I hate both, but left is clearly better than the right option.
/pcbg/ - PC Building General
so I'm putting together my new ryzen build today, coming from a really old Intel build
As far as I can read everywhere, I have to do a clean install of windows on my SSD that I already have windows on
Is there a way I can keep most of my files?
Can someone tell me if I need to install the Intel Management Engine interface chipset driver from my motherboards website? Thanks.
Why do you hate them both?
Transfer them across to a USB/externa HDD before new install
>RTX 2060 thanks to 6gb VRAM is only good as a short-term solution
Cringe
m.youtube.com
I'm looking into buying one, and I'm going with brown. It makes me feel better when I know if I actually activated a switch. It sucks that I don't have access to the various keyboards, and if you do, I would obviously try them out before spending $100+ on a keyboard.
I have a laptop and 1 monitor, is there any way to listen to videos on the laptop while playing games on the actual monitor at the same time without playing any of them through their actual speakers? What do you guys do?
Why not get a x570 mobo? You'll lose out on precision boost 2 and pcie 4.0 by sticking with x370
How should I proceed when updating my PC? I have a budget of about 600 dollars USD. I know I need a new mother board and processor badly. Actually maybe 800 USD. Not sure on a budget still.
Anyway, What do I need most? I basically want to upgrade my PC in a way to leaves me open to being able to upgrade it in the future easily. Like right now, I don't even think I could use one of the new processors coming out?