Exciting News! Thanks to PCWorld for recognizing the ADATA SE920 External SSD as an Editor‘s Choice. “If you want an uber-fast external SSD, then the SE920 is likely what you want. The SE920 is a whole lot cheaper and easier to carry around. Good job, ADATA.“ Perfect for gamers and content creators, the SE920 offers top-notch performance and ease of use. Learn more: https://lnkd.in/gABc6Uy4 #ADATA #SE920 #PCWorld #AwardWinning #Performance #Storage #externalstorage #externalSSD
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Check out the latest Echo 20 SuperDock review 😍 "In this video, we're taking a look at the Sonnet Echo 20 SuperDock, a Thunderbolt 4 dock with tons of ports and a built in NVME SSD Slot! I also really love the built in RCA jacks on this dock for plugging into my powered speakers." #NVMe #SSD #NVMeSSD #dockingstation
The BEST Thunderbolt Dock for Mac Users: Sonnet Echo 20 SuperDock Review
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Learn about the new performance feature coming to Edge soon - the RAM slider! --- https://lnkd.in/gvhNfciW --- #performance #browserimprovement #edgeram #microsoftedge #browserperformance
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Beginning of the week, let's look at Bootlin open-source contributions from last week: - Louis Chauvet posted a v3 of his patch series improving the VKMS Linux kernel driver to reimplement line-per-line pixel conversion and add YUV support (relying on earlier work from another contributor on this topic): https://lnkd.in/gxhVj2i3 - Alexis Lothoré continued his work on the test infrastructure of OpenEmbedded/Yocto, and submitted a v4 of his "testimage: add failed test post actions and fetch more data" series, https://lnkd.in/gexuAiVV - Köry Maincent continued his Linux kernel work in 2 areas: selection of the HW that does PTP timestamping, version 9 was sent at https://lnkd.in/gggRuQW4, and support for Power over Ethernet, version 5 was sent at https://lnkd.in/gyMdc3PZ - Bastien Curutchet is trying to extend the Device Tree binding for the Texas Instruments DP83640 Ethernet PHY, with a v2 of this patch series: https://lnkd.in/gcxNqZwN - Luca Ceresoli is improving some bits of the OpenEmbedded documentation: https://lnkd.in/g4dZnURM - Herve Codina continues to work on Device Tree overlays and generally runtime device removal topics, with several patch series on this topic: https://lnkd.in/g42y9GVh and https://lnkd.in/gSaE9cDh - Herve Codina is also working on a completely different topic: enabling HDLC support on some old NXP Semiconductors PowerPC platforms, with a v5 of his patch series: https://lnkd.in/gkKGCUaM - Théo Lebrun continues to submit a lot of patch series enabling various devices on Mobileye EyeQ5 platforms: GPIO support (https://lnkd.in/gHn7HRWK), I2C (https://lnkd.in/gZEjk3T4) and system controller (https://lnkd.in/gnipAUTa) - Maxime Chevallier is improving some bits of Linux kernel documentation related to SFP support: https://lnkd.in/guaqV6Rz, but also posted a v9 of his series implementing PHY listing and link typology tracking: https://lnkd.in/gDuYmGcs - Thomas Perrot worked on OP-TEE, he saw his pull request fixing an issue on Microchip Technology Inc. platforms merged (https://lnkd.in/gC6PJtg9), and some of his work for SAMA7 processor support got submitted as part of a larger pull request at https://lnkd.in/gvg-CcP3 ... more in the comments ...
[PATCH v3 0/9] drm/vkms: Reimplement line-per-line pixel conversion for plane reading - Louis Chauvet
lore.kernel.org
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The first handheld to use PlaytronOS is some Web3 thing - the SuiPlay0x1 https://bit.ly/3PWunqY
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RAM capacity is more important than RAM speed is what I tell clients. Jayztwocents on YouTube just dropped a video showing this to be true regarding RAM speed comparisons in gaming work loads. In professional workloads, speed may help but then I say stability is king as well. More memory channels offer more benefit than a fast dual channel kit like that in systems with an Intel i9 or Ryzen platforms. Your needs may vary but this is just generalized information. All it takes is one crash and the ROI is lost for maybe over a years worth of working hours. Anyways, I digress. Here is the video link at about the 14min mark with Jay talking about a few interesting things. How about you share a time you ran out of system RAM and how it negatively affected your workflow? Comment below ✍ https://lnkd.in/gwwFV8qu
Stop wasting money on fast Ram!! 7200MHz vs 4800MHz...
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Let's have a look at the open-source contributions from Bootlin engineers from last week, with quite a few things once again. Most of it are Linux kernel contributions, but there's also some Yocto Project project and some Buildroot work as well: - Romain Gantois submitted the 7th iteration of his patch series adding support for the GMAC1 Ethernet interface in the Renesas Electronics RZN1 processor, and this iteration got merged and will be part of Linux 6.10! See https://lnkd.in/e_YqBb6U - While at the Linux Display Hackfest organized in Spain by Igalia, Louis Chauvet continued working on... graphics topics, and submitted a v7 and then v8 of his series improving the Linux kernel VKMS to support YUV pixel formats (https://lnkd.in/ecjPTRie), and he also sent a first iteration of a series adding support for several other plane formats: https://lnkd.in/eBNE-pkn - Herve Codina fixed a bug in the lan966x network driver: https://lnkd.in/eAnKqYyi - Grégory Clement sent a v2 of the patch series adding initial support for the Mobileye EyeQ6H processor: https://lnkd.in/evgM3Yjb - Thomas Petazzoni contributed two changes to Buildroot: one to fix hash of some Cargo-fetched packages, one to switch to Gitlab as the issue tracker: https://lnkd.in/e4dY-VCg, https://lnkd.in/e-5pNkWR - João Marcos Costa fixed an issue in the OpenEmbedded/Yocto CI machinery: https://lnkd.in/ecD6B5eU - Alexis Lothoré continued his work on the Microchip Technology Inc. WILC driver: https://lnkd.in/eB6ZV_hp - Thomas Richard posted a v6 of his series adding suspend/resume support for the PCIe interface on recent Texas Instruments processors - Richard Genoud added power management support to the TPS6594 driver: https://lnkd.in/eNS2Htf4 - Miquèl Raynal submitted a v2 of his NAND early identification fixes: https://lnkd.in/e5udNp4m - Thomas Bonnefille submitted a v2 of his series adding I2C support for the Alibaba Group TH1520 RISC-V processor: https://lnkd.in/eS6dgP-7
[PATCH v8 00/17] drm/vkms: Reimplement line-per-line pixel conversion for plane reading - Louis Chauvet
lore.kernel.org
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I have successfully tested the RC7 of kernel 6.9 with openSUSE Tumbleweed PPC64 in a virtual QEMU ppce500 machine:
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The pros and pros list doesn’t lie… here are five reasons why you might want to upgrade to an SSD. Read more: https://kings.tn/3P7UwTp #PCstorage
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Feeling lost in the world of HDDs, SSDs, and NVMEs? Don't worry, we've got you covered! Think of this post as your guide to understanding these different types of storage drives and finding the perfect fit for your needs. Imagine your storage drive as a briefcase 💼 : HDD: Like a sturdy duffel bag, it's large and affordable, holding tons of data, but slower to access. Good for everyday files and backups. SSD: Similar to a sleek briefcase, it's fast and reliable, allowing you to access files instantly, but with less storage space and a higher price tag. Ideal for everyday use and performance-oriented tasks. NVMe: Think of this as a high-tech travel case, offering lightning-fast speed and access, perfect for demanding tasks like editing and gaming, but coming at a premium cost. So, which briefcase is right for you? Read the complete article here: https://lnkd.in/gPiPhVGW #hdd #sdd #nvme #storage #storagedevices #storagecomparison
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