cezanne support will come to x300 for sure, but does it mean that we can use these apus in a300 with x300 bios as well?
as we know we can install the x300 on a300
cezanne support will come to x300 for sure, but does it mean that we can use these apus in a300 with x300 bios as well?
Yea, I was able (+ next 3 posts) - and share the extract UEFI partition table, also I'm missing @Danlopez1222 who digged even more inside with logic analyzer.Since bios 3.60L is any CPU Microcode and gpu Microcode in bios included . I see that of screens of one person who analysed the bios with special bios tools
Hello, one question. Is there any reason to buy an A300 now that the X300 is out? Thank you
what would you suggest, then? I'd like to build a sff pc with two hdd in raid, an ssd, and an apu.IMHO: Avoid BOTH at the moment because the latest "offical" BIOS release's from both are horribly outdated AGESA/Module wise and are buggy unstable disasters.
I cannot name you the specific components, anyway I don't also know what your budget is, but for orientation you could use following:what would you suggest, then? I'd like to build a sff pc with two hdd in raid, an ssd, and an apu.
I have to ask: why on earth would someone wanting to build a tiny APU-based PC need a 600W PSU? That is downright crazy. mATX doesn't make sense either - remember, the person you're responding to wants an A300 alternative, not any desktop PC.- modular power supply, at least 600W
Not really the thread for it, but what's your use case beyond wanting room for storage? If it's a general-use PC without specific hardware needs but a desire for a powerful APU and small size, I'd find a small case you like (I went for the Lazer3D HT5 for my HTPC, and it's gorgeous and easy to build in, plus it fits everything you want) and go for a simple ITX+Renoir setup. The only real challenge would be powering it, but if you're fine with power bricks that's not an issue either, just get a HDPlex combo, ArchDaemon+suitable 12V picoPSU, or similar. You won't need a powerful PSU - my ITX 4650G pulls ~110W at the wall in gaming loads with a small iGPU OC and RAM at 3800MT/s.what would you suggest, then? I'd like to build a sff pc with two hdd in raid, an ssd, and an apu.
Hahaha you're right. I was missing somewhere the use case and leaned to much out of the window I guess some time in the listing I applied my use case.I have to ask: why on earth would someone wanting to build a tiny APU-based PC need a 600W PSU? That is downright crazy. mATX doesn't make sense either - remember, the person you're responding to wants an A300 alternative, not any desktop PC.
Lol, I had a whole post written up here before glancing up at the quote and spotting your edit. Serves me right for leaving tabs open for hours before replying But yeah, as I said, my ITX 4650G system peaks at 110W at the wall while gaming (I haven't measured any concurrent CPU+GPU torture loads, which would probably have hit 130 or so). That's with the GPU at 2100MHz and 3800MT/s RAM, a single SSD and a single 140mm fan. For another couple of 2.5" HDDs I would add 10-15W on top of that (20-25W if they were 3.5"). At the most, though lower with the iGPU at stock and/or slower RAM. So a PSU capable of delivering 150W continuously should do the job perfectly. I'm using a MeanWell RPS-200-12C + ArchDaemon for my HTPC, and it works like a charm in a case that would never, ever fit an SFX, FlexATX or TFX PSU. HDPlex also makes great power supply setups. Of course an external power brick rated for ~150W would also work great, and allow for the use of some really tiny cases.Hahaha you're right. I was missing somewhere the use case and leaned to much out of the window I guess some time in the listing I applied my use case.300W should be enough.But forget the dedicated GPU upgrade (PSU will be limiting)
Edit: right, there are PSUs in smaller format than ATX, like pico for example. I have to agree, they will be more than enough.
So it turns out that the blue screens I keep getting is because of corrupted boot files. After getting fresh windows 10 installed, I haven't had any blue screens.
As someone said 3 pages ago, installing fresh Windows 10 fixed his problem. Well that's because if you didn't successfully load Windows, your boot files might be corrupted and yes the only sure solution is to re-install fresh Windows 10. And that's probably because your SoC VID is not high enough.
I can run Memtest all day to test the stability of the DDR4 memory. Is there a program I can run to test the stability of the SoC?
I'll be using an eGPU and Ubuntu, I don't know if that makes a difference.
I've got a custom 400W psu for the deskmini and an egpu.Again, if you use search function in this thread, you may spot some results on 4750G's voltage, but it seems to be a whole another story. Since the PSU is not even that powerfull to be able to satisfy the power demands.