Is this the most power-hungry southbridge we've seen in a decade?
A key principal of the Zen 2 design is the use of a seperate northbridge die on the package, fabricated on a different process to optimize cost and yields; said northbridge die is fabbed in 12nm, and the X570 southbridge is little more than a 14nm version of the northbridge die. Apparently, high power consumption is a consequence of this design decision.
A memory divider is a ratio which is used to determine the operating clock frequency of computer memory in accordance with front side bus (FSB) frequency, if the memory system is dependent on FSB clock speed. Along with memory latency timings, memory dividers are extensively used in overclocking memory subsystems to find stable, working memory states at higher FSB frequencies. The ratio between DRAM and FSB is commonly referred to as "DRAM:FSB ratio".
Memory dividers are only applicable to those chipsets in which memory speed is dependent on FSB speeds. Certain chipsets like nVidia 680i have separate...
Why? Because Infinity Fabric on 3rd Gen Ryzen can run at a reduced speed if the memory is too fast for it. AMD says it can cope with memory speeds of up to 3733 MT/s, above which the Infinity Fabric will clock down. This enables use of faster memory, albeit at the cost of slower internal communication.
> That’s important because the Infinity Fabric is tied to the GMI [global memory interconnect] link
Hmm... So Infinity Fabric is not the FSB itself but is tied to the FSB speed. Now that is interesting.
Also... communication between CCXes within each chiplet passes through the northbridge. There is no direct Infinity Fabric connection between CCXes within each die.
I've talked about this before... I make it a policy not to block ads whenever possible, but more and more websites are putting up paywalls and ad revenue is becoming a hard problem.
With growing consumer resistance to advertising, especially with privacy concerns in recent years, I fear that the cost will be shifted to the end user more than ever.
Especially when regulators are preparing significant new regulations for major tech companies. Restricting tracking and profiling is definitely a win for privacy, but will cripple ad revenue.
Somebody has to pay for it. And if it isn't the advertisers, it's going to be the end consumer.
And that's why I fear a subscription cost explosion happening over the coming months and years.
Also... tricks like darkening the page and blocking scrolling when requesting push notification permission (e.g. Reddit). This shows how desperate the digital media industry is.
Is there something I can do on my end to mitigate the subscription cost explosion?
And is there something Internet users can do as a group to address this problem?
And here's my biggest complaint about Internet media over the last few years: advertising has ramped up dramatically in both quantity and aggressiveness. The problem is that ad revenue has been falling rapidly, especially traditional advertising formats like banners.
Autoplaying video. Banners that take up a third or more of the screen. Anchored ads that float on the screen. Ads that are more difficult to dismiss or require a time delay. Aggressive requests to enable push notifications. Full-page, full-width ads on mobile, with some using parallax effects to draw user attention. Proliferation of paywalls, with gaps closed (e.g. blocking access in private browsing).
The subscription cost explosion: what can I do to mitigate it?
There's a fair amount of consumer distrust in ads. It might help if they were more carefully vetted.
As in, stricter policies against clickbait, higher quality standards to ensure that ads are relevant and useful without detracting from content, and closer examination of each ad creative to prevent malware from slipping through the cracks.
Internet ads suffer from a quality problem because media companies are simply looking for quick fixes to an existential threat, by running more ads more aggressively instead of setting higher quality standards that can increase their effectiveness. They haven't actually paid attention to why ads are failing.
> Upon his initial communication to Zoom, the researcher asked whether Zoom provides bounties for security vulnerability submissions. Zoom invited the researcher to join our private paid bug bounty program, which he declined because of non-disclosure terms. It is common industry practice to require non-disclosure for private bug bounty programs.
> After attempting to uninstall the Zoom client on macOS, the software will keep on re-installing automatically, using a hidden web server that is set up during the first installation and that stays activated after attempting to remove the client. As of July 2019 the software offers no method for complete removal on macOS and will re-install itself when following Zoom meeting links, using the hidden web server.
@Burgi I've spent thousands on doctors' visits. They always blame a lack of vitD. So I start taking more. But they say it's still deficient. So then this happens...
@bertieb I used to think taking vitD did, but it's very possibly a placebo effect, since my back pain didn't go down even when I had enough vitD in my system
@bertieb I've experienced tingling a couple times in my hands, a few months ago. Once I dropped a bar of soap because I couldn't hold on to it or something? 'twas weird.
@bertieb I'm thinking I'll go to my childhood doctor (the one I've been visiting since literally the day I was born - he was in the room when I was delivered), and explain the whole situation
@bertieb Honestly the health system in the US seems... horrific, from what I've read on the interwebz. It's much better in India. Everyone receives highly subsidized healthcare here if they need it. No one leaves a govt. hospital having been refused treatment.