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http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820233254

 

I already have those ^^ - When I do research - multiple Journal pdfs/nytimes etc are opened for days before i'm done writing and I find my PC slows down a bit..I don't mind going above 16gb... but I see some deals here I can afford.  

This is my MB - http://www.advantionline.com/ASRock-B85M-Pro4-LGA-1150-Intel-B85-HDMI-SATA-6Gb-s-USB-3.0-Micro-ATX-Intel-Motherboard.html 

and here are the deals... 

 

http://www.newegg.ca/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=40000147%20100152&IsNodeId=1&name=Desktop%20Memory

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https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1190353-i-want-to-expand-my-ram-capacity/
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Looks like you got 4 slots on there so just slap another 2 x 4GB in there and be good to go.

http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820313355

Those look good to me :p (Might even buy them for my MicroServer now that i saw them).

I'm however wondering why opening a bunch of PDFs should be slowing your machine. I got 5GB on my work machine and generally never have any issues (dual monitors) with multiple PDFs, Word Docs and browsers (along with Outlook and a few other programs in the background constantly).

--------------

Edit -

Wait - Hold the phone:

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820313355

in USA they are $80!! :o No wonder i thought those were stupidly cheap.

Looks like you got 4 slots on there so just slap another 2 x 4GB in there and be good to go.

http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820313355

Those look good to me :p (Might even buy them for my MicroServer now that i saw them).

I'm however wondering why opening a bunch of PDFs should be slowing your machine. I got 5GB on my work machine and generally never have any issues (dual monitors) with multiple PDFs, Word Docs and browsers (along with Outlook and a few other programs in the background constantly).

http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820231416

what about that ?

 

I usually have 100 Tabs opened aswell... watching streams..and watching videos etc... I just noticed a bit of lag when I reach 70% of Ram usage

I guess i should have checked buy any reason you are going for crazy "gamer" RAM or something? Neither of those will make a difference in regular everyday use and your only benefit is if you plan on overclocking them (the heatsink). Regular RAM will run just as fast and more RAM will be better regardless of how fast they are.

I don't think RAM is going to solve this issue...

 

How much RAM do you have and are you actually pegging your current RAM to the max? You really should be checking the RAM usage before going out to buy more RAM and making the assumption that it is the problem.

 

If 4GB, you could definitely peg it with a modern browser etc, if 8GB, it is far less likely. I only see 7-9GB usage even when running another virtualized OS on my desktop machine, various IDEs/program editors, dissembler instances, hex editors and such. Right now that machine is using 7.8GB with a Linux instance using 2.8GB and a Windows instance using 0.5GB of that space. Of that, chrome is about 1.5GB.

 

I think the slow down you are seeing is probably just the result of the browser caching things to disc (this is outside of the context of a page file -- I really mean it is just doing a browser cache to/from disc). I noticed the same thing back when I use to run HDDs. It was an issue regardless of whether I was peaking on the RAM. Became a non-issue after I moved to SSDs.

 

EDIT: Just noticed your, "I notice slowdown at 70% of RAM usage". So exactly as I said - that doesn't fit with your scenario of buying more RAM. You aren't even pegging your RAM so you clearly won't be paging memory in/out or memory thrashing... so why would buying more RAM do anything for you?

 

EDIT2: You can test this easily by disabling your paging file and seeing if your slowdown issues persist.

None has the 7 cas latency has my original ram... guess problem I guess from judging the other thread about this here ?

Wont matter so much as the MOBO will just run your current ones as CAS9 instead. Only in benchmarks will there be an actual difference between 7 and 9.

As others are pointing out, you have absolutely no need for "performance" RAM, just get cheaper standard RAM such as that from crucial.com. More RAM though could make a huge difference.

 

Providing more info about your current system could help with providing you with suitable suggestions. You've shown us what motherboard you have, which is Intel Haswell based, excellent, so what about:

 - How much RAM do you currently have?

 - What CPU do you have?

 - Do you have an SSD?

 

Edit, ah 100 tabs inc. videos and such, yeh, I could see how it's likely you might need more RAM...

 

I don't think RAM is going to solve this issue...

 

How much RAM do you have and are you actually pegging your current RAM to the max? You really should be checking the RAM usage before going out to buy more RAM and making the assumption that it is the problem.

 

If 4GB, you could definitely peg it with a modern browser etc, if 8GB, it is far less likely. I only see 7-9GB usage even when running another virtualized OS on my desktop machine, various IDEs/program editors, dissembler instances, hex editors and such. Right now that machine is using 7.8GB with a Linux instance using 2.8GB and a Windows instance using 0.5GB of that space. Of that, chrome is about 1.5GB.

 

I think the slow down you are seeing is probably just the result of the browser caching things to disc (this is outside of the context of a page file -- I really mean it is just doing a browser cache to/from disc). I noticed the same thing back when I use to run HDDs. It was an issue regardless of whether I was peaking on the RAM. Became a non-issue after I moved to SSDs.

 

EDIT: Just noticed your, "I notice slowdown at 70% of RAM usage". So exactly as I said - that doesn't fit with your scenario of buying more RAM. You aren't even pegging your RAM so you clearly won't be paging memory in/out or memory thrashing... so why would buying more RAM do anything for you?

 

EDIT2: You can test this easily by disabling your paging file and seeing if your slowdown issues persist.

 

Actually that's not true, Windows pre-emptively moves things into the paging file, it doesn't wait until you're at 100% RAM usage. I.e. the fact that RAM usage is at 70% does not mean that the page file is at 0%. Right now, on my system with 16GB of RAM, according to rain-meter on my desktop, I'm using just 28% of my RAM, but I am also using 19% of my page file! (That reminds me, I never checked how big a page file Windows created when I built this new system of mine, I will go check...)

Actually that's not true, Windows pre-emptively moves things into the paging file, it doesn't wait until you're at 100% RAM usage. I.e. the fact that RAM usage is at 70% does not mean that the page file is at 0%. Right now, on my system with 16GB of RAM, according to rain-meter on my desktop, I'm using just 28% of my RAM, but I am also using 19% of my page file! (That reminds me, I never checked how big a page file Windows created when I built this new system of mine, I will go check...)

 

You are misunderstand how Virtual Memory works. Just because you have a allocated space to your paging file doesn't mean it is actually being used. Windows pre-allocates the paging file based on your memory size + prediction mechanisms. It may even duplicate pages into the paging file based on those prediction mechanisms (I don't know if Windows does this, but is a feasible strategy for paging). None of this means that you actually getting page faults though. You can check this via Resource Manager by looking at Memory. It is listed as Hard Faults/Sec. I get about 0-3 per second on a machine with 4GB of RAM; 77% used; and 2.5GB paging file. You'll get them even if you disable the paging file though because they also occur if you have memory mapped files and parts of those files are not mapped to memory yet. My point here though is that they are very low despite the the large page file and 77% ram usage because none of my memory is really paged out.

I don't think RAM is going to solve this issue...

 

How much RAM do you have and are you actually pegging your current RAM to the max? You really should be checking the RAM usage before going out to buy more RAM and making the assumption that it is the problem.

 

If 4GB, you could definitely peg it with a modern browser etc, if 8GB, it is far less likely. I only see 7-9GB usage even when running another virtualized OS on my desktop machine, various IDEs/program editors, dissembler instances, hex editors and such. Right now that machine is using 7.8GB with a Linux instance using 2.8GB and a Windows instance using 0.5GB of that space. Of that, chrome is about 1.5GB.

 

I think the slow down you are seeing is probably just the result of the browser caching things to disc (this is outside of the context of a page file -- I really mean it is just doing a browser cache to/from disc). I noticed the same thing back when I use to run HDDs. It was an issue regardless of whether I was peaking on the RAM. Became a non-issue after I moved to SSDs.

 

EDIT: Just noticed your, "I notice slowdown at 70% of RAM usage". So exactly as I said - that doesn't fit with your scenario of buying more RAM. You aren't even pegging your RAM so you clearly won't be paging memory in/out or memory thrashing... so why would buying more RAM do anything for you?

 

EDIT2: You can test this easily by disabling your paging file and seeing if your slowdown issues persist.

I have a SSD... the lag came I tried openings videos flies that were really large while already running at 70% of RAM.. and my video card is poor ..460,,

I would like to have three browsers..20 tabs in each... and 20 PDFs... also while doing my regular browsing... as you guys should know nyt etc all have limitation on free articles.. therefore you want to keep these windows/tabs open..

I feel like IE with adblock is a huge RAM drainer tho..

 

Today I took a break from my studies -- went to lay down and came back to be PC restarted so it probably even crashed on the huge load..

 

You are misunderstand how Virtual Memory works. Just because you have a allocated space to your paging file doesn't mean it is actually being used. Windows pre-allocates the paging file based on your memory size + prediction mechanisms. It may even duplicate pages into the paging file based on those prediction mechanisms (I don't know if Windows does this, but is a feasible strategy for paging). None of this means that you actually getting page faults though. You can check this via Resource Manager by looking at Memory. It is listed as Hard Faults/Sec. I get about 0-3 per second on a machine with 4GB of RAM; 77% used; and 2.5GB paging file. You'll get them even if you disable the paging file though because they also occur if you have memory mapped files and parts of those files are not mapped to memory yet. My point here though is that they are very low despite the the large page file and 77% ram usage because none of my memory is really paged out.

 

Well admittedly I feel as though my knowledge of the details of memory management could be perhaps be improved to some degree, but I do feel that I have a decent grasp of the fundamentals, and I do of course absolutely agree that sluggishness relating to memory management would be a result of thrashing not simply utilisation. Now perhaps with your particular example system with 77% RAM utilisation you're experiencing very little trashing, but that doesn't mean the OP isn't; I do not believe that high frequency thrashing only occurs near 100% RAM utilisation, I believe (and perhaps I need to do more research into this) that Windows pre-emptively moves pages into the page file, keeping some RAM free allowing for quicker response to spikes in demand, and that the higher the utilisation, the more likely and frequently that thrashing could be occurring. Thus I feel it is entirely feasible that you could see a system with only 70% utilisation (which I consider fairly high) and yet with a large (relatively) amount of thrashing. For example, a user may have a browser with a large number of tabs open, and only 70% RAM utilisation, as here, and see thrashing because firstly, Windows is keeping the remaining 30% open in order to allow other applications to be opened quicker (as a measure to try and provide a better user experience), and secondly, the browser may be causing pages to be moved back and forth between RAM and the page files as tabs do stuff such as load new content via AJAX or continue buffering video, or simply as the user switches between tabs in the interface. That's just my speculation though. If I'm right, adding more RAM could result in Windows allowing a larger proportion of the browser's pages to remain in RAM, thus reducing thrashing and thus reducing lag. I do have a PC here used by other members of my family, which previously had only 2GB of RAM; this was never maxed out but utilisation was quite high. Increasing this to 4GB resulted in a definite improvement in performance, which I feel supports my hypothesis.

 

Of course I'm not stating out right that thrashing is absolutely the issue here, I may be wrong; we know nothing about page file utilisation and fault frequency on the OP's system itself to say such a thing and there could be other causes. The OP states that lag is noticeable at 70% RAM utilisation and the implication is that this is a result of an increase in the number of tabs, not other applications that are then consuming significant resources. Perhaps the additional tabs result in an increase in CPU cycle consumption by the browser; perhaps as you suggested there's an increase in HDD activity related to caching; both sound reasonable to me. Perhaps it's a combination. However my gut feeling, based on the fact that the OP has a recent Haswell based MB, and likely a decently fast enough CPU to go with it, and that the lag occurs at high memory utilisation, is that increasing the amount of RAM is going to result in an improvement. Regardless, I feel that the OP could benefit from the extra headroom.

 

With that said though, perhaps checking disk activity might be a good idea to be certain. I still feel that more RAM to give more headroom would be good, but of course if disk activity is high, whether from frequent page faults or caching, an SSD is going to be the best solution if the OP doesn't have one.

 

Edit: backing up I've noticed that the OP has actually stated how much RAM they have (presuming the link is the actual item, not just the same model with a different capacity), I was assuming the OP had something like 4GB. So you have 8GB. That's actually a pretty decent amount. What browser are you using. I ask this because on my previous system (which I replaced a few months back) I had 6GB of RAM and shortly prior to replacing it I was doing some research with a ton of tabs open in both Firefox and Chrome, and a few times maxed out both my RAM and page file resulting in Windows issuing memory errors. Chrome was the culprit, consuming a huge amount of RAM across it's large number of individual processes. If you're using Chrome, you may find that using Firefox instead will reduce your RAM consumption enough to negate any need for purchasing hardware. (Disclaimer, I'm a fan of both browsers, I'm not acting as a fanboy here).

I have a SSD... the lag came I tried openings videos flies that were really large while already running at 70% of RAM.. and my video card is poor ..460,,

I would like to have three browsers..20 tabs in each... and 20 PDFs... also while doing my regular browsing... as you guys should know nyt etc all have limitation on free articles.. therefore you want to keep these windows/tabs open..

I feel like IE with adblock is a huge RAM drainer tho..

 

Today I took a break from my studies -- went to lay down and came back to be PC restarted so it probably even crashed on the huge load..

 

 

You have an SSD, excellent. And you're actually experiencing lag when loading videos taking you BEYOND 70% RAM utilisation. I'd say that significantly supports the suggestion of getting more RAM. First I suggest you try a different browser though and look at the difference!

Yes I was using Chrome..yesterday I actually got the memory error and the tabs closes/went to an error page - reloading them fixed the problem.. I'm currently testing it out..running at 85% at the moment and it's better..

 

I have music playing...two videos playing..and about 200 tabs with chrome and explore... but it's not lagging at much..  only lag I notice comes from me adding all my music to the windows media player playlist..now I can't click anything in the music folder...

 

CPU usage is only at 20% Runnings Haswell i7s 

You have an SSD, excellent. And you're actually experiencing lag when loading videos taking you BEYOND 70% RAM utilisation. I'd say that significantly supports the suggestion of getting more RAM. First I suggest you try a different browser though and look at the difference!

 

Yeah it's running better today... Yesterday I had a bunch of lag.. browser tabs shutting down due to memory problem - I even got the warning..but it's above 85% and okay at the moment.. 

i am just wondering why you need so many tabs open on your browser..... 200? how do you know which tab is which. i usually have no more than 15 or so. but then again...i dont have to worry about a ram issue due to running with 20gb of ram (2x8 and 2x2). it never hurts to have more ram. i say pull the trigger

I have a SSD... the lag came I tried openings videos flies that were really large while already running at 70% of RAM.. and my video card is poor ..460,,

I would like to have three browsers..20 tabs in each... and 20 PDFs... also while doing my regular browsing... as you guys should know nyt etc all have limitation on free articles.. therefore you want to keep these windows/tabs open..

I feel like IE with adblock is a huge RAM drainer tho..

 

Today I took a break from my studies -- went to lay down and came back to be PC restarted so it probably even crashed on the huge load..

 

 

You are being inconsistent in what you say your RAM usage is  :huh: 70% or 70%+large video files? SSD wise, I'd find it even harder to believe that you are experience noticeable paging thrashing if you have a page file now (sure possible, but I don't think it is likely). Fortunately, there are two really easy ways to see if this is from the RAM: (1) disable you page file and see if the issue resolves, (2) Look at the hard fault rates. Those are pretty much guaranteed to rule it in or out.

You are being inconsistent in what you say your RAM usage is  :huh: 70% or 70%+large video files? SSD wise, I'd find it even harder to believe that you are experience noticeable paging thrashing if you have a page file now (sure possible, but I don't think it is likely). Fortunately, there are two really easy ways to see if this is from the RAM: (1) disable you page file and see if the issue resolves, (2) Look at the hard fault rates. Those are pretty much guaranteed to rule it in or out.

 

I have the videos files/Music files on a HDD...

 

70% caused the lag yesterday.. i'm currently trying to stress this the system but it's doing better... even tho i'm currently at 84% .. I don't know if it's because yesterday the computer was already running for two days... 

Off-topic: I'm curious to see what it looks like with 200 tabs open, can you take a screenshot?

 

On topic: Why don't you give FF a try, it's usually low on system resources as long as you don't have a ton of extensions?

Yeah it's running better today... Yesterday I had a bunch of lag.. browser tabs shutting down due to memory problem - I even got the warning..but it's above 85% and okay at the moment.. 

 

Are you saying you 

 

Well admittedly I feel as though my knowledge of the details of memory management could be perhaps be improved to some degree, but I do feel that I have a decent grasp of the fundamentals, and I do of course absolutely agree that sluggishness relating to memory management would be a result of thrashing not simply utilisation. Now perhaps with your particular example system with 77% RAM utilisation you're experiencing very little trashing, but that doesn't mean the OP isn't; I do not believe that high frequency thrashing only occurs near 100% RAM utilisation, I believe (and perhaps I need to do more research into this) that Windows pre-emptively moves pages into the page file, keeping some RAM free allowing for quicker response to spikes in demand, and that the higher the utilisation, the more likely and frequently that thrashing could be occurring. Thus I feel it is entirely feasible that you could see a system with only 70% utilisation (which I consider fairly high) and yet with a large (relatively) amount of thrashing. For example, a user may have a browser with a large number of tabs open, and only 70% RAM utilisation, as here, and see thrashing because firstly, Windows is keeping the remaining 30% open in order to allow other applications to be opened quicker (as a measure to try and provide a better user experience), and secondly, the browser may be causing pages to be moved back and forth between RAM and the page files as tabs do stuff such as load new content via AJAX or continue buffering video, or simply as the user switches between tabs in the interface. That's just my speculation though. If I'm right, adding more RAM could result in Windows allowing a larger proportion of the browser's pages to remain in RAM, thus reducing thrashing and thus reducing lag. I do have a PC here used by other members of my family, which previously had only 2GB of RAM; this was never maxed out but utilisation was quite high. Increasing this to 4GB resulted in a definite improvement in performance, which I feel supports my hypothesis.

 

Of course I'm not stating out right that thrashing is absolutely the issue here, I may be wrong; we know nothing about page file utilisation and fault frequency on the OP's system itself to say such a thing and there could be other causes. The OP states that lag is noticeable at 70% RAM utilisation and the implication is that this is a result of an increase in the number of tabs, not other applications that are then consuming significant resources. Perhaps the additional tabs result in an increase in CPU cycle consumption by the browser; perhaps as you suggested there's an increase in HDD activity related to caching; both sound reasonable to me. Perhaps it's a combination. However my gut feeling, based on the fact that the OP has a recent Haswell based MB, and likely a decently fast enough CPU to go with it, and that the lag occurs at high memory utilisation, is that increasing the amount of RAM is going to result in an improvement. Regardless, I feel that the OP could benefit from the extra headroom.

 

With that said though, perhaps checking disk activity might be a good idea to be certain. I still feel that more RAM to give more headroom would be good, but of course if disk activity is high, whether from frequent page faults or caching, an SSD is going to be the best solution if the OP doesn't have one.

 

Edit: backing up I've noticed that the OP has actually stated how much RAM they have (presuming the link is the actual item, not just the same model with a different capacity), I was assuming the OP had something like 4GB. So you have 8GB. That's actually a pretty decent amount. What browser are you using. I ask this because on my previous system (which I replaced a few months back) I had 6GB of RAM and shortly prior to replacing it I was doing some research with a ton of tabs open in both Firefox and Chrome, and a few times maxed out both my RAM and page file resulting in Windows issuing memory errors. Chrome was the culprit, consuming a huge amount of RAM across it's large number of individual processes. If you're using Chrome, you may find that using Firefox instead will reduce your RAM consumption enough to negate any need for purchasing hardware. (Disclaimer, I'm a fan of both browsers, I'm not acting as a fanboy here).

 

The 8GB RAM thing is what initially made me skeptical. I would be totally willing to agree with you otherwise about the RAM thrashing and things. Now, he states he has an SSD, has upped the RAM usage to 85%, claims he uses three browsers open at the same time, and is opening huge movie files. At this point, I am just assuming the OP wants more RAM and is just saying whatever to justify it. That's fine by me given that I was just trying to get the OP to check if this was the issue or not. I've already told him how to verify whether it is so I don't really have much more input all points considered -- other than eye brow raising faces  :laugh:

 

On a side note, I do believe that Windows preemptively drops pages into the paging file also. I don't believe it is necessarily removes the original copies though _unless_ they actually need to be evicted. The idea would be to keep the copy in memory until you are forced to evict it for other data. Remember this is a least-recently-used policy, so the things you evict shouldn't be recently used -- so it stands to reason that you could do this without too much trouble. Windows has some list for "cached" memory that may account for this. I haven't looked at it in fine enough detail to conclude exactly what it is though. 

This is what i'm talking about ... 

 

86% and error message.. IE seems to be the main culprit 

 

Yeah it is trying to use something that requires more RAM than you have total evidently. Do you even have a paging file enabled? Sounds like no since it normally would tell you it is expanding your paging file...

 

EDIT: your disc I/O looks super low also in that picture. Basically you ran out of memory and the system is grinding to halt from what it looks like. In my experience that is what happens if you don't have a paging file and run out of memory...

yup it's enabled on the SSD - 500 -2000MB

 

Oh that makes sense after all. Your paging file is also completely used up and isn't set to expand beyond that point. The system isn't thrashing, it is just killing things because it can't do anything else. Instead of getting 8 more GB, you should probably just pay for however much your board supports (32GB or 64GB). You have after all are going to hit the maximum regardless since you evidently just leave everything open and never close anything. This has officially become absurd. I'm honestly not even sure if you are being serious at this point or if you just didn't just open 500 thousand tabs take that screen shot. I'm probably not the only one...

I am going to stop telling people what I always tell them about RAM usage and modern necessities.  I always tell people, "unless you use VMs, Photoshop, media editing - you will never use more than 4GB, for most people 8GB is more than enough.."  OP has me confused. 

How in the world can someone "use" 200 tabs ?  More than 20 and they dont even show up, just pile up.  200 tabs ?  why ?  Does the OP simply never close them after using them ?

Anyway, its not my place to question another person's usage - it just seems like something can be done better before adding RAM.  FWIW

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    • Hands-on with BOOX Tappy: cute little reading accessory by Taras Buria Page turners are quite popular accessories for e-readers, as they enable a hands-free reading experience, which is particularly useful with large readers featuring 10-inch or larger displays. The BOOX Tappy is a new accessory that was introduced earlier this year, and we took this cute-looking thingy for a spin. The Tappy comes in a small box, with two additional buttons and a user manual. The device is made of glossy green plastic and resembles old appliances from the nuclear age. Material quality is great, and each part feels quite premium. Plastic is high-quality, the switch is nice to flick, and the buttons are not rattly. At the bottom, four rubberized feet prevent slipping when used on a desk. Unfortunately, there are no color options, and the Tappy is only available in green. It looks good, but I wish there were other options as well. There are two removable buttons, an on/off switch, and an LED indicator that displays connection mode, charging status, and more. The buttons resemble those of an old typewriter, with quite a long travel distance and a pleasant clack. In the box, you have four buttons with different icons: heart, coffee, O, and X. You can easily swap buttons by simply pulling them upwards. Tip: buttons come with plastic covers, but they are quite tricky to remove. It is hard to call the Tappy the most ergonomic remote control, but after fiddling with it for a few hours, I managed to find a comfortable hand position. Attaching a lanyard to it can make it more comfortable in use without the fear of dropping it, but unfortunately, the Tappy does not come with one. The Tappy connects via Bluetooth 5.2, and it works in three modes, which you can toggle by pressing and holding both buttons for about five seconds: Reading Mode Multimedia Mode Browsing Mode Next / Previous page Next / Previous Track Up / Down scroll If you pair the Tappy with a BOOX device (I tested it with the BOOX Go 10.5 Gen 2 Lumi), you will get small pop-ups indicating the current mode. Plus, you can customize what each button does when pressed one time, two times, or held for a few seconds. The list of available actions and features you can use is massive, and I like that BOOX lets you map stuff like brightness adjustment, app launching, screenshot-taking, screen rotating, navigation, and more. Note, however, that while you can use the Tappy with other readers, its customization is only available on BOOX devices running firmware version 4.2 and newer. I could not connect the Tappy to my computer (Windows 11 claims a driver error when I try), but it worked with the DuRoBo Krono that I recently reviewed. My Kindle Paperwhite refused to work with the Tappy, though, just like my iPhone. The Tappy uses a non-removable Li-Ion battery, which can be recharged with a Type-C cable. BOOX rates the remote for "weeks of use," and I can say that it indeed has very good battery life. While there are no battery indicators on the remote, you can see the current level in the status bar or in Input settings in the BOOX firmware. After a few days of active use, mine still shows about 95%. Overall, the Tappy left a nice impression. It is well-made, and the integration with BOOX devices is great. I also like that BOOX decided to have some fun with its design and swappable buttons. I cannot say I am a fan of its odd shape, though. Still, I managed to find a way to use it comfortably. And when not in use, it just looks neat sitting on the table doing nothing or serving you as a small clacky fidget. Buy BOOX Tappy - $29.99 on Amazon US As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
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    • Passkeys: Think of them like a broken heart necklace. Imagine one of those heart necklaces that breaks into two matching pieces. One person keeps one half, and the other person keeps the other half. With passkeys, the website has one half, and you have the other half. If the website gets hacked and someone steals its half, that stolen piece is useless by itself. It cannot unlock your account without your matching half. This particular heart necklace is one of a kind, there is only one in existence. Your half of the necklace has to be stored somewhere. It might be stored on your phone, tablet, computer, security key, or a password manager that can sync it between all your devices. A security key is a small physical device that you keep with you, kind of like a house key, car key, or flash drive. I would not usually recommend a security key as the first option for the average person. For most people, it is easier to use their phone, computer, or a password manager that can sync passkeys between their devices. A security key is more like a spare key you keep in a safe place, just in case you lose access to your other devices or your password manager. Some security keys plug into your computer. Some plug into your phone or tablet. Some get tapped against your device. The idea is simple: a security key can hold another passkey for the same website. Think of it like creating a second one-of-a-kind heart necklace for the same account. One necklace could be paired with your password manager, while another necklace could be paired with your security key. That means the website has more than one matching half on file. One half matches the passkey in your password manager. Another half matches the passkey stored on your security key. So, if you lose access to your phone, computer, or password manager, you would still be able to log in using the passkey stored on your security key. Think of it like keeping an extra special necklace piece on a tiny keychain, stored somewhere safe. The website still has the matching half for that security key, but your half is safely stored inside the little key. A passkey does not automatically exist on every device you own. It lives wherever you save it. If your half is stored on one device, then that device is the one that has the matching piece. For example, if you create the passkey on your Windows computer and it is only saved to that computer, your iPhone does not automatically have that same half. If you create it on your iPhone and it only stays on that iPhone, your Android phone does not automatically have it either. That is where password managers come in. A password manager can act like a protected jewelry box for your passkeys. Instead of your half of the necklace being locked to only one device, the password manager can securely sync that half to your other approved devices. For example, Apple Passwords and iCloud Keychain can sync passkeys between your Apple devices. Google Password Manager can sync passkeys with your Google account. But password managers such as 1Password and Bitwarden can sync passkeys between everything, your phones, tablets and computers. Now, you might ask: “What happens if I lose access to the device that has my passkey?” That depends on where your passkey was saved and what recovery options the website gives you. If your passkey was synced through a password manager, you may be able to sign in from another device that has access to that same password manager. For example, if your passkey is saved in iCloud Keychain, Google Password Manager, 1Password, or Bitwarden, another approved device may still have access to it. If your passkey was saved only on one phone, computer, or security key, and you lose that device, then you may not have your half of the necklace anymore. In that case, you would usually need to use the website’s backup login or account recovery options. A lot of websites that support passkeys still let you fall back to your regular password. So if you lose access to your passkey, the site may still let you log in with your password, a code sent to your email, a text message, a recovery code, or some other account recovery process. That is convenient, but it is also important to understand: if the website still allows password login, then your password still matters. Passkeys are safer than passwords, but if your account still has a password as a backup, you should still use a strong, unique password and turn on two-factor authentication if the website offers it. This is why it is a good idea to have more than one safe way back into important accounts. For example, you might keep your passkey in a syncing password manager, add a second trusted device, save recovery codes somewhere safe, or set up a backup security key. A passkey is very secure, but just like a real key, you need a backup plan in case you lose access to it. Now, you might ask: “What stops a hacker from copying my half of the necklace?” That’s the important part: your half is protected. It is not something you type in, and it is not something the website gets to keep. Think of your half as being locked inside a tiny safe on your phone, computer, security key, or password manager. That safe only opens when you approve it with your fingerprint, face, PIN, or device password. When you log in, the website does not need to see your half. It only needs proof that your half matches its half. Your actual half is not handed over to the website. This is different from a password. With a password, you type the secret into the website. If you type it into a fake website, the hacker now has it. With a passkey, you are not typing your secret into the website. Your device is proving you have the matching half without giving the half away. That also helps protect you from fake websites. If someone makes a fake login page that looks like the real site, your device can tell it is not the real match. It will not use your passkey there. Now, could someone use your passkey if they stole your device, got into your password manager, or somehow unlocked the safe that holds your half? Yes, that is why your device password, PIN, fingerprint, face unlock, and password manager security still matter. But a hacker cannot just steal your passkey from the website or trick you into typing it into a fake page like they can with a password. That is why passkeys are safer than passwords. The two matching pieces have to come together, like two lovebirds who were once separated and are finally reunited.
    • Newegg offers insane combo deal on Amazon Prime Day 2026 that beats Steam Machine by Sayan Sen Building a PC is undoubtedly difficult nowadays but with this epic combo deal, Newegg is trying to make it as easy for you as it is possible. If you are making a new one or even upgrading an old system to a new Windows 11 device, this combo bundle is truly unmissable as you get AMD's Ryzen 9800X3D, a compatible X870 motherboard, a 240mm AIO liquid cooler and finally a Samsung 990 PRO SSD all for under $1000 (purchase link under the specs table down below). This should beat out the newly launched Steam Machine from Valve in terms of performance and performance per dollar especially if you are willing to set Linux up on it. Essentially with this combo you will get the AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D 8-core 3D V cache CPU, Samsung's 990 PRO 2TB NVMe SSD, the MSI MAG X870 TOMAHAWK WIFI ATX Motherboard, and finally the Cooler Master Elite Liquid 240. Thanks to that massive vertically stacked L3 cache, the X3D desktop processors, including the 9800X3D, also come with the benefit of not needing fast memory. Even DDR5-5600 should be plenty for it. The technical specifications of the Ryzen 7 9800X3D are given in the table below: Specification Value Architecture Zen 5 Cores / Threads 8 / 16 Base Clock 4.7 GHz Max Boost Clock Up to 5.2 GHz L1 Cache 640 KB L2 Cache 8 MB L3 Cache 96 MB Total Cache 104 MB CPU Core Process TSMC 4nm FinFET I/O Die Process TSMC 6nm FinFET Socket AM5 Default TDP 120W Max Temperature (Tjmax) 95°C Thermal Solution Not included Memory Type DDR5 Max Capacity 256 GB Memory Speeds 2x1R: DDR5-5600 2x2R: DDR5-5600 4x1R: DDR5-3600 4x2R: DDR5-3600 PCIe Version PCIe 5.0 PCIe Lanes (Total/Usable) 28 / 24 USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10Gbps) 4 USB 2.0 1 Graphics Cores 2 CU RDNA 2 Frequency 2200 MHz DisplayPort over USB-C Yes Overclocking Unlocked Up next we have the tech specs for the MSI MAG X870 TOMAHAWK WIFI Motherboard: Specification Value Chipset AMD X870 CPU Support AMD Ryzen 9000 / 8000 / 7000 Series Desktop Processors Socket AM5 Memory Slots 4 × DDR5 UDIMM Maximum Memory Capacity 256GB Memory Support DDR5 8400–5600 MT/s (OC), DDR5 5600–4800 MT/s (JEDEC) Integrated Graphics Outputs 1 × HDMI 2.1 FRL (up to 8K 60Hz) 2 × USB4 Type-C with DisplayPort 1.4 HBR3 (up to 4K 60Hz) Expansion Slots PCI_E1: PCIe 5.0 x16 (CPU) PCI_E2: PCIe 3.0 x1 (Chipset) PCI_E3: PCIe 4.0 x4 (Chipset) Audio Realtek ALC4080 Codec 7.1-Channel USB High Performance Audio Supports up to 32-bit/384kHz playback on front panel S/PDIF output M.2 Slots 4 × M.2 M2_1: PCIe 5.0 x4 (CPU, 22110/2280) M2_2: PCIe 5.0 x4 (CPU, 2280/2260) M2_3: PCIe 4.0 x2 (Chipset, 2280/2260) M2_4: PCIe 4.0 x4 (Chipset, 2280/2260) SATA Ports 4 × SATA 6Gb/s RAID Support RAID 0, 1, 5, 10 for M.2 NVMe storage devices Rear USB Ports 4 × USB 2.0 3 × USB 5Gbps Type-A 2 × USB 10Gbps Type-A 1 × USB 10Gbps Type-C 2 × USB4 40Gbps Type-C Front USB Headers 4 × USB 2.0 4 × USB 5Gbps Type-A 1 × USB 20Gbps Type-C LAN Realtek 8126-CG 5G LAN Wireless Wi-Fi 7 (M.2 Key-E module pre-installed) Supports 2.4GHz / 5GHz / 6GHz bands Up to 5.8Gbps Supports 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/ax/be Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.4, MLO, 4KQAM Internal Power Connectors 1 × 24-pin ATX Power 2 × CPU Power Connectors 1 × PCIe 8-pin Power Connector Fan Headers 1 × CPU Fan 1 × Combo Fan (Pump/System) 6 × System Fan RGB Headers 3 × Addressable V2 RGB (JARGB_V2) 1 × RGB LED (JRGB) Other Internal Headers 1 × EZ Conn-header 2 × Front Panel Headers 1 × Chassis Intrusion 1 × Front Audio 1 × TPM 2.0 Header Debug Features 4 × EZ Debug LEDs 1 × EZ Digit Debug LED Rear I/O Ports Clear CMOS Button Flash BIOS Button HDMI 2 × USB 40Gbps Type-C 1 × USB 10Gbps Type-C 4 × USB 10Gbps Type-A 3 × USB 5Gbps Type-A 4 × USB 2.0 5G LAN Port Wi-Fi/Bluetooth Antenna Connectors Audio Connectors Form Factor ATX The Samsung 990 PRO is a PCIe Gen4 NVMe SSD and still one of the fastest drives available today for under $500. Speaking of fast, sequential reads and writes are rated at 7450 MB/s and 6900 MB/s, respectively. The random throughputs for reads and writes are 1400K IOPS and 1550K IOPS, respectively. The 990 PRO is based on Samsung's 7th Gen V-NAND flash, and it too is TLC. It packs 2 gigs of LPDDR4 DRAM cache, which helps the random performance. The endurance rating for this is 1200 TBW (terabytes written), which should be sufficient for most users. The Samsung 990 PRO is compatible with the PlayStation 5, but if you are going to use the 990 PRO on a PC, check out the Samsung Magician app that lets you track your drive's health, update its firmware, customize various settings, and more. The tech specs are given below: Specification Value Interface PCIe Gen 4.0 x4, NVMe 2.0 Form Factor M.2 2280 Controller Samsung In-house Controller NAND Flash 3D TLC DRAM Cache 2GB LPDDR4 Sequential Read (Max) 7,450 MB/s Sequential Write (Max) 6,900 MB/s Random Read (4K) Up to 1,400,000 IOPS Random Write (4K) Up to 1,550,000 IOPS TBW (Endurance) 1,200 TBW MTBF 1,500,000 hours Operating Temperature 0°C to 70°C Storage Temperature -40°C to 85°C Shock Resistance 1,500G / 0.5ms Heatsink No Get the combo deal at this link: AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D, Samsung 990 PRO 2TB, MSI MAG X870 TOMAHAWK WIFI motherboard, Cooler Master Elite Liquid 240: $784.99 + $25 off with promo code FTTF77: $759.99 (Sold and Shipped by Newegg US) Good to know This Newegg deal is U.S. specific, and not available in other regions unless specified. We only use first-party seller links (at the time of article publishing); ensure that you purchase from a first-party seller link only. Check out Today's Deals on Amazon | or our recent tech deals. Become a Prime member (for Students or SNAP) via Neowin Get Prime Access - Prime for half price (for qualifying Medicaid, EBT, SNAP) Subscribe to Prime Video, Audible Plus, Music Unlimited or Kindle Unlimited via Neowin As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
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