The proteins that control our lives are like rolling tumbleweeds. Each has a tangled, unique shape, with spiky side-branches dotting its surface. Hidden in the nooks and crannies are the locks to battle our most notorious foes—cancer, diabetes, infections, or even aging—if we can find the right key. We just got a universal key maker. […]
Chef Chris Sayegh recently opened Nostalgia Bar and Lounge, which is also home to the Secret Supper Club—a limited, members-only cannabis dining experience.
Last November we took a look at Intel's first 12th generation desktop processors, and today we're back to finish the job. In that initial piece, we reviewed the Core i9 12900K and Core i5 12600K and came away impressed. As it turns out, a modern 10nm process, a larger L3 cache and a new hybrid architecture with 'Performance' and 'Efficient' cores adds up to a very capable CPU lineup. However, both the $589 12900K and $289 12600K have cheaper equivalents with fewer E-cores that ought to provide very similar gaming performance - so this time we're taking a look at those chips, the $409 Core i7 12700K and the $167 Core i5 12400F.
Looking at the specs for each CPU in the table below, you can see that the logic behind the 12900K/12700K and the 12600K/12400F pairings. In each case, we have the same number of hyper-threaded Performance cores - eight for the high-end (i9/i7) parts and six for the mid-range (i5) offerings - with four fewer Efficient cores in the lower-end example. That means moving from eight E-cores in the 12900K to four in the 12700K, while the 12600K's four E-cores turn into zero E-cores on the 12400F.
Market analyst Credible Crypto has set forth that CME hole filling is not assured The analyst additionally identified that the underside is probably going in for Hedera (HBAR) Popular crypto trader and market analyst Credible Crypto has given his views on the worth actions of Bitcoin and Hedera Hashgraph. The analyst shared the forecast tweets […]
Over the course of the last week, it's been the Spanish who have been at the fore of the Ultimate Team game, taking up many spots in the previous FIFA 22 TOTW. Now though, as Team of the Week (TOTW) #22 begins to shape up, a whole new squad of players have joined the party. There are some seriously big EPL names included here too.
If you're at all interested in making seriously tiny, full-powered PCs, you've probably heard of DAN Cases. The boutique manufacturer designs mini-ITX cases that can hold full-power components. The designs are highly sought-after in the home build community, not least because the small company can never make enough cases to meet demand, even with its relatively high prices. A partnership with Taiwanese case maker Lian-Li fixes both of those problems.
The new A4-H20 cases are variants of the original DAN A4-SFX design. While these versions are slightly larger — 11 liters of internal volume versus just 7.2 liters — they're also more capable, stretching to accommodate graphics cards up to triple-slot size and 322mm in length. On top of that, the top chamber can handle an all-in-one liquid CPU cooler (something the original design struggled with) at up to 240mm long. It all fits into an itty-bitty box 140mm wide by 244mm tall by 326mm long (5.5 x 9.6 x 12.8 inches — approximately the size of a sneaker box).
The only real compromise in terms of hardware, aside from a mini-ITX motherboard's usual lack of extra expansion options, is the reliance on a SFX or SFX-L power supply. Depending on which CPU and GPU you put into your build, you might run into some power issues with more bombastic pairings. But at least it'll be easy to assemble; removable panels on all sides make the sandwich-style frame more accessible for tricky cable routing. On the side-mounted front panel you'll find a standard USB 3.0 port, USB Type-C, and audio input and output jacks.
Lian-Li
The A4-H20 is also considerably cheaper than previous DAN Case designs, starting at just $120 for the PCIe 3.0 version. The PCIe 4.0 version is $155 (distinctions necessary for the side-mounted GPU riser), and shipping to the US adds an extra $10 to both versions. The case comes in black or silver color options.
Reading Time: 2minutes Kevin Murcko, Founder of CoinMetro teams up with AdLunam co founder Jason Fernades as Crypto Connoisseurs for YouTube Series What – Live Streamed update about the latest news in the cryptocurrency markets from Kevin Murcko of CoinMetro and Jason Fernandes of AdLunam. When – Every Saturday 8.30 AM GMT Two […]