@Boris_yo I scanned the 28mb file, says nothing bad, and has a legit looking file info in the file. its probably clean. but you know there is freeware out there that installs more benign crap that doesnt get seen by the malware program untill after the malware is installed. It comes down via one of them web install methods.
I installed this here tiny one, and it is certannly clean, didnt muck up the registry, now i shall see how it does with its first PDF.
Question: Why SSD's random reads and writes are not on par with its sequential read and write? Isn't it supposed to take zero time on SSD for both? If there are no platters to seek then SSD should have same sequential and random speeds.
@Psycogeek You mean various crapware? Were you asked to checkmark these before installing Cool Pic PDF reader? And why not extract self-extracting exe installation file to scan with antivirus?
You know when you fold out the centerfold pics (not just in centerfold magazines) it is good to have 2 pages shown at a time, that little tiny pdf reader doesnt have the option to show the "facing pages"
But its so small and light and treated my computer well, I think i will keep it as the only reader. It should handle manuels and all
Basically, all data is stored on the HDD and the system will automatically cache the most frequently accessed blocks to the SSD. Completely tranparent.
Very effective with 32-64GB SSDs. And you get far more total storage space for much cheaper.
@Boris_yo me read a book. sure like the microsoft referance manuel. I spend so much time reading stuff trying to figure out the computer, i would not touch a book. Movies :-)
@Bob Sounds good to me but requires to have supported MB or laptop wit such MB which has place for both SSD and HDD. Since I use laptop, it's a problem.
@Bob I rarely use CD drive but prefer not to mess with taking it out, sourcing good caddy that would fit drive bay and other tasks. I am sure this best works for desktop rigs.
@Bob How do I check for this on my laptop currently? What is this feature called? Intel Turbo Cache? I have AIDA Extreme hardware information and benchmarking utility.
In computing, Smart Response Technology (SRT) (pre-launch name SSD Caching) is a proprietary caching mechanism introduced in 2011 by Intel for their Z68 chipset (for the Sandy Bridge–series processors), which allows a SATA solid-state drive (SSD) to function as cache for a (conventional, magnetic) hard disk drive.
SRT is managed by Intel Rapid Storage Technology software version 10.5 or later, and implemented in its device driver and the Z68 motherboard's firmware (option ROM). It is available only when the (integrated) disk controller is configured in RAID mode (but not AHCI or IDE ...
@Psycogeek For me it puts strain on my eyes and back to read books on digital screens. While I use Android tablet, my back feels relaxed but I still put eyes on strain.
If you are on the same page of a book, and you do not have to turn. Then why do you take longer to read 20 words from all over the page then to read a single page ?
Also, NAND and chips do have a select time.
NO head movement, but there is a chip power uo-ish delay
@Hennes More overhead for random reads and writes? Got it. Sure it needs time to locate fragments on NAND chips compared to sequential where it locates once and from then on, carries on.
I am not sure if that is the whole story. But it is at least part of it.
Also, for random writes there is the extra overhead if there is no empty sector. So once a SSD has exhausted its spare supply of empty cells then random writes are going to crawl
If you are on the same page of a book, and you do not have to turn. Then why do you take longer to read 20 words from all over the page then to read a single page ?
@Boris_yo So your indicating that the e-ink has no such issue? it did look more like a normal way to read text, as oppsed to the glowing screen method. But dont forget i like the Black screen :-) with the glowing text instead.
@Psycogeek Black screen with the glowing text? Okay. Not sure why to like black screen better than white screen if latter is easier on the eyes but if it is your personal preference for some reason then I guess that's your call.
@sammy: Bits to bytes is not always a ration of 1:8
@sammy 8:1 just works for most RAM. (And was 10 bits per bytes on some mainframes and non-X86 computers, so the '8' might not be always correct either)
@Boris_yo But you did not answer the question? back here you say strain on your eyes , and e-ink does not strain your eyes? I have shown other people how to have black screen with glowing text, and they not only prefer it , they wont stop using it.
@sammy: In the case of SATA you have to account not just for the data which can flow over the SATA wire (which is limited by 1.5G changes of voltage per second), but also checksums, information about just where the data should be written on disk. Tag queueus, etc etc.
@sammy: the result is that a 1.5GBit/sec SATA link maxes out near 270MB/sec.
@Psycogeek What I mean was digital screens (laptops, desktops, tablets, smartphones) strain my eyes while Kindle (which I don't have) is supposed not to. And yes, I tried black screen with white characters and it was better.
@sammy and Even our fastest spinning drive (15K RPM 2.5 inch enterprise SAS) drives barely reach that speed when transfering data from/to the actual disk
@Boris_yo Reading a book is claimed to use as much calories as a lite jog, exercizing them brain muscles i guess. although it does nothing for my ass :-)
My first thought where about running (jogging) and some kind of sugar tablets for energy. (Obviously not to loose weight but to increase your condition)
Hmm, now it just poped into my head that wasnt right? Our special Open Source program. Watch out for clones of our program ?? uhh yea open source, there would be other compliations i assume ?
@Hennes So is SATA3 worth having over SATA2? I guess in terms of sequential read and write yes but even with SATA1 operating system and apps will work as good because random writes and reads will be on par.
E.g. a task takes a HDD 2 minutes. 100x as fast would be just over a minute. (1.2 seconds, or a 58.8 second gain). 200x times as fast would take 0.6 seconds (or a 59.4 second gain)
@Bob I am noticing much faster alt-tabbing between fullscreen games and Windows desktop now with Windows 8.1
Windows 8.1 will include WDDM1.3[31] and DXGI 1.3.[32] New additions according to preliminary documentation are trim DXGI adapter memory usage, multi-plane overlays, overlapping swap chains and swap chain scaling, select backbuffer subregion for swap chain and lower-latency swap chain presentation. Driver feature additions include wireless displays (Miracast), YUV format ranges, cross-adapter resources and GPU engine enumeration capabilities.
if you haven't upgraded now, and you play 3d games, this might be an incentive for you to upgrade
@Bob both ATI and Intel have put out brand spanking new drivers specifically to support WDDM 1.3 on Windows 8.1, so there's that. don't know if they'll fix switchable graphics too
maybe it's just other unrelated improvements in the AMD graphics drivers that have absolutely nothing to do with Windows 8.1, but Planetside 2 is running a LOT better now for me, shrug
mine is working fine except for the brokenness of the LucidLogix chip
and their refusal to produce updates
if they were really able to do LucidLogix just right -- if they got the hardware/software to an ideal state -- it'd essentially be free SLI on any mainstream Intel CPU with a discrete GPU in the same system
@Bob Only chipset Z68 implements Smart Response Cache. Do you know if Z68 chipset is used on laptop motherboards? Do you know of website which allows to find all motherboards that have certain chipset?
but the Intel GPU comes in to provide real time QuickSync Video encoding of video capture
@Bob I know they are iterating LucidLogix's hardware on the motherboards of new ASUS, etc. "8" series chipsets for Haswell. I bet the Broadwell motherboard + CPU/iGPU combo with the right LucidLogix chip and drivers will be the ideal
new Intel iGPU drivers (since about August) have been allowing you to perform GPU encoding using QSV or OpenCL even when the iGPU has no plugged in video card and isn't being used by LucidLogix
just install the driver and the API becomes available in programs that use it
@allquixotic if it could be used as a team with a card GPU. I think it would just make stuff more prone to fail and have minimal improvement for a normal desktop with a gaming GPU card.
@Bob they're already doing that, silly! :) TomsHardware did a comparison between the percentage of the CPU die (the whole package, not just the "CPU part") dedicated to graphics processing between Sandy and Ivy, and it went from like 25% to 55%
@Bob the latest Intel graphics drivers can initialize the Intel iGPU regardless of BIOS settings, motherboard, etc. for "headless" compute operations, meaning, DirectCompute, OpenCL and QSV, primarily.
@Psycogeek the on-die GPU of standard HD4000 series GPUs reserves a ~512 MB chunk of system memory (configurable on some systems), which is a lot slower than GDDR5
but Iris Pro 5200 on Haswell's mobile platform, as well as all upcoming Broadwell GPUs, have on-die GDDR (a small amount, but it's there) for the iGPU
if you're at all serious about using that computer, you should have at least 8GB
@allquixotic I'll have to try that tomorrow
> I read in PC Magazine and on the website 3D Guru that the 2600K (P67 chipset) DOES have Quick Sync capability as long as a discrete GPU is not plugged in.
wat
so... this guy is saying you can use QS as long as you have no video output at all??
@allquixotic Ok, but whatever type it would use, in a mlutitasking game where the gpu and cpu are running, and memory is accessed in Both. I would wonder how the On-die GPU using the onboard memory, would clash with the programs own use of memory. Both of them using the same resource, instead of dedicated resources.
the older Intel drivers (even from earlier in 2013) would refuse to provide any on-die iGPU functionality whatsoever unless you had a monitor (display head) plugged into the iGPU and it was actively rendering your desktop
@Psycogeek well, modern memory to CPU buses are point to point, meaning there shouldn't be any bottlenecks, and every component has a clear lane reserved just for it
@allquixotic Looks like it was in the March update
and the August update did something else
wait, fuck
there goes that idea
> Now, one can use both Intel Quick Sync Video and OpenCL even when Intel® HD Graphics is not the primary display adapter. This requires Intel Graphics driver to be installed and will work only on Windows 8 platforms.
@Boris_yo It balks the video only stops it for 1/2 a second, while audio continues. then it does seem that the frame rate drops some as long as the right click menu is up, hard to tell because some of the frame rates are already low.
buying a $36 DXTory license (TotalBiscuit's preferred capture program, yay!) to provide a DirectShow video source for capturing the current running game
@allquixotic But you said the on-die GPU will be using the same CPU controller memory. It is not like the GPU on the CPU would use a different path to that memory would it?
@Boris_yo no, DXTory provides uncompressed video in either RGB or YUV formats, to Sony Vegas, which then does the encoding
DXTory can also capture and encode itself, but it only comes with one bad compression codec that doesn't support QSV (or any GPU encoding), and otherwise you need to use a third party VfW codec.
@Boris_yo just it fudging up when the right click goes off, is a reason somebody should have noticed it, or to ask them to kindly look into it. there is no reason it has to be that way?
Gnash "One problem for the project is the difficulty of finding developers. The current developers have never installed Adobe's Flash player, because they fear that anyone who has ever installed the Adobe Flash Player has at the same time accepted an agreement not to modify or reverse engineer Flash player. Therefore, the Gnash project has only about 6 active developers." Thats funny, they could always use the presidends excuse "I forgot"