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BitMaster

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Posts posted by BitMaster

  1. I can only second LucShep's perspective, I basically had to make the same decision couple months ago, 27" was my goal.

    My only difference is that I already see 32" as 4k territory, ppi wise, but it is still acceptable, similar/better  to a FHD @ 24" .

    I ended up with an Asus  XC27ACG 1440p and really like it. I have an older 27" 1440p Asus Gsync that my son uses now and HDR makes a big difference, as that is were mine differ.

    I don't strive for max FPS, rather a solid base fps that rarely fluctuates, regardless what game I play.

     

  2. Am 15.7.2025 um 14:56 schrieb Raven (Elysian Angel):

    I recently upgraded from a 5900X to 9800X3D and I observed the minimum framerates go up by up to 50%, especially around busy air bases. Now the frame rates no longer dip around an airbase, while previously busy air bases were the hardest on my system. It truly is night-and-day difference and it transforms the experience.

    ^This....foremost the low 1% get's fixed. Seeing this on X3D's that I have built and service.

  3. Am 30.6.2025 um 12:11 schrieb Dragon1-1:

    There's actually one feature that's really handy to have in a sim: free spinning scroll wheel. Great for quickly turning dials. You won't find that in most gaming mice, though. I use a Razer Basilisk because it's the only non-Logitech mouse that combines free scroll with wireless. This makes for a mouse that's very handy in a sim. It was expensive, but not excessively so. So I say, get any mouse that has an unlockable scroll wheel. Useful for work, too (scrolling through a large document, for instance).

    Yes, it's one of the stand-out features, free flying wheeeeeeeel

    When I come to my desk and any of my kids clicked my G502 into non-free-wheel I get GRHHHHHHHH !   honestly, I hate mice with locked/rastered wheels, using Logitech with free-wheel for over a decade, no way back....that or a Mac mouse, that is equally easy to scroll.

    • Like 1
  4. If I had to pick one that is free I would likely pick opnsense or pfsense. I have played around with it in VMware a while ago and it's pretty straight forward for standard setups.

    If you've build a cloud setup, then it will be not much different. 

     

    I have no first hand info on what's popular in the US. I use Lancom over here if I can choose, but often I have to deal with the Router that there is, that's part of my job.

    Looking back through the years, I know which companies I don't prefer, mildly speaking. SInce I have used my own DIY Linux Routers back in ISDN years, 1998, I don't have

    to accept, I had and have options. But to be fair, I use a Provider owned Fritz!Box! Cable edition for years, 1Gbit, static IP etc., it's all I need. I have just sold an enterprise UTM Firewall

    Appliance, Linux based, on eBay for good money as the last thing I want and need in my Home/SoHo is a firewall that needs constant attention. So there is a gap between what one needs

    at home and what`sreally available on the market. Reliable, secure, LONG term support, OpenSOurce, Expandable,   Asus, Netgear, etc.  all have nice boxes but miserable support, lousy

    software, things AVM does 10x better with the Fritz Eco System. So to fill the gap, use a DIY Linux opnsense/pfsense on a mini-PC.

     

    For the kicks,

    You can install & configure it in VMware in such a way, that you dont have WAN until you fire up your virtual router, aka, test it on your rig before you deploy it. VMware is free meanwhile btw.

     

  5. get 96GB for such a new system, it already stands on the horizon that 96GB is the new standard soon ( 1-2 years ) accepted by most builders.

    I would personally even do 128GB  if that was available with good timings tbh

    • Like 1
  6. You do not want to use any Mesh-System of any kind for gaming that is FPS based, you add considerable latency by using any Mesh.

     

    One should understand what a Mesh system is and how the specific one in use reacts and routes traffic.

    One Router and one Client do not need a Mesh nor do they present one. You need at least 2 AP's in addition to a router with WiFi to create a so called Mesh system.

    By definition, the Mesh is rerouting your traffic on another path if the AP you are connected lost connection on the shortest path to the gateway but the Mesh system has another route, aka MORE HOPS usually = more latency, to the gateway..or whatever destination inside your LAN. By logic, the 2 AP's ( often fed by WiFi only, no LAN connection to the router ) must be able to communicate via WiFi to have the option to reroute traffic. Some systems, like AVM's Mesh include LAN  and WiFi connected Access Points and use intelligent steering...either way...all adds lag in DCS...it is not great for gaming per se !

    If you need a good router, built it yourself with Linux if you can, it's not that hard...or choose a company that has proper and long term support and cares for their devices. I would absolutely stay away from Asus and all brands that do not do network devices as their prime business, let me tell you that as someone who works in IT. If you are in Europe, get AVM Fritz!Box, that is a very good box. If you cant get one of those, consider DIY, with a Mini-PC or older PC and one of the many ready-to-boot-usb-linux versions. The knowledge you gain pays back.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  7. Am 11.6.2025 um 03:26 schrieb Markus77:

    Hi,

    MSI expresses itself a little more precisely than ASUS, here in the case of a MAG X870 TOMAHAWK WIFI:
    ....
    4x DDR5 UDIMM, maximum memory capacity 256GB
    Memory support DDR5 8400 - 5600 (OC) MT/s / 5600 - 4800 (JEDEC) MT/s
    Ryzen™ 9000 series processors max. overclocking frequency:
    - 1DPC 1R Maximum speed up to 8400+ MT/s
    - 1DPC 2R Maximum speed up to 6400+ MT/s
    - 2DPC 1R Maximum speed up to 6400+ MT/s
    - 2DPC 2R Maximum speed up to 4800+ MT/s
    ...
    This means that with 2 DIMMS per channel (2DPC), which corresponds to four modules, the maximum speed drops significantly (4800MT/s instead of 6400 MT/s). Put simply, this means that you lose approx. 25% memory-speed.

    Greetings

    Heck, there you go. 

    Now combine all above info into 1 decision, risc the gamble, yes or no ? That's the baseline I guess.

    When you can risc your work... risc it if you love tinkering and usually don't give up, love watching Bios passing by..or Not, and love the one beep that solves it all. 

    When you need your work... don't even think about straying aside, no Support will then be willing to help you usually, BSOD's come and go as they like, Data corruption etc...

    Dialing in your RAM is always a gamble and even 2 identical boards with same RAM kits might behave different, with the same or different CPU, the variables are many.

     

    I run 2DPC 2R way above specs, at insane Volts...for years..rocksolid VMware 99% RAM full tilt for hours, no BSOD's....but if it wouldn't, there is nobody to blame but myself.

    • Like 1
  8. I would not risc the 4 modules gamble just for DCS when you also aim for low latency and likely 6000MT/s. That's not what 4 modules is for, for now.

    If you do math, rendering, AI...yes, then latency and speed is not so important, there, volume counts.

     

    I would go 2x 48GB, 6000MT/s and CL30 or lower if I had to buy today.

    If I needed it as a true WS, I would buy a Dell with Support...LoL

    • Like 2
  9. DCS having stutter is one thing, blank screens while reading email is a serious thing.

    If it still persists, boot a Linux USB stick and see if you have the same "everywhere and always" freezes and blanks...if yes...it's your hardware or even firmware.

    Could well be hardware... like said before,, reseat the card, make sure temps are ok even in idle.

     

    Heck, my idle temp was 81°C last week...ehhhmm  WHAAAT !??   well, turned out, the night before I moved the case a few inches back and forth...I squeezed the Cooling tube..  LoL.

     

  10. Hey Flavi,

     

    yes, I have a DCS install also on Mint Linux via Steam for a long time, just out of curiosity and because I like to tinker a lot.

    The only drawback are peripherals beyond Hotas, like TiR and likely most VR solutions.

    My TM gear and rudders work out of the box but TiR is a No-Go as far as I could research it on google so far.

    You need to enable Proton in DCS/Steam btw.

    There are other ways but Steam is pretty straightforward and has the highest rate of success, ymmv!

    • Thanks 2
  11. FWIW,

    availability might become a factor across the board, who knows what comes.

    For that reason, clients I have feel the need to upgrade HW sooner than planned (Win10 to Win11; SRV2016 to 2022 ) since no one knows if you still can buy all you need in 3 months, next month, a week from now. This is a bad roller coaster ride we are all in, no matter what IT-HW you currently need.

    "Lieber den Spatz in der Hand als die Taube auf dem Dach"  may show it's wisdom

  12. That's odd, something is likely not right. Some Dell Workstations Series I serviced do this, but they selftest, reset and go booting, with Status LEDs etc..  a feature, not a bug.

    Whenever I had that on my own or Client PC's it was mostly RAM related. If it doesnt do it with JDEC defaults or another brand you have to look no further....

    But it can be also be a hardware/firmware issue, you'd have to swop parts and start simple too, no gimmicks, no LEDs etc.. just bare bones and then see

    when the error comes in when you add hardware as needed. YOu dont need any drive attached or NVMe inserted to test bios init and CPU/RAM test, all you get is a No Bootdrive found.

    1 RAM module, 1 drive, use iGPU if possible first, the least amount of variables, one by one...  no OC, no XMP

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