poke01
Diamond Member
- Mar 8, 2022
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what is a desktop?desktop was simply a necessity of the past which does not apply anymore
what is a desktop?desktop was simply a necessity of the past which does not apply anymore
9950X3D-class CPUs are becoming so flexible/cold/light to run that are even in handheld devices
All kinds of Laptops, including the most expensive Alienware/Dell/HP/Lenovos out there. Many of which are using liquid metal to cool the CPU and possibly GPU. I've seen countless examples of boards with faulty power rails, power delivery inputs, and failing mosfets, some of them destroying the CPU in the process. And the use of liquid metal in these machines in so bad that it's leaking out from the dam and shorting components. You can't just take the average Joe and figure out what components are bad and need to be replaced. Sending your laptop to one of these repair facilities is easily $250 or more for a repair, which doesn't cover the cost of a motherboard.8. what kind of laptops. there are 1000s models in the market, most are not good by design
but the good models are here to stay, their mobos rarely fry
9. wrong, you can buy replacement laptop mobos. if so worried just pay $200 extra for 3-4 years warranty
also the biggest benefit of a DIY PC, you are not reliant on the OEM for part sourcing.All kinds of Laptops, including the most expensive Alienware/Dell/HP/Lenovos out there. Many of which are using liquid metal to cool the CPU and possibly GPU. I've seen countless examples of boards with faulty power rails, power delivery inputs, and failing mosfets, some of them destroying the CPU in the process. And the use of liquid metal in these machines in so bad that it's leaking out from the dam and shorting components. You can't just take the average Joe and figure out what components are bad and need to be replaced. Sending your laptop to one of these repair facilities is easily $250 or more for a repair, which doesn't cover the cost of a motherboard.
Again, you can not buy CURRENT GEN or even a few generation old motherboards for laptops on Aliexpress. Laptop motherboards are proprietary and expensive to replace. Show me a motherboard on Aliexpress with a 9955HX3D, I'll wait.
Not to mention you can barely find a laptop with that chip in it, but you can find 9950X3D CPUs all over the place.
Good points but the large desktop display is still a big plus for users I think. It's something you don't need to be a power user to appreciate.most people here are super-powerusers i.e. max 2% of the total market 😉
my argument is that even for 99% of powerusers, proper 2025 laptops replace desktop 100%
(except edge cases needing more than 16TB NVMe storage or full desktop 5090 for 4K 120fps lol)
when super-powerusers here try to reach out for niche arguments like more than 16TB storage or other inaccurate arguments,
then....
yes lads
My 7800X3D going full tilt throttles with a NH-D15S cooling it. Sticking that kind of CPU in a laptop (let alone anything smaller) and expecting comparable performance is ridiculous.
And it only runs for 2 hrs unplugged better get 275HXeveryone seems to be missing the core argument which is:
9950X3D-class CPUs are becoming so flexible/cold/light to run that are even in handheld devices
let that sink in...... most commenters here live in the past
the future of computing is embedding top-end CPUs in small factors everywhere
desktop was simply a necessity of the past which does not apply anymore
I call this.... the fastandfurious6 law
give me a real scenario to test live
Yup, modern laptops are no more reliable. That's why I basically ignore the claims of "no moving parts = reliable". Because I'd argue machines that have handful of components which are moving parts are far more reliable than modern day 1000-plus component electronics. I went and helped replace a door switch for an old dryer. It had a schematic on the door. Couldn't be simpler. It will probably last another ten-plus years before it dies. I reverse-engineered a chest freezer for our family that broke, repaired the board, and that has been 4 years now.All kinds of Laptops, including the most expensive Alienware/Dell/HP/Lenovos out there. Many of which are using liquid metal to cool the CPU and possibly GPU. I've seen countless examples of boards with faulty power rails, power delivery inputs, and failing mosfets, some of them destroying the CPU in the process. And the use of liquid metal in these machines in so bad that it's leaking out from the dam and shorting components. You can't just take the average Joe and figure out what components are bad and need to be replaced. Sending your laptop to one of these repair facilities is easily $250 or more for a repair, which doesn't cover the cost of a motherboard.
Most of Anandtech visitors can't figure out what components are bad. Most actual average joes can barely push the power button, and vast majority aren't even aware of how to find the reset switch on their desktop PC. They aren't dumb, they just don't have their lives revolving 24/7 around computers and electronics. They need patience and understanding.You can't just take the average Joe and figure out what components are bad
high-end desktop CPUs these days can't be stopped from throttling with purely air coolers
The limiting of the CPU speed within the manufacturer's specs is throttling. Furthermore, when a desktop CPU is reviewed, no-one in the business benchmarks it with a sliver of heatsink that one may find in a tablet.Not really throttling...
what you describe doesn't threaten grinding anything to a halt
it should be differentiated because 99% of throttling cases are actually grinding stuff to halt, not in what you describe i.e. more power to give under stronger cooling
article said:Certainly the most important takeaway is that the performance differences are really small, even 2.5% performance loss on average will be something you'd never notice. Props again to AMD for making the thermal throttling so well-behaved and gradual.
Yes.Yup, modern laptops are no more reliable. That's why I basically ignore the claims of "no moving parts = reliable". Because I'd argue machines that have handful of components which are moving parts are far more reliable than modern day 1000-plus component electronics. I went and helped replace a door switch for an old dryer. It had a schematic on the door. Couldn't be simpler. It will probably last another ten-plus years before it dies. I reverse-engineered a chest freezer for our family that broke, repaired the board, and that has been 4 years now.
Also, laptops put more things on one board. In a laptop, touchpad has it's own controller, keyboard has another, even a dGPU is on the same PCB, RAM is often on the board. It's just more chances for failure. If people didn't associate their financial sink with emotional sink, more would understand especially on gaming laptops, something more than a token battery capacity makes no sense.
I did attempt laptop repair before. I know for a fact that you can't hook up any LCD. You need the exact replacement, because even the same model name, same year, same CPU, RAM, GPU, may have 5 different panel variants. It's stupid.
I ACTUALLY care for the environment unlike the fake ones that think paper straws are needed, banning plastic bags on grocery stores, when the same group of people care a zit about 100 different chemicals going into the landfill with disposable electronics, while being outright lobbying against small repair stores. Hypocrites.
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Louis Rossmann
Contact: youtube@rossmanngroup.com - Louis reads this - UNLESS YOU COPY & PASTE FROM CHATGPT, IN WHICH CASE I DELETE. I TALK TO VIEWERS, NOT ROBOTS. I started as a studio repair technician at Avatar & started a Macbook component level logic board repair business. This channel shows repair &...www.youtube.com
Most of Anandtech visitors can't figure out what components are bad. Most actual average joes can barely push the power button, and vast majority aren't even aware of how to find the reset switch on their desktop PC. They aren't dumb, they just don't have their lives revolving 24/7 around computers and electronics. They need patience and understanding.
You live in the reality that desktop PCs are already obsolete for 99% of users
yes!
If you stick a high-end desktop CPU like an X3D into a laptop or even worse, a tablet, you're going to forego *a lot* of performance
So your argument is so weak you have to make up fake quotes to respond to?
[...]
Handbrake video encoding in software, h.264 or h.265. In the last few days I've been ripping DS9 seasons to my computer. The first stage is to decrypt and dump the disk image to fixed storage with MakeMKV, then in Handbrake I use the following settings: Super HQ 576p h.264, decrease quality to RF20, make sure deinterlacing is enabled (it is by default).
My CPU + NH-D15S at full tilt can sustain 4.6 to 4.7GHz, temp hits 80C in less than 10 seconds.
My god, man, that's brutal! Get an Nvidia GPU and run NVENC instead, give that poor CPU room to breathe!
I have a 5900XT, and I've been playing with Handbrake as well, but the hardware encoder on the RTX3080 is still much faster and just as good!
Not sure why GPU compute has a 'lower bitrate' than CPU compute.Not for the same quality/bitrate I would bet. Sometimes that matters.
GPUs have dedicated hardware called media engines for encoding and decoding video. It isn't done by GPU compute. Hardware accelerated encoding is very fast and energy efficient, but videos encoded this way have worse visual quality for a given bitrate.Not sure why GPU compute has a 'lower bitrate' than CPU compute.
I know what media engines are. Do any modern media engines not have full codec support? Apple's do. I thought the latest gen Nvidia ones did as well.GPUs have dedicated hardware called media engines for encoding and decoding video. It isn't done by GPU compute. Hardware accelerated encoding is very fast and energy efficient, but videos encoded this way have worse visual quality for a given bitrate.
You realise you are talking about a lossy compression scheme? Resulting bitrate has no meaning on its own, it is fully configurable, in the first place. Quality achieved at given bitrate varies massively between encoders.Not sure why GPU compute has a 'lower bitrate' than CPU compute.
My god, man, that's brutal! Get an Nvidia GPU and run NVENC instead, give that poor CPU room to breathe!
I have a 5900XT, and I've been playing with Handbrake as well, but the hardware encoder on the RTX3080 is still much faster and just as good!
It's not a matter of codec support. Even with the same codec, resolution, and bitrate, hardware encoding has worse visual quality than software encoding.I know what media engines are. Do any modern media engines not have full codec support? Apple's do. I thought the latest gen Nvidia ones did as well.
