A "cheaper version of this card" is two r9 290x in Crossfire.
You condemn NVIDIA fanboys while saying how much you love to use AMD.
I would spend more on a nicer mouse. Maybe a G500? I like laser mice with high sensitivity.
I was implying that you were implying that.
That's like saying Intel's hyperthreaded CPUs such as the i7s have twice as many cores as they have, i.e. 8 cores. AMD's module design is their answer to Intel's hyperthreading. It's arguably better in theory, but that doesn't hold over into the real world.
Yep, nailed it. You can solve all of society's problems.
Ah, you're one of THOSE people...
So a year and a half later someone comments something completely irrelevant, then two years later you show up to defend him? Because I thought the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport not having free WiFi was shit? Jesus Christ you Dallasites are insecure.
Eh, I was looking at the recommended specs. I'm never below minimum, so I don't much care for what they are. An i7-3770K is top of the line besides the hexacores but a 560Ti is mid range two, nearly three, generations old.
It's also interesting that, clock speed aside, the CPU requirements are so much higher than the GPU requirements. Must be one hell of a CPU intensive game.
There will be losses in generating electricity then turning the electricity back into mechanical energy. There is always a loss when converting energy. On top of that, there would be a lot of added weight (a lot being relative, a few grams in racing can add up). Your idea is to replace a shaft that's probably carbon…
Yeah? Well our son builds rockets, and conquers countries, and he's even going out with his friends next weekend to combine these two great loves of his by colonizing Mars.
The OS is not limited. Your inability to grasp the UI doesn't mean the OS is less capable.
Yeah, it's just Ubuntu with XBMC bundled in, and I think boots to the XBMC 10 foot interface by default, but lets you go to the Ubuntu desktop if you'd like.
What? My media is entirely DRM free. You could play it on your macbook, a Linux desktop, a chromebook, and hell, I stream it to my Raspberry Pi. There isn't an Android store where you buy music/videos/books that only works on an Android phone. I'm not confined to any system. I did that on purpose.
Hundreds? Mine has five.
That's the first time that argument has ever popped up for me. I think if you can't remember what the application is called, you don't use it enough to need it.
A Raspberry Pi ($25 for no networking, $35 for one with networking) and a half decent SD card will do the trick. Get RaspBMC and play just about anything.