

News
Be quiet! Liquid cooling series Silent Loop 2 includes four models
Be quiet! presented the processor liquid cooling system Silent Loop 2. In the description of the novelty, the manufacturer notes the low-noise pump and fans Silent Wings 3. In addition, the advantages include a large surface area of the nickel-plated copper base of the water block in contact with the processor cover. An array of 120 microchannels is formed on the inner side of the base.
The waterblock is combined with the pump, the lid of which is adorned with ARGB lighting. The backlight can be controlled using the supplied controller or using the software supplied with the motherboard. Be quiet! Logo illuminated separately by white LEDs, which can be turned off if desired. The speed of the pump is regulated by changing the voltage in the range of 9-12 V.
The Silent Loop 2 liquid cooling system is available in four versions with different radiator lengths: 120, 240, 280 and 360 mm. Depending on the size of the radiator, it is equipped with up to three Silent Wings 3 fans with a diameter of 120 or 140 mm. The rotation speed of the fans with hydrodynamic bearings is controlled by PWM.
In the description of the LSS of the Silent Loop 2 series, it is noted that there is a port built into the radiator through which coolant can be added, extending the service life of the system. A container with coolant is included in the scope of delivery. The Silent Loop 2 cooling system fits all common processor sockets. The mounting kit for the sTRX4 will be available separately starting June 2021.
Be quiet! Sales Silent Loop 2 will begin on April 6th. The MSRP for the 120mm model is 99 €, the 240mm model is 129 €, the 280mm model is 139 € and the 360mm model is 159 €.
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Components
Is it time to finally retire video cards with 2-3 GB of memory? Halo Infinite no longer runs on these adapters

Video cards with a small amount of memory can sometimes still perform well in modern games, if we are talking about the flagship solutions of yesteryear. However, now there is at least one game where accelerators with less than 4 GB of memory simply will not work. This is Halo Infinite.
A fresh patch for this game now simply does not allow you to run it on a PC with video cards that have less than 4 GB of memory. At the same time, such changes are not mentioned in the description of the patch.
It can be noted that the requirement in the form of at least 4 GB of memory has always been in the game, but usually such requirements are conditional. In particular, Halo Infinite ran on inappropriate 3D maps prior to the patch. For example, there are a lot of videos on the Web where the game is tested, including on a GeForce GTX 1050 with 2 GB of memory, which is quite enough to play even in Full HD with minimal graphics quality settings. But there is a much more powerful GeForce GTX 1060 3GB, which feels quite tolerable even in more demanding games.
There is a possibility that the restriction is just a mistake and will be removed soon. But not at all a fact.
News
Nvidia unveils monstrous H100 NVL dual-chip accelerator with 188 GB of memory for training language models

Nvidia introduced the H100 NVL accelerator, which, apparently, was created specifically for training language models. Servers equipped with H100 NVL GPUs deliver up to 12x the performance of the GPT-175B over DGX A100 systems while maintaining low latency in power-constrained data center environments, according to Nvidia’s website.
In fact, the H100 NVL is a pair of H100s on the same board. We are talking about two GPUs connected by an NVLink interface, thanks to which Nvidia says 68 TFLOPS in double precision calculations (FP64), 143 TFLOPS (Tensor Core FP64), 7916 TOPS (IN8), 188 GB of memory with a bandwidth of 7.8 TB /With. All this allows you to process up to 175 billion ChatGPT parameters in real time.
Nvidia also announced the launch of inference platforms for large language models and generative AI workloads. We are talking about four inference platforms at once, optimized for a diverse set of rapidly developing applications of generative AI.
Each platform combines a full stack of inference software, the company’s latest GPUs, from gaming Ada Lovelace to dedicated Hoppers, and the Grace Hopper Superchip.
News
Mastercard will make payments in stablecoins

Mastercard has announced a partnership with Australian stablecoin platform Stables to provide USDC payments in the APAC (Asia Pacific) region.
The new Mastercard will be connected to the Stables crypto wallet, which only supports stablecoins. Card users will be able to pay at any outlets that support Mastercard cards. Funds will be debited from the balance of the Stables crypto wallet with automatic conversion to USDC.
“Mastercard is committed to delivering innovative payment solutions that give cardholders the freedom to spend their assets where, how and when they want. Stables is building a solution for the Web3 sector using Mastercard’s global payment network. The platform also uses various analytical tools, including CipherTrace and Ekata services to ensure trust and security”, ? said the head of Mastercard Australia on fintech Callan Hogan (Kallan Hogan).
Stables co-founder and CEO Erez Rachamim said the initiative was driven by the need for a “simple and affordable means” to leverage digital assets. In addition, these efforts are accompanied by an increased desire of digital asset owners to use a debit card to spend digital currencies. In a global survey by Marqeta, 82% of participants showed interest in such a solution. In addition, according to the survey, 55% of clients in Asia Pacific (APAC) are more comfortable investing in digital assets backed by reliable companies.
Using the Stables wallet, you can also place deposits in other stablecoins such as Tether (USDT) and Binance USD (BUSD). However, all deposits are automatically converted into USDC without commission. The integration is expected to go live in June, in the second quarter of 2023. Mastercard payments in USDC will be available in Australia first. However, later this payment method will be available in Europe, the US, the UK and most of the Asia-Pacific region.
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