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What's your latest tech purchase?

238€ for a 4TB 176 layer TLC, 4GB DRAM Cache SSD that is on par with a 980 Pro/SN850X.
Copying files from my MP600 PRO XT wrote over 1100GB of data with 3-6GB/s non stop. Really impressive, considering it costs 100€ less than similar ones.
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Looks like it uses an InnoGrit controller. Probably an IG5236?

Do let me know how it holds up as you use it. I was eyeing a drive with the same controller (Fanxiang S770, which is probably the same drive anyway) a while ago before prices went to shit.
 
Just broke out the last four USB 2.0 ports on headers from my MB, after I realized that PCI slot covers with just the USB ports and header cables are available for cheap - and probably barely counted as tech purchase too, when I think about it - and that I have two otherwise permanently unoccupied slots, one blocked by an out-of-gauge video card and the other non-existent on the mobo, and two unconnected USB 2.0 headers with the word "USB" somehow printed onto the header itself, beneath the pins.

Now I have on the case a grand total of six USB 2.0 ports, in addition to the six 5Gbps ports, and three 10Gbps ports, that are more or less entirely cross-compatible. Wonder what I'm gonna do with these.

Trivia: The seller advertised cable shields grounded to pin 10 of the USB 2.0 header, but pin 10 is marked as NC in the manual for my MB, as presumably per standard. I wonder why they still did that - Though I suppose the cable shield would still be grounded to the chassis, via the connector receptacle and the PCI slot cover, whatever pin 10 might be (not) connected to.
You usually only connect one end of a shield to avoid ground loops, which may cause audio, hum or RFI issues.
 
You usually only connect one end of a shield to avoid ground loops, which may cause audio, hum or RFI issues.
Now that you mention it, it does look like one, if that pin 10 is actually anything other than floating as documented. Bridging chassis and electrical ground sounds unlikely, but a chassis ground loop through half of the motherboard...I think I might poke it with a continuity meter to find out, though...no, I'd better not.

Do motherboards generally actually contain and route chassis ground, anyway? It doesn't sound too likely.

What that seller said is bosh, then. But that's not the only one with pin 10 connected to cable shield and in turn chassis ground I've seen, though. Wonder why they still do that, considering it involved at least one more heat shrink for the cable shield, and one more pin connected.
 
Bought few small heatsinks and some heatsink paste thought of putting them on mobo VRM but it seems too small for them, the base is fine but it lacks height. No matter might put these on old AGP card memory or their VRM. I been watching necroware videos and he got a brilliant idea of slowing down fan on older system without fan controller so I buy a couple of LM2596 based DC to DC BULK converter just in case I ever need them. Could be useful for other stuff as well.

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Looks like it uses an InnoGrit controller. Probably an IG5236?

Do let me know how it holds up as you use it. I was eyeing a drive with the same controller (Fanxiang S770, which is probably the same drive anyway) a while ago before prices went to shit.
yeah the same from the Lexar NM800 Pro.
so far i've written 2.4TB and everything performs as expected... i hope it will last longer than the QLC drives i had so far :D.
 
238€ for a 4TB 176 layer TLC, 4GB DRAM Cache SSD that is on par with a 980 Pro/SN850X.
Copying files from my MP600 PRO XT wrote over 1100GB of data with 3-6GB/s non stop. Really impressive, considering it costs 100€ less than similar ones.
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You should submit it to the SSD database.

With my Pixel4 suddenly dying a few weeks ago, I put in an order for an Asus Zenfone 11 Ultra.

I'm used to smaller phones, so this massive 6.7" Zenfone 11 Ultra is a huge change for me. I do think its well designed: its much "taller" than you'd expect, so the width / grip actually feels fine (large, but fine). Its a bit too tall to comfortably type in landscape mode, and the aspect ratio is very weird in landscape mode IMO. Still, its a great phone to use in portrait mode since the extra tallness gives much more room for keyboard + icons.

I'd say the #1 feature I'm impressed with is stereo speakers. I'm definitely getting a 3d-like effect when watching Youtube, where the phone can make it appear that sound comes all around me (including slightly behind me!)

The phone's marketing makes a big deal about the 6-axis gimbal stabilizer. I haven't had any good practical shots with it yet, but I can confirm that when I point my camera and pretend I have a shaky hand, the gimbal is counter-acting my movements and making the shot more steady. Its not a perfectly steady camera, but its a clear and noticeable improvement.

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I think I can recommend the Asus Zenfone 11 Ultra. The main reason why I bought it was to have a Qualcomm 5G radio (note: Pixel 8a/8 do NOT have Qualcomm radios anymore and many people online have concerns about seemingly worse connection). Seeing that Asus still made phones, I'm giving this one a shot. It definitely feels like a solid flagship phone, though I would have preferred the smaller size of Asus's older designs (like the 10).

Alas, Asus is one of the worst when it comes to software support. Only guaranteeing 2 Android updates and 4 years of security updates. But aside from this software weakness, the phone's hardware is amazing. Top end Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen3, solid gaming support (its the same chip and screen as the Republic of Gamers phones, as ROG is also an Asus brand). Huge battery. Surprisingly good stereo sound. Traditional headphone jack. Physical Gimbal stabilizer, 50MP camera, etc. etc. I hate today's prices, but this is great hardware for what $899 gets you in 2024.

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Side note: I don't really like today's phone market. I wouldn't say that I'm "wow'd" by anything here, but its a workable phone at a competitive price that meets my requirements. I'm pissed off at how expensive phones have gotten, but I also recognize that living without a smartphone in today's era has become much more difficult.

In the weeks it took to get this phone picked out and shipped to me, living without group texts, living without messaging apps like Discord or other online services also messed up some social communications. And of course, the lack of GPS hampered drives to unfamiliar areas. I did manage to live the last 3 weeks without a smartphone however, so its still possible, but so much of modern life just assumes a smartphone now. Case in point: a few months ago, I couldn't order a taxi without a smartphone account. All the Taxis in my area want an account with them. So I'm happy to finally have a smartphone in my pocket again.
Asus makes alright phone, had a Zenfone 6 for a couple of years, but that's the issue, they only offer two OS upgrades and then slowly stop supporting their devices. You still seem to be getting longer support with the 11 than the 6 got. Sadly all the unique aspects are gone with the 11, it's just a "standard" phone, whereas Asus used to have some interesting quirky features like the flip camera (which actually was really nice the few times I used it for selfies).
 
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Quick update on my latest purchase up and running. I'll have to swap the drives out for something larger later as these were only meant to be a workspace/buffer for HDDs, but it'll do for now. I still haven't got the newer Wifi running in my laptop, so I'm limited to 100-110MB/s, but I'll check later tonight with the gaming rig to see if I can saturate the 2.5Gb connection.

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Edit: I'd call that pretty saturated.
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This guy just got dropped off.. nothing wrong with my current one, but I am tiring of the RGB life, so I got this, my kid can have my current one :)

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And I wanted to check out the V2 fans.. :)
 
A pack of 5 Arctic P14 fans for my updated backup rig.
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Only installed 3
 
So we had some weather this week and I decided that i was going to buy a new case for one of my mining rigs. The current case is the Cooler Master HAFXB and I love it. The issue is that since the CPU is mining all of the heat the rad produces is being dumped into the case. That makes everything hotter. I found a nice Antec case for $60 CAD but they wanted $19 for shipping on Newegg. So I thought to myself why not just get an air cooler. With the CPU being a 5950X I knew that I had to get something with good performance. I did not see anything that caught my eye so I did an Amazon search for Thermalright. For $41 Canadian or $30 US I don't think that there is an air cooler that can compete.


This guy just got dropped off.. nothing wrong with my current one, but I am tiring of the RGB life, so I got this, my kid can have my current one :)

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And I wanted to check out the V2 fans.. :)
Enjoy the 3300 RPM on the block
 
Enjoy the 3300 RPM on the block
This one does 3500, and my Aqua Elite does like 3450..

I think that Notte does like 5K? No thanks. I have talked to someone at OCN that had their pump fail or start too, totally put me off of the round style housing. I would rather use my air coolers :D
 
This one does 3500, and my Aqua Elite does like 3450..

I think that Notte does like 5K? No thanks. I have talked to someone at OCN that had their pump fail or start too, totally put me off of the round style housing. I would rather use my air coolers :D
Not sure if they updated the Pumps from when I got mine. For me I have a Cooler Master Nepton 280 still running on a mining rig. I am sure I bought that no later than 2014. I also have a Thermaltake Frio OCK that never got an AM4 update so it is a nice display piece.
 
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got 2nd hand Casio AE-1200WH for great price

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a cheap RJ45 to USB, for this one i have to say it's pretty solid with full aluminum
 
Two more Silverstone FHP141's off Ebay. At $16 each I couldn't resist. That's the best price I've seen them for in at least 10 years.
 
Picked up an LG 39" OLED today... This one:

https://www.bestbuy.com/site/lg-ult...tor-with-hdr400-black/6575398.p?skuId=6575398

Definitely wouldn't pay 1500 for it, but 500 off was too tempting.

Not 100% sure if ill keep it or not.. leaning towards yes.

Pixel density isn't great at 3440X1440.. its not TERRIBLE but i can tell a difference between this and my 38" @ 3840X1600.
Also thought i'd hate the aggressive curve but its actually kind of nice.
 
Picked up an LG 39" OLED today... This one:

https://www.bestbuy.com/site/lg-ult...tor-with-hdr400-black/6575398.p?skuId=6575398

Definitely wouldn't pay 1500 for it, but 500 off was too tempting.

Not 100% sure if ill keep it or not.. leaning towards yes.

Pixel density isn't great at 3440X1440.. its not TERRIBLE but i can tell a difference between this and my 38" @ 3840X1600.
Also thought i'd hate the aggressive curve but its actually kind of nice.
If they'd bring out this exact screen in flat I'd buy one yesterday. Still super jealous. 39"-40" is the perfect size for me.
 
If they'd bring out this exact screen in flat I'd buy one yesterday. Still super jealous. 39"-40" is the perfect size for me.

Agreed, Perfect size for an ultrawide.

My 38" has a 2300R(i think) curve and you can barely even notice it.
This one is much more aggressive, we'll see if i get used to it.
 
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Traded a pair of IEMs I wasn't using for it. 6 cores, 12 threads, 16GB RAM, 1TB Samsung 980 Pro, 4k touchscreen. All the laptop I'll need for a long time.
 
Traded a pair of IEMs I wasn't using for it. 6 cores, 12 threads, 16GB RAM, 1TB Samsung 980 Pro, 4k touchscreen. All the laptop I'll need for a long time.
I remember when XPS was their premium gaming line before they bought Alienware. What it turned into is not all bad.

Excellent find!
 
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