![]() ROG Connect links your main system to a notebook through a USB cable, allowing you to view real-time POST code and hardware status readouts on your notebook, as well as make on-the-fly parameter adjustments at a purely hardware level. Monitor the status of your desktop PC and tweak its parameters in real-time via a notebook-just like a race car engineer-with ROG Connect. Plug and Overclock - Tweak it the hardcore way! This way, you can connect extra devices without taking up valuable space on the motherboard, and get the best of both worlds: for better connectivity and expandability without sacrificing essential features. The unique Combo attaches to the motherboard near the rear I/O, and comes with one mSATA port supporting Intel® Smart Response Technology hybrid storage acceleration with compatible mSATA SSDs, and a dual band 2.4/5 GHz Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n and Bluetooth v4.0 card bundled into its mini PCI Express 2.0/USB 2.0 combo port on the opposite side. Hook up immediate extra connectivity to the ROG motherboard and say so long to physical limitations. MPCIe Combo + Dual-band Wi-Fi / Bluetooth 4.0 ![]() Love overclocking in LN2 mode, but have trouble finding out just how cold your board is? Worry no more, with Subzero Sense you can read the system’s temperature even in its coldest subzero degrees temperature. Love to overvolt but got mad trimming the tiny variable resistors? With the VGA Hotwire feature, plug the two-wire cable onboard and solder two wires on the VGA's voltage regulator and accurately adjust the voltage, taking your system to the next level while avoiding some risks. For example, users can connect multiple native Thunderbolt storage devices, an HD video capture device and even an HD display to a single Thunderbolt chain while maintaining maximum throughput. And with the ability to daisy-chain up to six devices without the need for a hub or switch, that means less overheard for a clutter free computing experience. Featuring a maximum bi-directional speed of 10 Gbps, Thunderbolt is 2 times faster than USB 3.0 and an incredible 20 times faster than USB 2.0. crossfire has worked, and very well, granted not on ALL titles, but definitely a majority of them.An industry first, ASUS has place Thunderbolt I/O technology onboard its motherboards, and are set to revolutionize the speed at which peripherals and displays operate. I found the Vega crossfire was underwhelming however, imo the architecture just wasn't geared for it since even a vega gpu on it's own was struggling to be properly utilized. But by this time dx12 and vulkan were getting in most releases. initially running a pair of rx 470 cards was great, upgrading to 3x rx 580s was kicking the 1080 ti's teeth in anything dx11 and under. the GCN 1.2 clearly sorted stuff out with those cards. However there are 3 cards out of the 200/300's that were phenominal with crossfire, i'd say the golden era of crossfire, the R9 285 Tonga and the R9 380 and 380x cards were amazing in crossfire. Crossfire tanked however on the HD7000 and r200s however, the GCN design seemed to throw a hefty wrench into the mix, basically all the R 300s were affected obviously due to the rebranding mostly. the hd6000 too since they were basically similar. The HD5000 series is the era in which crossfire really worked great. ALT+TAB back and forth was the most prevalent and often working solution, there are others that were more game specific, but pretty much any game worked with that solution if it wasn't functioning right on first loadup. Tons of games worked great, and while a lot of people think unreal engine based games, specially on the 3rd engine never worked, they did, VERY WELL, but i find it puzzling how many people didn't bother with the crossfire jumpstart fix, It was usually pretty evident when crossfire wasn't working "properly" or at all, either frame rates akin to a single gpu, or frame times that were shit due to the other gpu needing a smack in the back of the head to clock the fuck up. regardless, it was shortly after that, that the API changes kind of threw a wrench into things during the cold era of the HD2000's, though to be fair, the move to ribbon cables really was much nicer than the awkward external dongle. I'd say crossfire didn't get on it's feet until the Radeon x1900xtx cards launched, Of which i still have actually, i'm sure that mastercard could go for a premium price now. shall we say, pretty rough, understandably. There are more times where it was very functional than when it wasn't. As someone that has used every generation of amd gpu with crossfire.
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