/pcbg/ - PC Building General

>just installed this AIO cooler (H80i) and it's louder than my old Noctua NH-U9S. I was told that AIOs are quieter.
You're retarded lmao.
Every single thread it's pointed out that those single thin radiator AIOS are garbage and worse and louder than half decent air cooling. It's simple fucking thermodynamics.

You deserve this for not reading, and not paying attention in school.

in the previous thread
i asked advice on how to acquire a cheap feet input, i was advised to build one starting from a numpad PCB, but where could i find the cheapest one to start with, assuming i only need 4 buttons?

Generally larger capacity but it depends on the budget and use, if it's for games you won't find much difference in loading times between an NVMe and a good SATA SSD like the MX500 but if you're editing or encoding for example you'll notice it more
youtube.com/watch?v=vNMcW2tL3r4

was posting it in /sqt/ but it seems dead so will ask here
>just got ryzen 2600X but ASRock motherboard CD only has intel drivers am I supposed to install that stuff like the intel LAN and Bluetooth drivers for AMD?

neither capacity nor sequential read/write speeds are more important than the other.
What's more important for the average use is the 4k random read/write speeds.
Capacity matters in that you need to make sure the SSD is big enough for your needs.

on the manufactuere's website?
asrock.com/support/index.asp?cat=Drivers

Yes but get them from the mobo's page under Support

Ok that's what I figured thanks

It's a very specific question. You're asking people to google for you.
Look around for various mechanical keyboard kits, pcb, etc. You should be able to ones that are only a handful of keys.

>CEE DEES IN 2018

fpbp