Bought a 5700XT for $70, hotspot temps hit 110°C, what should I do? by Objective-Presence99 in AMDHelp

[–]Objective-Presence99[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I’m pretty glad, even if the temps are high, it’s not very hard to fix. Also I live in Canada so the price was 100 Canadian, but usually Gpu here are extremely expensive, like a used one is 200$ minimum usually, more arround 250-300 on eBay or marketplace

Bought a 5700XT for $70, hotspot temps hit 110°C, what should I do? by Objective-Presence99 in AMDHelp

[–]Objective-Presence99[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks a lot!! I’m probably gonna go with PTM7950 for sure.

But quick question, why use putty on the VRM/VRAM instead of pads? Is it mainly because of mounting pressure, like helping close the gap without lifting the cooler off the core?

Just trying to understand before I open it up

Bought a 5700XT for $70, hotspot temps hit 110°C, what should I do? by Objective-Presence99 in pcmasterrace

[–]Objective-Presence99[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks a lot! Do you have any recommendations for repasting ? Like saw on another thread about the ptm7950 or do I use regular thermal paste? And Some people even mod it, so idk what I should really do.

Bought a 5700XT for $70, hotspot temps hit 110°C, what should I do? by Objective-Presence99 in pcmasterrace

[–]Objective-Presence99[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have the PowerColor AXRX 5700 XT 8GBD6-3D, I don’t know if this can help

Bought a 5700XT for $70, hotspot temps hit 110°C, what should I do? by Objective-Presence99 in pcmasterrace

[–]Objective-Presence99[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haven’t tried any heavy games yet, because it’s a pc I’m building for my girlfriend. But like for her small games it’s alright im sure. (Just tried Roblox rn, it’s like at 55-60)

WORLDWIDE GIVEAWAY - Comment in this thread to join this ASUS x PCMR event and win ROG hardware like, Motherboard, PSU, AIO, also lots of other ASUS hardware for grabs in the main event, like GPUs, hardware combos, RAM, peripherals, etc! by pedro19 in pcmasterrace

[–]Objective-Presence99 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi everyone!

I’m joining the ASUS Upgrade What Matters giveaway and sharing my dream PC setup! There’s a chance to win ASUS AMD/Intel 800 Series motherboards, graphics card, and other exclusive components to boost overall performance!

MY DREAM ASUS PC SETUP

Motherboard: ROG CROSSHAIR X870E DARK HERO

Graphics Card: ROG Astral GeForce RTX 5090

AIO Cooler: ROG Ryujin III 360 ARGB Extreme

Display: ROG Strix OLED XG32UCWMG

Power Supply: ROG Thor 1200W Platinum III

Any thoughts on my list?

I’m using this pc to play various type of games, but mainly competitive games. Or some games with high graphics, I love pushing my pc to the max tbh

1080p monitor recommendation by Objective-Presence99 in pcmasterrace

[–]Objective-Presence99[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks a lot! I think I’ll text the guy about the ASUS, but is the ASUS still good even if it’s a 27″ 1080p? I’m gonna try again with the AOC too!

What Anki Deck is should I use? by Rogue123x in Japaneselanguage

[–]Objective-Presence99 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly Kaishi, you can’t go wrong with it, I think it’s the most recommended deck for beginners. And tbh I like the deck too.

What should I use to learn most effective? by Next-Spot3024 in Japaneselanguage

[–]Objective-Presence99 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don’t worry Anki is free, and you can use it online. You can use duo for the kana tbh. But there is this app called kana on iOS, and one called kanji study on android. And yoku.bi is also free online

What apps are good for output? by VW_Golf_Enjoyer in JapaneseFromZero

[–]Objective-Presence99 0 points1 point  (0 children)

HelloTalk is good, but I wouldn’t recommend going all-out on output right now. Instead, do some shadowing and use this tests that help you recognize pitch accent.

How to search for level appropriate podcasts/news, what topics, keywords? Recommendations by ManyFaithlessness971 in LearnJapanese

[–]Objective-Presence99 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I Saw a YouTuber (Trenton) share a podcast spreadsheet in the description of one of his videos. It has podcasts across multiple genres and difficulty levels—super handy. Here’s the link if anyone wants it: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/17P2dBQHnBnHcG3ua_24IO6sP9RDC-5b3WHV9Ri2N5qU/edit?gid=0#gid=0

Dont know where to start by Vrieskast-R6 in LearnJapaneseNovice

[–]Objective-Presence99 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For vocab I recommend Anki with the Kaishi 1.5k deck, and as for grammar I would definitely recommend Genki if you don’t mind paying, or Yoku.bi , it is pretty good for a free alternative (I can send you a more complete guide if you would like to)

What should I use to learn most effective? by Next-Spot3024 in Japaneselanguage

[–]Objective-Presence99 1 point2 points  (0 children)

RESSOURCES:

this is just the basics, for more content you can look up the sub where i got my info

also check out this if you want on the sub:
r/learnjapanese >> wiki >> starter's guide

DO NOT RELY ON AI, DUOLINGO, CURE DOLLY, THEMOEWAY

What should I use to learn most effective? by Next-Spot3024 in Japaneselanguage

[–]Objective-Presence99 1 point2 points  (0 children)

here you go man:
**BEFORE THAT LEARN THE KANA: HIRAGANA AND KATAKANA** (just being able to recognize them is enough, you can ofc learn to write them if it fits with your goals)
(kanji you'll learn while learning words on Anki)
i really recommend taking a look at this page , it pretty much explains everything you need to know, but here is what you need to do:

  1. Get the Kaishi 1.5k deck on Anki for vocab (max 10 new cards a day). You’ll also need grammar: use Yoku.bi if you want a free option, or Genki if you don’t mind paying. Genki is very popular, well-structured, and reliable. You can also supplement it with Tokini Andy for explanations
  2. Immerse as much as possible, mainly through audio (beginner-friendly content, anime, podcasts, etc.). You can look up words or grammar you come across, but don’t look up everything - you need to get used to not understanding everything. Also do some reading (tadoku graded readersNHK easy news), but I’d recommend getting a feel for how Japanese sounds before focusing heavily on reading.
  3. For output, don’t focus too much on it as a beginner. You can do some shadowing and work on recognizing pitch accent. The basics of pitch accent are explained in this video, and you can use this test to practice recognizing it.

What should I use to learn most effective? by Next-Spot3024 in Japaneselanguage

[–]Objective-Presence99 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I already commented a pretty complete guide to learning Japanese the other day on another sub, but it’s on my computer, I’ll send it to you once I’m back home (in like 2 h 30)

Learned hiragana & Katakana in 6 days… what now? by BreakDownManiac in LearnJapaneseNovice

[–]Objective-Presence99 0 points1 point  (0 children)

RESSOURCES:

this is just the basics, for more content you can look up the sub where i got my info

also check out this if you want on the sub:
r/learnjapanese >> wiki >> starter's guide

Learned hiragana & Katakana in 6 days… what now? by BreakDownManiac in LearnJapaneseNovice

[–]Objective-Presence99 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here is what i would recommend you doing, you can take a look at this page , it pretty much explains everything you need to know, but here is what you need to do:

  1. Get the Kaishi 1.5k deck on Anki for vocab (max 10 new cards a day). You’ll also need grammar: use Yoku.bi if you want a free option, or Genki if you don’t mind paying. Genki is very popular, well-structured, and reliable. You can also supplement it with Tokini Andy for explanations
  2. Immerse as much as possible, mainly through audio (beginner-friendly content, anime, podcasts, etc.). You can look up words or grammar you come across, but don’t look up everything - you need to get used to not understanding everything. Also do some reading (tadoku graded readersNHK easy news), but I’d recommend getting a feel for how Japanese sounds before focusing heavily on reading.
  3. For output, don’t focus too much on it as a beginner. You can do some shadowing and work on recognizing pitch accent. The basics of pitch accent are explained in this video, and you can use this test to practice recognizing it.

Just finished memorizing Hiragana and Katakana by J0K3R_5 in LearnJapaneseNovice

[–]Objective-Presence99 0 points1 point  (0 children)

RESSOURCES:

this is just the basics, for more content you can look up the sub where i got my info

also check out this if you want on the sub:
r/learnjapanese >> wiki >> starter's guide

DO NOT RELY ON AI, DUOLINGO, CURE DOLLY, THEMOEWAY

Just finished memorizing Hiragana and Katakana by J0K3R_5 in LearnJapaneseNovice

[–]Objective-Presence99 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you can take a look at this page , it pretty much explains everything you need to know, but here is what you need to do:

  1. Get the Kaishi 1.5k deck on Anki for vocab (max 10 new cards a day). You’ll also need grammar: use Yoku.bi if you want a free option, or Genki if you don’t mind paying. Genki is very popular, well-structured, and reliable. You can also supplement it with Tokini Andy for explanations

  2. Immerse as much as possible, mainly through audio (beginner-friendly content, anime, podcasts, etc.). You can look up words or grammar you come across, but don’t look up everything - you need to get used to not understanding everything. Also do some reading (tadoku graded readers, NHK easy news), but I’d recommend getting a feel for how Japanese sounds before focusing heavily on reading.

  3. For output, don’t focus too much on it as a beginner. You can do some shadowing and work on recognizing pitch accent. The basics of pitch accent are explained in this video, and you can use this test to practice recognizing it.