![]() I had been running the new Nvidia drivers for a week+ prior to that - so not thinking it was driver related. In ArchAge it is fine in the lowest graphic settings - turn it up at all and within 5 min my computer does a full shut down/reboot. Well that is the only game I am playing currently - but no issues with playing back video, etc. GPU temp: 43.0☌ (min:43.0☌ - max:48.0☌)Īny help/suggestions appreciated - realize I am a pretty green novice.Īre you having any issues in other games? > glcnd.exe microsoft.reader_8wekyb3d8bbwe (PID: 3336) Is this normal or did I screw something up when I put these in 2+ years ago? Should I try to update these somehow or? ![]() One card shows 2x the memory? (cards are physically identical) The GPU Shark part of that program - showed me big differences between the two cards - is this normal? Is there a way for a novice like myself to check these cards? I ran Furmark benchmark - no issues, ran fine, based on the web list of scores mine did fine (did not crash). But that applies to every case, even custom ones.I have two 560 Ti's in SLI - been having issues in a game (ArchAge) - trying to determine if I have a bad card or? From another post - pretty sure I am going to upgrade to a 970 - but all on backorder - meanwhile trying to solve this with the 560's. The harder part would be accommodating new GPUs, especially if the size limits what you can replace. Switching out ITX boards with new CPUs would definitely be useful. It would be nice, of course, if they have user-replaceable parts. Whether it's in an office or at home, that's the neat part. To me, the wow factor of the Shark case is the case itself, not what powers it. I think of collectors - people have different tastes, and they spend their money however they want. You can't judge on what people feel when they make their purchases. You invite a few friends over expecting them to "wow" over your new rig, and as soon as they find out it's got 2 year old tech inside they'll comment on how their rig out paces yours and be like "meh" instead. Think of the kind of person that is going to want to buy this kind of system. Husker said:And it's even more than that. We dig the retro colors, similar to what we saw recently on Dell's updated G15. This one also uses ITX motherboards and SFX power supplies, and Cooler Master is confirming more recent components, like Nvidia RTX 4000 and AMD 7000-series GPUs here. There's also a Mini X, which has side panels that can be swapped. This isn't the first time we've seen Cooler Master experiment with NUC: it suggested it would eventually launch the KFConsole with the NUC 9 Extreme Compute Element and a Core i9-9980HK, but that never materialized. In Q3, Cooler Master will have a few more PCs, including the AIOX NUC (also a code-name), using an Intel NUC with a 12th Gen Intel Core i9 and a custom cooler made by Cooler Master. The company says the system is small enough to carry around (though at 38.1 pounds, that's debatable), or at least fit on top of your desk. ![]() The chassis echoes elements of the company's iconic Cosmos case, with handles on top, but is much smaller, measuring 14.63 x 10.47 x 5.88 inches. Liquid goes from the radiator to the left side panel, the pump, the CPU, the GPU, the right panel, and back to the radiator to repeat the process. Both the CPU and GPU are liquid-cooled, and the coolant runs through the side panels, which have 21-fin heatsinks. What Cooler Master is pushing with the Cooling X, unsurprisingly, is the cooling solution for the parts. ![]()
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