Eh, for high res VR, you're really stuck with a 4090, 5080, or 5090. :/ My 4090 is not strong enough to keep my Pimax capped at 90fps without having to resort to somewhat aggressive upscaling.
People still play VR?Eh, for high res VR, you're really stuck with a 4090, 5080, or 5090. :/ My 4090 is not strong enough to keep my Pimax capped at 90fps without having to resort to somewhat aggressive upscaling.
Sim Racing. The only permanent use case I've found for it (and yes it's incredible).People still play VR?
Crystal Super OLED. It's okay, it's the only headset I've had long term experience with. The lenses definitely have some off central point chromatic aberration and you're still definitely looking though goggles.Which Pimax do you have, and how do you like it?
I almost pre-ordered the Pimax Dream Air but questions on when it would ship, and the weird 'charge you extra for a service ..thing' on their website wasn't clear so I backed out for now.
Hasn’t running two cards been pointless/worse than running one for like 20 years now?So today I find myself at a quandry....
Decided to do the "tiny" upgrade to the desktops in the house. (my rig and the oneMrs. Haus uses). 3060s with 8GB to 5060TIs with 16G. For the first time I can remember I'm doing an upgrade NOT because of gaming performance. But rather that we're both leveraging AI stuff and need the memory on the cards to be high enough to run some more capable models.
Both our rigs are running 750w "bronze" rated power supplies. And my calculations show I could PROBABLY get away with running both cards in the machines (both our existing, and the 5060 along side) but it would be borderline.
Now I'm debating that, versus taking both old cards back to the lab to drop in my lab box and have it run dual and have those running something....
For gaming yes, for AI the more the betterHasn’t running two cards been pointless/worse than running one for like 20 years now?

The way I see it, the games my wife and I like playing all play reasonably on the cards we already have. If the 5060s are just used for the AI work that perfectly serves my purposes well. For now, I think I'll remove the old cards, upgrade in place. Then once I can hit the store or find a good sale on PSU upgrades, I'll upgrade them to 1000W PSUs and drop the old cards back in.For gaming yes, for AI the more the better
could also look for used 3090sSo today I find myself at a quandry....
Decided to do the "tiny" upgrade to the desktops in the house. (my rig and the oneMrs. Haus uses). 3060s with 8GB to 5060TIs with 16G. For the first time I can remember I'm doing an upgrade NOT because of gaming performance. But rather that we're both leveraging AI stuff and need the memory on the cards to be high enough to run some more capable models.
Both our rigs are running 750w "bronze" rated power supplies. And my calculations show I could PROBABLY get away with running both cards in the machines (both our existing, and the 5060 along side) but it would be borderline.
Now I'm debating that, versus taking both old cards back to the lab to drop in my lab box and have it run dual and have those running something....
Those have 10k hours of bit mining on themcould also look for used 3090s
Not only that, but at full power. Likely replaced because they started popping errors all over the place.Those have 10k hours of bit mining on them
This is true. Still the best value for AI usage though (possibly outside of setups that can leverage old server cards).Those have 10k hours of bit mining on them
IMO, you are better off with a paid service. I've done quite a bit of local AI stuff, and mostly have moved off of it. This is on Apple, AMD AI, and Nvidia stuff.So today I find myself at a quandry....
Decided to do the "tiny" upgrade to the desktops in the house. (my rig and the oneMrs. Haus uses). 3060s with 8GB to 5060TIs with 16G. For the first time I can remember I'm doing an upgrade NOT because of gaming performance. But rather that we're both leveraging AI stuff and need the memory on the cards to be high enough to run some more capable models.
Both our rigs are running 750w "bronze" rated power supplies. And my calculations show I could PROBABLY get away with running both cards in the machines (both our existing, and the 5060 along side) but it would be borderline.
Now I'm debating that, versus taking both old cards back to the lab to drop in my lab box and have it run dual and have those running something....
Well, in this case it was 2 so that we'd both basically get our "once every 5 years or so" gaming rig upgrade in while also doing AI stuff.IMO, you are better off with a paid service. I've done quite a bit of local AI stuff, and mostly have moved off of it. This is on Apple, AMD AI, and Nvidia stuff.
5060TI has the memory, but neither the processing power nor the memory bandwidth to do anything useful with them. Same with Apple "M" chips, same with AMD Ryzen "AI" garbage.
Not only that, but tools for AI constantly break. AMD ROCm is a sad joke, and managing packages and installs on even Nvidia stuff can be a tedious affair. I wasn't paying attention, and updated the package on one of my apps, and it took the WHOLE thing down with it. None of my other apps worked, and had to be reinstalled from scratch.
Imagine doing this with Apple stuff, AMD stuff, and Nvidia stuff.
Now, I just use online apps.
If you want to futz with it, it is fine. That's what I started out doing. In that train of thought, you'd be better off with a 5070ti. Double the memory bandwidth of a 5060ti, Apple "M" or Ryzen "AI". Same-ish cost of 2 5060ti's, but WAY more performance.