https://liliputing.com/2021/11/hyst...el-hades-canyon-gaming-pc-for-480-and-up.htmlBut what really makes the Hystou F9 unusual are its processor options:
- Intel Core i5-8305G – 65 watt, 2.8 GHz to 3.8 GHz quad-core chip with Radeon Vega M GL graphics
- Intel Core i7-8705G – 65 watt, 3.1 GHz to 4.1 GHz quad-core chip with Radeon Vega M GL graphics
- Intel Core i7-8709G – 100 watt, 3.1 GHz to 4.1 GHz quad-core chip with Radeon Vega M GH graphics
- Intel Core i7-8809G – 100 watt, 3.1 GHz to 4.2 GHz quad-core chip with Radeon Vega M GH graphics
Processors: 120 Cores/ 184 Threads
- 1x AMD Ryzen Threadripper Pro 3995WX with 64 cores and 128 threads
- 7x NVIDIA BlueField-2 8-core Arm Cortex A72 2.0GHz DPUs
RAM: 624GB
- 512GB Micron DDR4-3200 ECC RDIMMs
- 7x 16GB on DPU RAM
Storage: ~8.2TB
- 2x Micron 7400 3.84TB M.2 SSDs
- 7x 64GB DPU Storage
Networking: ~1.4Tbps
- 2x 10Gbase-T ports from the ASUS motherboard
- 14x 100G ports from BlueField-2 DPUs
- 8x out-of-band management ports (one shared)
- WiFi 6
https://www.servethehome.com/building-the-ultimate-x86-and-arm-cluster-in-a-box/Tallying this up:
- 2x 10Gbase-T ports (ASUS)
- 14x QSFP56/ QSFP28 100GbE ports (7x BlueField-2 cards)
- 7x Management ports (7x BlueField-2 with a shared ASUS port on a 10G NIC)
- WiFi 6
A questão principal é que não são "placas de rede". Aquilo são computadores completos, numa placa Pci-Ex, com CPU, RAM, Storage e "por acaso" também têm uma placa de rede.Mas na pratica, qual o user scenario? Isso foi basicamente meter 7 "placas de rede" na maquina
That is a big reason behind why one of the next projects on STH you will see is running 1700 fibers through the home studio and offices.
With the mass of fiber installed, it is trivial to connect a system like this without having to put a loud and power-hungry switch in the studio.
Along with the laptop, XMG offers an optional external liquid cooling system that significantly expands the cooling resources and promises quieter and ultimately faster operation at lower temperatures – throwing aside the physical limitations of conventional laptop cooling systems.
Before setting up, the external AIO cooling must first be filled with cooling liquid (part of the supplied accessories) via a funnel. This also allows refilling at a later time. A self-locking quick-release connector with hoses for the inlet and outlet quickly connects the liquid cooling system to the laptop – and disconnects just as easily if the NEO 15 is to be taken along on its own.
https://videocardz.com/press-releas...p-with-oasis-external-liquid-cooling-solutionFor an XMG NEO 15 (E22) with Intel’s Core i7-12700H, an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Ti, 16 GB DDR5-4800, a 500 GB NVMe SSD and a WQHD IPS display with 240 Hz, XMG targets a retail price of around € 2,500 (including 19% VAT). The price for the XMG OASIS as an optional accessory will not exceed € 200.
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/adata-xpg-vault-1tb-ssd-mousethe company announced it will be making an appearance at CES 2022 and teased a number of new products, including a new gaming mouse concept known as the XPG Vault. The XPG Vault is a gaming mouse equipped with 1TB of solid-state storage for your games library.
The 1TB SSD built into the mouse is no slouch, with up to 985MB/s of bandwidth, it's significantly faster than your traditional SATA 3 SSDs which peak at around 550MB/s of bandwidth. It may not be as fast as an NVMe drive, but that is the trade off for convenience. The XPG Vault comes with a single USB Type C connector which pulls double duty for mouse and the 1TB SSD.
Estou a ver que voltaram os tempos do hardware bizarro, nesta CES.
A ADATA lançou um Rato Gaming............com um SSD embutido. Porquê? Porque sim.
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/adata-xpg-vault-1tb-ssd-mouse
É para os batoteiros meterem as cheats a rolar bem rápido
https://lore.kernel.org/linux-arm-kernel/[email protected]/T/This patch set adds basic support for the Tesla Full Self-Driving (FSD)
SoC. This SoC contains three clusters of four Cortex-A72 CPUs,
as well as several IPs.
Patches 1 to 8 provide support for the clock controller
(which is designed similarly to Exynos SoCs).
The remaining changes provide pinmux support, initial device tree support,
and SPI, ADC, and MCT IP functionality.
Collectors of rare PC hardware have just missed out on the chance to own a little piece of history: a prototype Intel GPU claiming to be the only working Larabee board in the world. It sold on eBay France for a mere €4,650 ($5,234) and even came in a snazzy case.
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/intel-larrabee-gpu-soldLarrabee was Intel's 2008-vintage attempt to make a GPU, or rather a GPGPU, separately from the project that led to Iris Pro. Rather than following in the footsteps of Nvidia and ATi, Larrabee used the X86 instruction set with special extensions, and the GPU functioned more like a hybrid of a CPU and GPU. In addition, it did a lot of its work in software rather than using specialized graphics hardware, using a tile-based rendering approach. The idea was to make a board that could accelerate more diverse workloads than 'just' games and achieve graphics effects that GPUs at the time couldn't manage, such as real-time ray-tracing and irregular shadow mapping.