Quote from: Tribbls on July 21, 2024, 15:29:23I'm still using an HP Probook(4540s) laptop that's got a socket packaged Intel Ivy Bridge 3632QM "Mobile" Processor. And so that Laptop's BGA soldered to the MB Radeon HD 7650M(Terascale Rebrand) dGPU has given up the Ghost and I could get a new MB and swap the CPU over to that as the old parts for that Business Grade laptop are still in good supply owing to the fact that corporations had fleets of these laptops to manage. But the Laptop sill works fine with the Ivy Bridge Intel HD 4000 integrated graphics and so I've never bothered getting a new MB to fix that dead discrete GPU. I can still go over to the Local Micro Center and get a replacement battery for that as the laptop has the removable battery that can be swapped/replaced when needed for longer battery life with a spare battery or easy replacement with a new battery as I have done when the old battery expired!
I have an old HP Elitebook 840 G1 which has HD 8750M, best laptop I have ever owned. I am typing on it right now even and it works excellent even to this day. Too bad HP business laptops have went from some of the best to junk. I am still amazed also how easily serviceable this laptop is
QuoteBut that's only because of AMD's non existent ROCm/HIP support for Polaris Graphics, or even ROCm/HPI support for Vega iGPUs! And so no Blender 3D iGPU/dGPU accelerated Cycles rendering on Linux Mint and Polaris graphics was dropped from the ROCm/HIP support matrix years ago and Vega Graphics is on borrowed time for that ROCm/HIP support matrix soon as well.
AMD doesn't officially support it, but you can get ROCm/HIP running. I did on my old Polaris card in Mint
Quote from: lol on July 21, 2024, 16:37:17We trust you bro, except my PHONE connected to a screen, keyboard and mouse with a cable and full Arch Linux + xfce4 does 1900/5500 geekbench and the other one 1300/3400 geekbench.
When I see beginning of posts like this it's clearly yet another retrograde who only does very basic office work on his laptop and could actually use a tablet instead.
I'm going to disagree with you. My computer is just 1 year older(but it is a U processor, I have better single core performance but worse multicore, 866/1617 vs his 500/1677) and I do programming on it all the time
The reality is for most usage, it isn't that big of a deal. Only time I send stuff to my faster desktop pc is when I need to do compiling. But for interpreted stuff, it works good enough that I have little stress.
Synthetic benchmarks are just that, synthetic. It helps when you aren't on windows with billions of things running in the background. It also helps that browsers these days suspend background tab processes
The real thing that hampers old stuff is instruction sets. Like if you have a processor before AES instruction sets or SSE/AVX. Or h264 hardware acceleration. These are the big stuff, the every day stuff you use in every day life that when offloaded to the processor can be a pain. With these instruction sets even slower cpus aren't effected as much for most every day use.
It's like getting an SSD, the slowest SSD is a huge upgrade over an HDD. But the fastest NVME is an improvement but not as much compared to the jump of the above. That is pretty much how computing is, it is why budget android phones used to be crap but these days are good enough for most people. It is also why intel intentionally kept many instruction sets away from their lower celeron/pentium/i3 lines. To make the performance bad enough that it is usable but you see an upgrade.
Interestingly enough, many people aren't even using the full potential of their hardware. One of the reasons why chromebooks are able to get decent performance out of low end hardware is because they take advantage of this fact. It is based on gentoo where the software is compiled and optimized for the hardware making full advantage of the hardware