Tag

External Gpu

All articles tagged with #external gpu

DIY PCIe Over Fiber: Off‑The‑Shelf SFPs Ignite a New USB/PCIe Link
technology5 hours ago

DIY PCIe Over Fiber: Off‑The‑Shelf SFPs Ignite a New USB/PCIe Link

Hackaday covers Sylvain Munaut’s experiment to run plain PCIe over fiber using inexpensive QSFP transceivers, a Raspberry Pi 5, and custom SFP PCBs to switch between PCIe edge and USB 3.0 connectors. The setup demonstrates a Gen 2 x1 PCIe link over single‑mode fiber, building on Eli Billauer’s 2016 groundwork for Gen 2 over SFP+. Compatibility hurdles—device detection, side‑channel clocking, and Gen 3 equalization training—pose challenges for higher generations. The project aims to scale to Gen 3–5 (potentially x4 to x16) in future videos, with the hope of external GPUs operating at near‑full bandwidth without Thunderbolt.

Tiny PC, Big Power: How Khadas Mind Graphics 2 Turns a Pocket Mini into a Gaming Rig
technology19 days ago

Tiny PC, Big Power: How Khadas Mind Graphics 2 Turns a Pocket Mini into a Gaming Rig

A Tom’s Guide reviewer docks a Khadas Mind mini PC with the Mind Graphics 2 external GPU dock and a desktop RTX 5060 Ti (16GB VRAM) via the Mind Link connector, turning a pocketable computer into a desktop-class gaming rig with front ports, fingerprint, speakers, and multiple video outputs. In testing it runs demanding titles (including Skate Style, Ratchet & Clank, and Final Fantasy VII Rebirth) at high settings on ultrawide displays, though the setup is niche and priced at $1,349. The Mind Graphics 2 complements the Mind ecosystem, offering a plug‑in upgrade path that preserves portability while boosting performance for both gaming and creative work.

"Performance Impact: OCulink's Effect on GeForce RTX 4070Ti SUPER vs. RTX 4090"
technology2 years ago

"Performance Impact: OCulink's Effect on GeForce RTX 4070Ti SUPER vs. RTX 4090"

The introduction of the OCuLink connector has expanded external GPU options for consumer products, allowing direct connection to high-end desktop GPUs like the RTX 4070Ti SUPER and RTX 4090. However, recent tests show that when connected to a laptop and displaying images directly on the laptop monitor, the RTX 4070Ti SUPER experiences a 9.8% performance loss, while the RTX 4090 suffers up to a 22.6% loss. Connecting the discrete GPU directly to an external monitor provides better performance, with a lower loss of just 16.6%. The performance decrease varies based on the benchmark, but overall, external GPUs using OCuLink face similar bottlenecks as Thunderbolt-connected graphics, albeit with less performance penalty.