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[5095.00 --> 5096.00] And aren't even gonna watch. |
[5096.00 --> 5097.00] Yeah. |
[5097.00 --> 5098.00] Yeah. |
[5098.00 --> 5099.00] That's kinda ridiculous. |
[5099.00 --> 5100.00] That's pretty much it. |
[5100.00 --> 5103.00] Someone in the chat, sorry I was trying to watch the chat for someone to correct me. |
[5103.00 --> 5105.00] Apparently, uh, you do have a followers list. |
[5105.00 --> 5106.00] Okay, there you go. |
[5106.00 --> 5108.00] So you have a sublist and a followers list. |
[5108.00 --> 5110.00] Apparently douche canoe is not a thing? |
[5110.00 --> 5111.00] I've heard that. |
[5111.00 --> 5112.00] Really? |
[5112.00 --> 5113.00] Was it me? |
[5113.00 --> 5114.00] Maybe. |
[5114.00 --> 5115.00] That's possible. |
[5115.00 --> 5118.00] I remember it was a big thing. |
[5118.00 --> 5125.00] My group of friends got called douche carts one year at PAX and we were like, wow, that's amazing. |
[5125.00 --> 5127.00] And we kind of adopted that for a little while. |
[5127.00 --> 5128.00] There are so many great topics left. |
[5128.00 --> 5129.00] We have to go really fast. |
[5129.00 --> 5130.00] Keystone Cat posted this. |
[5130.00 --> 5132.00] This is from MumbaiMirror.com. |
[5132.00 --> 5136.00] Electronics printed with a t-shirt printer. |
[5136.00 --> 5138.00] Holy actual crap. |
[5138.00 --> 5145.00] This combined with 3D printing would literally mean printing your own consumer electronics. |
[5145.00 --> 5147.00] Very simple ones. |
[5147.00 --> 5148.00] Yeah. |
[5148.00 --> 5151.00] I mean, we're talking like, what were they saying they printed? |
[5151.00 --> 5155.00] Like a four bit, um, hold on. |
[5155.00 --> 5156.00] Doesn't show. |
[5156.00 --> 5157.00] Yeah, it's not in the notes. |
[5157.00 --> 5160.00] It's in the article, but super, super simple stuff. |
[5160.00 --> 5165.00] But the electronic circuits are printed using unique materials, environmentally friendly methods, |
[5165.00 --> 5170.00] and the way, on top of everyday flexible materials such as plastic, aluminum foil, and even paper. |
[5170.00 --> 5180.00] Resistors, transistors, and capacitors, the key components of a complex electric circuit are printed using non-toxic organic materials like silver nanoparticles, carbon, and plastics. |
[5180.00 --> 5183.00] So a new startup company is being established to commercialize the invention, |
[5183.00 --> 5190.00] and a multinational biomedical company has also expressed interest in adopting the application of printed electronics for biomedical devices. |
[5190.00 --> 5191.00] Wow. |
[5191.00 --> 5192.00] Super cool. |
[5192.00 --> 5193.00] What a big deal. |
[5193.00 --> 5195.00] You just talked really fast. |
[5195.00 --> 5196.00] Sorry. |
[5196.00 --> 5197.00] You got it though. |
[5197.00 --> 5198.00] Thank you. |
[5198.00 --> 5199.00] That was a good job. |
[5199.00 --> 5200.00] Um, so that's cool. |
[5200.00 --> 5204.00] Oh, Nvidia's multi-frame anti-aliasing has finally been tested. |
[5204.00 --> 5212.00] So our good buddy Ryan Shrout over at PC Perspective has taken a pretty, I'm not going to call it in-depth, Ryan, but I'll call it- |
[5212.00 --> 5213.00] Oh, Rex. |
[5213.00 --> 5217.00] I'll call it a pretty, a pretty adequate look at MFAA. |
[5217.00 --> 5224.00] Now the problem with the way most people are going to try and look at MFAA is they're going to try and take a screenshot or a FRAPS recording. |
[5224.00 --> 5225.00] That won't work. |
[5225.00 --> 5236.00] Because the way screenshots and FRAPS recordings work is they take an image of the frame that is being presented at an earlier stage than the actual display output. |
[5236.00 --> 5251.00] Now the way MFAA works is it actually blends the anti-aliasing that it's applying in one matrix on the previous frame and in another matrix on the next frame together on the frame that the viewer sees. |
[5251.00 --> 5252.00] Okay. |
[5252.00 --> 5269.00] So it, it, it does 2x MSAA effectively in two different ways and then present it to the viewer as 4x MSAA, but they're calling it MFAA because it's not quite the same thing because it's using this blending technique. |
[5269.00 --> 5271.00] So in stills, okay, right. |
[5271.00 --> 5281.00] So the way you have to capture it is by actually capturing the display output using a capture card, something that PCPer already does for all of their graphics card benchmarks. |
[5281.00 --> 5291.00] Anyway, so they went ahead and did some captures and you guys should definitely check out the article where you can have a much better look at what they look like than this, you know, compressed video view here. |
[5291.00 --> 5297.00] But it looks pretty darn good in relatively non complex scenarios. |
[5297.00 --> 5307.00] It looks a lot closer to MF to 4x MSAA than to 2x MSAA and the performance hit is not as much as 4x MSAA. |
[5307.00 --> 5309.00] In more complex scenes. |
[5309.00 --> 5313.00] So there was one from, I think, crisis three that Ryan was looking at. |
[5313.00 --> 5320.00] It didn't look as good as 4x MSAA but still better than 2x and the performance hit is less. |
[5320.00 --> 5323.00] So Nvidia's technology looks like a winner. |
[5323.00 --> 5328.00] Except right now it's only compatible with 20 games. |
[5328.00 --> 5334.00] Now, so it's a white listed game support as opposed to black listing the ones that don't work. |
[5334.00 --> 5338.00] So it looks like Nvidia is going through and specifically validating games. |
[5338.00 --> 5344.00] Once they add it to GeForce Experience so it turns on and off automatically, I guess this is less of a concern. |
[5344.00 --> 5350.00] But right now it just doesn't give you any warning whatsoever if you launch a game and it says, |
[5350.00 --> 5353.00] it doesn't come up and say, hey, by the way, your MFAA isn't working. |
[5353.00 --> 5354.00] There's going to be more of a performance hit. |
[5354.00 --> 5356.00] You might want to tweak your settings. |
[5356.00 --> 5362.00] So it just happens in the background on white listed games and we have no idea what support's going to look like moving forward. |
[5362.00 --> 5364.00] There is no SLI support yet. |
[5364.00 --> 5366.00] So only single card support. |
[5366.00 --> 5369.00] But it's working for now. |
[5369.00 --> 5371.00] For now. |
[5371.00 --> 5373.00] In certain things. |
[5373.00 --> 5380.00] Intel revealed it will offer SSDs based on 3D NAND. |
[5380.00 --> 5382.00] This was posted by QWERTY Warrior on the forum. |
[5382.00 --> 5384.00] The original article is from Tech Report. |
[5384.00 --> 5385.00] Look at that. |
[5385.00 --> 5387.00] We're posting all the articles from our buddies in the last couple minutes here. |
[5387.00 --> 5389.00] We got Scott from Tech Report. |
[5389.00 --> 5390.00] Ryan from PC. |
[5390.00 --> 5392.00] Well, mind you, Ryan's not my buddy. |
[5392.00 --> 5393.00] I kind of hate that guy. |
[5393.00 --> 5394.00] Whoa. |
[5394.00 --> 5395.00] Even more shots fired. |
[5395.00 --> 5396.00] Yeah. |
[5396.00 --> 5397.00] I'm just kidding, Ryan, if you're watching this. |
[5397.00 --> 5398.00] I know you're not. |
[5398.00 --> 5401.00] You don't watch cool programming like Wancho. |
[5402.00 --> 5405.00] Too busy watching the PC per podcast. |
[5405.00 --> 5406.00] Oh. |
[5406.00 --> 5407.00] Too many P's in that. |
[5407.00 --> 5408.00] That's why it will never succeed. |
[5408.00 --> 5410.00] Well, triple rect, I guess. |
[5410.00 --> 5411.00] All right. |
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