. It works great for what I need
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="90">1:30</a> The article on the left from Wccftech which shows 1 memory channel also states at the top of the page "Update: It looks like the single-channel memory may just be a typo since the 8300G page lists dual-channel memory." which has been there since sometime in January 2024 according to the Wayback Machine. AMD's own website also states dual channel anyways.
It's a much better way to go. People who hit 1 or 5 star usually have some form of bias. Were as people who hit 2-4 are probably gonna have good and bad opinions about the product.
When I give things a personal rating I usually just have 1-2 scores for bad and worse. The rest are levels of goodness. So 3/10 is an average score. No need to sort trash.
People in Japan also take off stars for asinine reasons like "there was a piece of trash on the street outside", "a dog barked loudly", or "the guy at the table next to me farted."
It's probably has something to do with how people review their products there before listing in on sale. I remember reading stories of people who sold their virgin clean PS5 for ridiculously low prices, just because it had micro-cosmetic barely visible scratches on the case and no original box.
I've only recently put an A310 into a system I built for a friend. For the simple reason that it's basically trivial to do passive cooling on it and it's a monster for AV1. My friend primarily uses it as a media center, to rip BR and DVD films to NAS, and to do some light browsing. So yeah an 11th gen T-sku an A310, 32GB RAM and an SSD, pico-PSU and a laptop power brick. The whole system bolts to the back of a monitor using a VESA 100 adapter.
@@powerfulshammy 1030 doesn't have hardware acceleration for AV1, which matters a lot for this use case. It's worth the 23 euro price difference. 980ti is a 250W GPU, doesn't have hardware acceleration for AV1, is not available as a low-profile card, and it needs 6+8 pin PCI-e power. Keep in mind this entire system needs to fit in a
@@fermitupoupon1754 980ti has low profile card but you have to buy it here in South East Asia I still have that old video card as a memory of my old PC since I'm rocking a AMD 7900 x3D now with a 4060
In defence of the Intel Arc Sparkle A310, it not only comes with a half-height bracket in the box, but fits wonderfully in a 2U, needing no extra power (it seriously even runs at 50W, when you can get 75 from a PCIe slot). The AV1 enc/dec on that device rocks, and unlike nvidia cards, you don't need to modify it to remove 'session' restrictions. You possibly can't get better for that really niche edgecase from a single-slot GPU.
Yeah I have one of these and love it for it's very specific use-case. Hope it sells well enough that they continue to iterate on it as new encoding tech flows down the pipe.
Its something I might consider if I upgrade the plex server from a 6700k to something amd with more cores. Plex support for hardware encoding on Linux with amd chips is fairly poor, but that a310 should probably be seen as the quicksync feature of the 6700k.
@@bionicgeekgrrl I haven't been able to pin down the issue but I cannot get the A310 to work for hardware encode on a proxmox VM. Device passes through but won't take on a load
@@user-sz9my7oz7r Weird, it should just work as if it was an Intel CPU with iGPU in theory. Maybe Proxmox or the drivers are not passing it through correctly for some reason? a Non-Proxmox install to check might determine where the problem is (ie proxmox or the drivers)
Okay, so to clear up some things: 1. The 8500G does support dual channel memory 2. It runs PCIe at x8 but the ARC GPU only runs at x4 edit: no, it was just x4 as confirmed by Taavi below. 3. That Mushkin memory is unstable at it's rated speed 4. The mice uses cheap sensor that won't work well on contrasted pattern on it's mousepad, but works fine on other mousepad 5. That Gigabyte PSU isn't as bad as it's early version Please coorect me if I'm wrong.
You are off about one thing. The 8500G only has 10 available PCIe 4.0 lanes, of which four are available to the GPU (this is a limitation shared by all Phoenix-2 APUs with Zen 4c cores). The secondary NVMe SSD lanes are limited to two as well.
Keep in mind Helldivers 2 performance scales with level as it depends on the number of enemies onscreen. It looked like they were on a lower level and conveniently cut out before Linus engaged the bugs
brother, literally nothing was happening during the helldivers 2 segment, two enemies were on screen and they werent even alive. be it intentional or not they basically rigged the test, its like benchmarking the main menu of starcraft.
@@MtnNerd Not to mention fire. Firestorms or even just fire weapons and I expect this system would have just straight up dropped to single digit FPS if didn't just crash.
My OptiPlex outperforms this. An i5 7TH GEN and a GTX 1650, both of which are over 5 years old, and budget components at that, still will outperform that $1.2k mess. I spent less than £250 on this. And it's reliable and won't die.
The Sparkle Arc A310 is genuinely a great GPU for niche purposes, it was good to see Linus mention it. It’s an absolute powerhouse for video transcoding and energy efficiency. It supports AV1, and it’s a low profile single slot card. One of the only on the market currently.
I love the way cheap tech looks, it's got a very like crunchy cyberpunk vibe with the exposed boards. There's probably a reason why gpus and other things don't do this, but it is kind of a vibe
i really dont like all the plastic moldings and cnc machined heat sinks on "gaming" products as they add a lot of unnecessary costs. unfortunately its usually the only way to get that one premium feature you actually need. this is why mobos are fucking expensive now (even the low end mobos that dont have any of that stuff).
Tbh its still weird to me NOT to see all the components on the surface since I took a break from desktops for like 15 years and now plastic is everywhere. I think the plastic covers for GPUs are supposed to help with cooling and supporting the weight of the chip. As for RAM sticks etc idk maybe dust prevention and easier handling at the cost of some surface components not getting airflow to cool them?
Have two, they are awesome if you get around the reset bug in proxmox. remove all reset options of this card before starting a vm with it passed through and do the same for every subsequent reboot of the vm. -> script it something like "echo > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:03:00.0/reset_method"
Having the intro music and animation again heals my soul. I missed it when they silently removed it from their videos and honestly it felt like there was a void in my LTT videos.
I recently built a PC with that Asus Motherboard... No complaints what so ever. B650 while not high end it's decently midrange. Paired with a 7600X and a Cheap mint marketplace RX6800 and 32GB Good Quality ram DDR5-6400... Made for an excellent system.
No kidding. Get any OptiPlex or an HP at a thrift store like Goodwill or a garage sale, then maybe add that ARC card if whatever you bought checks all of Intel's compatibility boxes; and splurge on a WD SSD so that you can use their cloning software, if what you bought doesn't have an SSD or it's an old SSD. If you need Wi-Fi, see if you can upgrade whatever is on-board with Intel's latest, or plug in a slot adapter. Probably drop in a RAM upgrade. Still at $100-200, total.
With the current used market, I'm currently loving the performance sweet spot of AM4 Ryzen 5 3600 builds. The market is flooded the 3600 CPU and fair market price is about $70 Freedom bucks, but you can possibly grab one for cheaper. An AM4 motherboard is about the same $65 (but make sure the BIOs out-of-box compatible with a 3600 or the prior owner has information on the BIOs version). Plus you have 5800X3D CPU upgradability down the line. DDR4 is flooded and you should be able to land decent 3200Mhz CL16 or 3000MHz CL15 for about $25 or buy new 2x16gb for $55. Pair that up with a beefy GPU like the 4070 Super Ti or and they're still a very relevant CPU in Ultra 1440p gaming, and seem to be fairly consistently capable of 100-120+ FPS in the majority of games (unless they're CPU hogs, like Rust). Will your CPU bottleneck in the "wrong" game? Absolutely. Are some of those "wrong games" popular titles? Absolutely, so check your game. If you can't directly jump at a new GPU like the 7900XT or 4070 Super Ti, a $140 5700 or better should "get you by" in 1080P gaming until you can - which should clear 60FPS med-high in most titles. It's absolutely not a bad combo for $70 CPU, $20 RAM, $65 mobo, $140 GPU and that's without finding good deals/bundles. (I just sold a 5700, 2x8, and 600W psu for $140 locally and it took a while to sell because I needed the upgrade for Blender).
The problem is the used tech market doesn't exist everywhere. In the area I live, there is very little used tech being sold. I started building a PC and tried my best to find used parts, but there was just too few things being sold, and I had to just give up and buy new. I know the 2nd hand tech market is greast in some areas, but other areas are not as fortunate. However, buying cheap stuff is still not the way to go. It's better to save up for the "more expensive" stuff.
I have one of those ADATA SSD's but the 960GB flavor, For about 6 years or so now. With 4 years of curent runtime and over 40TB of total write/reads. Its mostly a draft storage drive at this point, but its still going.
I used to have multiple ADATA SSDs and CF cards for my cameras. Never had any issue with them, all survived the needed time and got replaced due to capacity constrains, not because of a failure.
@@Sithhy it's been fixed since then, you probably last played just before that, but hang on a little, do i know you? did you used to play beamng a while back, or were you active on the forums back in the day?
@@Sithhy wow that's crazy, small world, been there since like 2013 ish, a decent bit before the pre-race update iirc, i'm too busy nowadays to partake in the forums, but i used to be very active, and although i never really ended up releasing much, i did partake quite a bit in the modding scene, kinda regret never polishing my barstow hatchback mod up to the standard i wanted.
Regarding on who buys these parts, I have defenitely seen that Case, fans and Rams going around PC Shops in my third world country, my guess is that they get deep discounts from a distributor to sell them. In third world countries the customer is less informed and these shops usually don't have a review system where you can see why those parts are so cheap or bad.
I have a 8500G, bought it back in march and I play league, ffxiv, genshin, apex legends, and epic seven on it without a gpu with no issues I also beat some single players games on it like RE8 and Tomb Raider the Trilogy, my ram is cors air 32gbs with expo enabled it runs at 6000mt/s with asrock riptide b650E motherboard however there are some occasional crashes (around a crash per a month) without a bluescreen that happens randomly and not during any gaming session, it's apparently because of the AMD adrenaline software which a common issue for all amd components Edit I also have a real m.2 ssd on it which is WD black sn850x 2TBs
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="1306">21:46</a> This frame rate, angle, and craft reminds me of playing KSP1 when it was still a free prototype back on the old Gen 1 Crystal Ball
As big fan of OG Kerbal Space Programme - a "Space Race" video with several members of LMG trying to get to an arbitrary in game goal would be very entertaining - especially if they don't know anything and aren't allowed to consult RU-vidrs!
A company I support, needed two new computers and to build two identical systems that are good for business / CAD use, the MB prices and PSU prices had me floored.... I could not believe the price uptick... you used to get a decent MB for around $70 for business simple use (mATX/Mini ATX), and a decent PSU that is perfect for this, like 450/500watt PSU for like $40 with $60 being a platum rated.... now they are like $140-$200... wtf!
You still can get decent hardware at that price range, but I won't be current generation, and you need to actually invest a lot of time for parts selection - usually so much time that paying the inflated prices would have been cheaper in the end. Have you checked out Minis Forum's Neptune Line ? They got dedicated GPU options ( 6600M, 6650M, 7600M XT ), 1TB SSD and up to 64GB RAM for less than $900 in a very small form factor fitting anymore, providing enough performance to easily manage 4 years even with graphically demanding applications. These Mini-PC start making ever more sense by the year, as does buying good last gen setups, simply because both performance gain and price of current generations ain't worth it.
A mini pc these days is probably fine for most business use, plenty on eBay that are cheap enough. Though for cad you probably want one with a pcie slot which do exist.
@@v0ldy54 here in the states, PSUs were cheapppp. I've been building PCs for 30 years. Until the trump terrifs with china, then prices went 3x. But for light business use where you don't need 800 watts of gaming power, a decent 450/500 watt unit would only be around $40 or so, even full modular for an extra $10 or so. I couldn't believe it. I've been building gaming rigs for the past few years, and to need to get back to a simple lower power setup, I was astonished at the prices. I tend to like the MSI pro series MB for corp type usage. And went with a Ryzen 5 9600x to keep hardware generation latest for supportability. The last ones I built for this company, one in office and one in a wood manufacturing facility have been running 24x7x365 for 6 years now with no issues. Updating to get to win11 support with win10 reaching EOL. Otherwise they would keep using the old systems until they died
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="17">0:17</a> and <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="649">10:49</a> lmao my parents bought that deskpad for my brother
My brother bought this one for me. :) Honestly, aside from the slightly curled edges after I washed it once, it's pretty good. A bit small, but pretty good.
I bought the PC I'm using now over 10 years ago. High end parts all bought à la carte and put together by myself, still runs great. Have upgraded the case and video card and hard drive on it since first purchased. Prob need a new one soon though.
I think we all can agree that KSP2 gameplay was the only thing absolutely spot on in this video :D Thanks for your hard work folks. I'll be subbing to FP soon as I missed the now gone de-googlify pt2 vid. Sorry that had to happen to y'all, hope the strike isn't affecting your channel. Cheers from Czechia!
Decent, I have one. SOG PowerPlier (I think it's called) is much, much, better. Better pliers, better screwdrivers (seriously and for-real, night-and-day), _far_ superior wire-cutter, and a better can opener. I think the Leatherman knife blades might be better, but I haven't used my Leatherman's blades nearly as much or as hard as my SOG's.
Insecure mode in Source Engine games means you can't connect to servers that are running with Valve Anti Cheat enabled, which will probably be most servers. Usually this is disabled by an argument that's passed to the game executable when you launch it.
Google pulled it down. When people ask "what's the point of Floatplane," this is the point of Floatplane. By having all internet discourse on Reddit, we trapped ourselves in their system, allowing them to control how the internet as a whole thinks while they sell our data. By having all online purchases be through Amazon, we trapped ourselves in their system, allowing them to manufacture cheap knockoff products and sell for huge profits with fake reviews. By having all entertainment on RU-vid, we trapped ourselves into losing free speech. Floatplane matters.
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="467">7:47</a> Correction. It was under ANY Load. It didnt need to be high. Literally just turning on your PC and sitting IDLE at your desktop was enough to cause an explosion.
Yeah, I once gambled on a low rated, cheaper power supply because it had LEDs in the modular connectors (I don't know wtf I was thinking). I only had to replace my mobo, cpu and gpu in addition to buying a decent, more expensive power supply after it blew up my whole pc. Choosing PC parts is best done by committee...product reviews are great insight, don't ignore them!
Nothing wrong with that motherboard - built this budget system based on it. Did go for a Ryzen 7600 though, 32 GB Kingston RAM, an RTX 3050, and Samsung 970 M.2 SSD. It's been 100% rock solid for the last 8 months, not a single blue-screen or other problem.
The A310 is awesome for Plex/Jellyfin transcoding, stream encoding or if you want the XVAC decoding of the 11th Gen and up Intel CPU's, but don't have one. Can be very useful for video editing timeline performance.
The Ryzen 5 8500G made me shudder, but shockingly, it wasn't rated that badly. The biggest issue is the Zen 4 price for the Zen 3 performance you get out of it - its comparable to a Core i5 14500, barely 12% above the Ryzen 5 5700G. But the Intel Arc A310 actually is a pretty nice card regarding price and features. For gaming I'd at least upgrade to a A380 though ... .
yah a310 is a really good solution for a very specific user group. pairing it with an APU is just silly though. this build should never exist in the wild.
I am guessing the Ryzen 8500 is chosen because of the memory address problem using an ARC with anything earlier than Zen 4, but I didn't know that Zen 4 fixed that problem with BAR.
@@SB-pf5rcAnd I guarantee you that people are pairing an A310 with CPUs that have integrated graphics. Simply because there is a widely held belief that integrated graphics are awful and any discrete GPU is better.
Love the 5.25 bays even though you physically have no place for them in the removable front bezel. Could be another indicator apart from the side panel, that it's some ancient case repurposed to be a "gaming" one.
I had that ADATA drive. It died less than a year into using it. That arc card does interest me though, as I'm still quite happy running with my 3070ti and the only reason I've considered upgrading to 40 series was for AV1 encoding to use with Virtual Desktop on Quest 3.
Please do tell. Recent quest 3 owner her, using quest link for that purpose but there is a lot of talk about virtual desktop but I have no idea why you said av1 code is somehow good for that.
@@boceksiadam virtual desktop makes use of av1 encoding, and the quest 3 has an av1 decoder. So with the right hardware virtual desktop can use av1, which will give better visual quality with less compression artifacts for the same data throughput
@@thecyberquake618 thank you. I knew av1 cuz GPU review channels always mention when applicable. I know Intel gpus have it, rdna 3 cards have it, Nvidia has it for 40 series and not sure about the 30 series. So far I knew it as the thing twitch streamers care about.
Hey! A pattern I don't think y'all noticed - Eco Adata AMD Aoesso Enhanced Arc Estone ASUS B-Vigor I think people are buying these parts sorted by alphabetical sort loooool
When the PS5 came out there was a shortage of 1440p monitors. (At least here in the UK). So I bought the gigabyte monitor in the video and I can say that I have been daily driving it for 4 years now and it has never had any problems. Maybe I had a lucky unit. Keep up the good work Linus, I have enjoyed these two videos of the best and worst rated PC parts.
ADATA... I used to work in a computer refurbishment center and whenever a computer came in with one of those ADATA ssds we were advised to destroy it (even if new in box). we not only didn't want to put them in computers for customers, we also didn't want to give them away to people and risk having them lose their data either. Before this policy, almost all machines with said hard drives were returned in under 6 months... edit, a bit more context: sometimes ssds came new in box because we had boxes of computer related stuff come in, not just full PCs and laptops. also for most drives we just zero'd out all the data and sent em back out, unless it came from a client with a policy to destroy all drives (like the military)
And this is why non "ai ad bait" made reviews(top 10 sites etc) are so important. People need to know whats budget and whats e waste or a bad value from real people who care. But its hard with so much out there that you end up sticking to the same handful of brands out of fear
Reviews provide valuable insights into the performance and veracity of the product claims which can go a long way in saving unnecessary expenditure and disappointment.
Fun fact all the pcs for IT classes at school i worked at partime had the same Adata ssd. I diagnozed 6 of them as dead ( or highly malfuctioning) and 7th one died on me while cloning its image to a better drive lmao. Had to re-do the image thou so that wasnt nice. Few of the drives died before my brief time working there, all of them while on the warranty so they ware being replaced but for same model. 1 of replaced ssd died too. The "might cause" blue screens is true, some of them were causing bsods and others unresponsive/slow pc at the end of its life. SSD never reported to system as faulty. Stopped showing up thou even to cloning devices just plain no disk detected.
That ADATA SSD is giving me PTSD....I wasted idk how much money on those back when SSDs first came out thinking I was just being stupid. Worst. Drives. Ever.
All of the SU800s I’ve gotten continue to work great, though I’m guessing you ended up with something like the SU630 which unlike the SU800 doesn’t have DRAM cache.
The ADATA brand of SATA SSD in the video. Back in 2010 I went through probably 3 in the course of 3 months. They all crapped out because of bad sectors. Even had an ADATA flash drive a couple years later than died within months. Just an awful brand in my experience.
i can't say much. i got a prebuilt that came with an adata ssd as the boot drive. i bought a samsung 870evo 1tb ssd and it's crashed and burned already. didn't last 3 years. one day my pc wouldn't boot and i narrowed it down to the 870 being bad. luckily i only put games and stuff on it. the important stuff goes on the hdd.
i visited the red dot design award museum in germany this week and to my surprise they had a framework laptop on display . didn't know it won a red dot award either. i never thought i would ever see one in real life.
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="705">11:45</a> I bought that deskpad for only $8 on AliExpress back in 2017/2018, there might be several companies producing it so the quality might vary but the quality of the one I bought is good.
@@SlickFootTitoyou could say this about any online game lmao, also if it was a singular ban wave they would've come back already clearly Valve figured something out
Linus you know as well as I do you did not buy the lowest rated PSU, you bought the Lowest rate "safe" PSU, because the PSU market gets super cheap and super sketchy VERY FAST. Not joking I still have an unused Diablotek PSU sitting in my office, I have been thinking about sending it out to Gamers Nexus for them to test just to show how bad cheap PSU's can be.
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="1180">19:40</a> half life 2 is very tricky the only people who play it are masters at computers and life, theres some sort of problems that steam has with playing day of defeat and counter strike source if you dont have hl2 tf2 downloaded because, now hl2 tf2 is free, there is a issue if you own the dods and css games because you have to have hl2 tf2 installed to play them, even tho you own dods and css, and many many other issues, for instance some times my hl2 team death match works some times not ;( . you basically have to have the engine base which is hl2 team fortress installed to play, they started having alot of issues and i noticed there where ways around them, and what seemed to be the problem was having the engine base downloaded, hl2 team fortress used to cost money, and now its free, along with the mods like zombie panic source, insurgency, and age of chivalry, i noticed if you dont have the base game downloaded you cant play the free mods as well. it has something to do with "orange box engine combination" that they used to sell at Walmart being a bundle box where you could buy 3 games for 20$ in the same box,,, im sure.. you could read online for days on how to fix the game launching to black screen but still hear menu buttons.... i highly recommend zombie panic source if you have a potato computer lol.. if you can get it to work lol..
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="174">2:54</a>: "we felt that it was best to limit our search to products that had more than just a handful of reviews." <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="219">3:39</a>: literally a handful of reviews
Bought an A310 for my NAS for the media encoder, it's form factor, and low power draw. I don't have fan noise issues on the linux drivers. It's a fantastic card for plex transcoding.
I've actually used that case before, and for a cheap gaming build with an i7-4790k and a 2 fan gtx 1070, it was amaing for the price of $30 new on amazon. Honestly for $30 new it was a fantastic case. Fun Fact the reset button changes the color settings on the case front panel.
I just built a 520$ system with an open box RX 6600, ryzen 5 5500, 650 w msi psu, 1 tb m.2 etc etc.... runs 1080p cyberpunk high/70fps, csgo 140ffps, warzone 85fps... etc etc... all very playable.. the amount people spend just to look cool is crazy.... for the avg gamer theres no need for a better system imo
Anyone else notice the 5700X an Mobo combo for $21 and change at <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="7">0:07</a>? I know it's a bit older but still, for $24 ish bucks, would be perfect for a small project PC. If it's legit that is.
that A310 slander was completely uncalled for, unlike the rest of the parts, the A310 is actually good, if you manage your expectations, nevertheless it's a $100 card that can run Cyberpunk at 60FPS, and being a low power, 1 slot SFF card it's perfect to drop in into an SFF PC and turn it into a beast for it's price range and target sector <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="1158">19:18</a> also no they fixed it like 2 months ago already
I just wanted to comment my two cents here. I have a few A310 Eco cards in my homelab, and I think you are spot on for them not being ideal for gaming, however I don't believe they were intended or really advertised for gaming. I use one in my Jellyfin server, and it's fantastic. I have a 14th gen i3 machine that idles at only a handful of watts, which absolutely eclipses the past machine with dual Xeons and a Tesla P4. I've seen a couple of other comments on the video regarding the Arc, but I think it's genuinely worth mentioning because compared to the GT 610 / 730 of yesteryear, its so much better for the price!
I would like a review on the UPS market, if it's not too boring. Some recent lightnings reminded me of their usefulness :P *David is a delight in yet another video. Well dome man.