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System Name | RogueOne |
---|---|
Processor | Xeon W9-3495x |
Motherboard | ASUS w790E Sage SE |
Cooling | SilverStone XE360-4677 |
Memory | 128gb Gskill Zeta R5 DDR5 RDIMMs |
Video Card(s) | MSI SUPRIM Liquid X 4090 |
Storage | 1x 2TB WD SN850X | 2x 8TB GAMMIX S70 |
Display(s) | 49" Philips Evnia OLED (49M2C8900) |
Case | Thermaltake Core P3 Pro Snow |
Audio Device(s) | Moondrop S8's on schitt Gunnr |
Power Supply | Seasonic Prime TX-1600 |
Mouse | Lamzu Maya Grey |
Keyboard | Monsgeek M3 Lavender, Moondrop Luna lights |
VR HMD | Quest 3 |
Software | Windows 11 Pro Workstation |
Benchmark Scores | I dont have time for that. |
Oof that’s a shame. I thought you were one of the ones capable of complex and critical thought but with bias that strong it isn’t worth the time.It's a connector which only Nvidia cards currently use and Nvidia was also one of the companies (alongside Dell) behind the standard itself.
For all intents and purposes it's their connector and their problem, I don't know who else would be responsible for it. I mean if you're behind the design of a connector which is prone to user error is it not an issue you need to rectify it ?
You can find those answers and misgivings in the previous threads about the cables. I think it’s important for everyone to educate yourselves on the origin and manufacture of the cable and catchup atleast on the revision being pushed, that’s all ontop as RTB so correctly put it “tempest in a teacup”.
As for adoption by the other manufacturers? Yes I think it will happen for sure.
Like candles to the lightbulb there will be those that oppose it but it’s just users, they are free to use whatever adapter they wish in the GPUs they make in their basement.