Timely and great communication. Great product. Timely shipping. Thank for filling this need and providing the expertise to give my investment longer life! I appreciate your time, the product, the instructions, responsiveness and customer service. A million thanks!
r***0 (88)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
Verified purchase
Good seller, item as described, fast delivery.
_***h (1731)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
Verified purchase
New SMA extension cables, as advertised. Good price, fast shipment. A pleasure to buy from! AAA+++
i***s (619)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
Verified purchase
Fantastic transaction! Quick turnaround, well packaged and seller initiated an immediate partial refund as eBay’s shipping quote wasn’t entirely accurate. Prompt and helpful correspondence as well! Highly recommend this seller! Thank you for everything!
0***s (1635)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
Verified purchase
Great seller. Shipped fast and arrived fast. I hear nothing but good things about this product however I never got to use it as it was stolen from my mail box before I had a chance to get to it.
You're gonna need a newer motherboard. Almost guarantee it. But it's worth it.
So, this card is awesome - it produces a bit north of 1 million points per day on Folding@Home, and chews down 150-200 watts DC. However, that's after a long, windy road of complicated problem-solving. The PCs I use for F@H are on the older side, 2010-2015, being used mostly to power newer GPUs (AMD 2xx-, 4xx, and 5xx's, and nVidia Kepler-era). I slapped this Maxwell-era card in there, and... "Device can't find enough free resources (code 12)". What?
Turns out, despite being the same chip as the nVidia 980ti and Titan X (with fuse-on-chip differences, I believe - not able to change its identity since they 'blow fuses' to configure its identity), this card is configured to _require_ an absolutely gigantic memory space in PCIe land. So you can only make this card work if your board supports "Above 4G Decoding" - which seems to have only started to be A Thing on newer boards (none of my pre-2015-era boards - of about 6 I've looked at - have the option). Back then, a single card needing more than 4GB of address space just wasn't a thing.
If you can get around that, and enable the "Above 4G Decoding" option, you can pair this with a PCIe-to-CPU 12v power adapter dongle (takes 2x PCIe 6- or 8-pin connectors, and makes 1x "EPS12v" CPU power connector), and a blower+shroud from gpu-mods, and voila. You now almost have a Titan X-class GPU.
But you're not done yet. You've got to put the card in WDDM mode before Windows will put games on there to pipe the sweet, luscious graphics over to your integrated GPU for display. Search Reddit for "nvidia-smi put tesla in wddm mode" and you'll find some clues there.
Haven't tested that myself - I'm happy running it with folding@home, but I'll probably be testing out its GPU capabilities soon enough. Happy with it, except for the obscure requirement for that "Above 4G decoding" feature which limits what boards it can physically work with! It was never meant for us mere mortals (at this price) anyway, so hey, can't blame them.
It also needs a ton of cooling -- and due to the way it's implemented, it's gonna be loud-ish, constantly. With the market the way it is, I'm sure you'll survive.
5 of 5 found this helpful
USA Asus Google Nexus 7 LCD Screen Display Digitizer Touch Screen 2nd Gen 2013
Sep 09, 2016
Finally, a replacement screen that works!
It cost twice as much as the garbage "Dig Repair" parts from knockoff sellers, but well worth it! I've been through at least 3 of those junk Dig Repair parts, and they have erratic touch and thin glass that breaks for no good reason. This replacement part is not only thicker and more reliable, but also includes the adhesive necessary to reattach the screen. Totally worth it.
These W530s kick the butt of most modern laptops. Last model to have touchpad buttons (which make the touchpad usable). True quad core CPU, 4 DDR3 slots. Add an SSD in the mSATA slot and a hard drive in the HDD Bay, and you've got a computer that rips through work like a modern workstation.
Only downside is that it requires a very bulky 135w or 170w adapter (135w is best choice, works on other ThinkPads as well).