Do I even need an all-in-one PC with artificial intelligence?
Do I even need an all-in-one PC with artificial intelligence?
Hey, I'm just sending over a template idea, but don't take it as the final word. We're still figuring out what you actually need.
so if those chips like the 8400 and 8500 only have eight lanes, then turning off the integrated graphics in some AMD F-variant models might bring those extra eight back. that would add up to maybe two additional computing units, right? i want to make sure i'm getting this straight. also, even if you put an AMD chip in, can it boot without a dedicated GPU? sounds pretty cool. wait, let's check the prices first. the Ryzen 8600g is around $150. The 7600 costs about the same at $150. The 8400F is around $130. The 8500G is also around $135. An A620 chip starts from $73 without wifi, and goes up to $130 with wifi. The Asus Prime H610 with Wi-Fi plus the 14000 series costs about $140 ($90 for the base + $130 for graphics). what do you think?
I need a PC with NVMe and Windows 11 support! I think any computer like that is good enough for my casual gaming, which takes less than 10 to 20 hours each year. PS: I am not sure if this is the right choice or if it causes problems. But since November, I have never used my D-GPU and disabled it in device manager because of that. Now my PC connects through a HDMI port from my motherboard to my monitor. Basically, there is a display cable coming out of my D.GPU and an HDMI coming from the motherboard. Both are connected right now. Since D.GPU is disabled in device manager, I get my desktop from Intel iGPU. And why? Because I hate the loud noise coming from fan on AMD GPU that I installed recently. Now it is completely silent.