Dann Corbit wrote: ↑Thu Jun 06, 2019 12:02 amTry putting them in a zip archive or a 7zip archive.
I guess that they are trying to save space by making us compress stuff.
You can attach archives and images. Not sure what else.

Moderators: hgm, Dann Corbit, Harvey Williamson
Dann Corbit wrote: ↑Thu Jun 06, 2019 12:02 amTry putting them in a zip archive or a 7zip archive.
I guess that they are trying to save space by making us compress stuff.
You can attach archives and images. Not sure what else.
HGM@'chessqueen' 2018-present, aka: 'George' 2013-2016, 'pichy' 2006-2013, 'Jorge Pichard' 2000-2006 (old forum) wrote: http://talkchess.com/forum3/viewtopic.p ... 79#p789713
14nm Intel vs 12nm TSMCsmatovic wrote: ↑Thu Jun 06, 2019 5:14 amWatts are imo not appropriate for comparison, there are differences inj.korhonen wrote: ↑Wed Jun 05, 2019 11:56 pmNvidia RTX 2080 TI: 250Wsmatovic wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2019 11:46 amOkay, another try,
let us assume the best software is those which makes best use of the transistors
given on a specific chip.
So let us compare the transistor count and the clock frequency of TCEC hardware:
Nvidia RTX 2080 TI:
18.6 billion transistors clocked with max 1.545 GHz
Nvidia RTX 2080:
13.6 billion transistors clocked with max 1.710 GHz
2*Intel Xeon E5-2699v4:
2*7.2 billion transistors clocked with max 3.6 GHz
Even with the best black magic bit twiddling hacks you will be limited by
transistor count and frequency, now do the maths and tell me where the
hardware advantage is...
--
Srdja
+
Nvidia RTX 2080: 215W
= 465W
Intel Xeon E5-2699v4: 145 W
+
Intel Xeon E5-2699v4: 145 W
= 290W
fabrication process for different architectures that causes different
consumptions...i am not that into fabs, but Nvidia RTX is produced in TSMC 12FFN
and the Xeons are produces in Intels 14 nm process...maybe Milos could clarify
--
Srdja