DDR5, introduced in 2020, improves on these even further while adding channel architecture improvements, but like DDR4, is not backwards compatible with previous gen DDR SDRAM modules due to different pin configurations. Read our design article on DDR4 here:How to Implement DDR4...
No. NVMe *is* the protocol used by all available M.2 SSDs and it is not backwards compatible. The older PCIe SSDs were discrete PCIe 3.0 x4 cards and thus you cannot use them in a laptop design. In 5th gen NUCs, we could only support M.2 SATA SSDs beca...
PS2 and PS4 games in addition to the previously PS3-only lineup. None of these options are 100% foolproof yet. That means you'll need to keep your Xbox 360 and PS3 in order to play more niche games that haven't been made backwards compatible on Xbox One or haven't been added...
High Sierra might work; it is APFS compatible, too, but I haven’t tried it. I’ve said this before, but the APSF file system does not work well on mechanical hard drives. It was designed for SSDs. I have it installed on an external SSD and it works very well, accept for so...
RAM:8GB DDR3 OS:Windows 10 OpenSauce04added thebugSomething isn't workinglabelApr 18, 2024 Did the Vulkan renderer ever work properly on regular Citra? And if so, do you remember the build or nightly number? I believe the Vulkan stuff should be backwards compatible, unless there are some...
No. NVMe *is* the protocol used by all available M.2 SSDs and it is not backwards compatible. The older PCIe SSDs were discrete PCIe 3.0 x4 cards and thus you cannot use them in a laptop design. In 5th gen NUCs, we could only support M.2 SATA SSDs because ...
No. NVMe *is* the protocol used by all available M.2 SSDs and it is not backwards compatible. The older PCIe SSDs were discrete PCIe 3.0 x4 cards and thus you cannot use them in a laptop design. In 5th gen NUCs, we could only support M.2 SATA...
No. NVMe *is* the protocol used by all available M.2 SSDs and it is not backwards compatible. The older PCIe SSDs were discrete PCIe 3.0 x4 cards and thus you cannot use them in a laptop design. In 5th gen NUCs, we could only support M.2 SATA SSDs bec...
No. NVMe *is* the protocol used by all available M.2 SSDs and it is not backwards compatible. The older PCIe SSDs were discrete PCIe 3.0 x4 cards and thus you cannot use them in a laptop design. In 5th gen NUCs, we could only support M.2 SATA SSDs because SOC could not support...
No. NVMe *is* the protocol used by all available M.2 SSDs and it is not backwards compatible. The older PCIe SSDs were discrete PCIe 3.0 x4 cards and thus you cannot use them in a laptop design. In 5th gen NUCs, we could only support M.2 SATA SSDs because SOC...