In some of his recent videos, Scottish YouTuber AdoredTV mentioned that he's often criticized for having a bias towards AMD. Obviously, he doesn't believe that to be true, as he has no problem with positivity or negativity towards any manufacturer, but the criticism apparently inspired him to...
Here Jim goes where he has not gone before with Zen 2 trying to explain what we have seen so far and reflection on how AMD uses benchmarks to profoundly show their best case scenario for performance.
In his newest video, Jim of AdoredTV on YouTube discusses fanboys, old school tech reviews, Zen II leaks, Ryzen 3000 leaks, overclocking the Radeon VII, and more. Listen to him reminisce over the days when reviewers told it like it was without a filter and then compare it to the advertiser...
AdoredTV on YouTube has released a new video where he speculates on upcoming AMD product launches for 2019 such as Navi, Vega II, and Ryzen 2. AMD President and CEO Dr. Lisa Su will have the undivided attention of the entire tech industry when she delivers her keynote speech at CES 2019, and it...
AMD presented their new "Rome" EPYC processors at the New Horizon event earlier this week, and they made some bold claims about the CPU's architecture and performance. The raw live stream has a lot of filler, but AdoredTV posted a great summary and analysis of the new architecture.
Check out...
AdoredTV tackles the history of Intel cheating on benchmarks. There are a few references to someone that we all know. :)
Unprincipled Benchmarketing 101.
AdoredTV has a new video where he explains how the marketing from Nvidia works and why it is meant to obfuscate the true performance potential of the upcoming Nvidia Turing RTX lineup. By analyzing previous performance metrics released by other reviewers on the internet, comparing hardware...
Good ol' AdoredTV has pushed out a new video on YouTube that speculates on the new RTX 2080, you read that correctly, that will feature a Turing GPU with ray tracing technology. Also of note in his video is the new Turing cards aren't going to be significantly faster than the current generation...