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Ramtech ENG

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=khnKT...
China has launched its first fully self-developed gaming GPU, the LX 7G100, which goes on sale at 8:00 p.m. Wednesday. Created by Shanghai-based Lisuan Tech, this product is five years in the making and marks the first time a Chinese company is competing directly with global giants like NVIDIA and AMD. Lisuan is also the first Chinese GPU maker and the fourth in the world to receive official Microsoft WHQL certification, proving its tech can run smoothly on computers globally.

Engineers are now manually optimizing popular video games to improve software performance for this brand-new chip.

The company was co-founded by 68-year-old Xuan Yifang, a legendary figure who led the mass production of 15 GPU generations in the US before returning to Shanghai to build a pure Chinese chip. Yet the development journey faced severe financial shortages and immense pressure as chip manufacturing is a one-shot deal where a single error can ruin an entire project.

While only 1,000 units are available for this initial release, more than 22,000 people signed up to buy one within the first 24 hours of reservations opening. Equipped with 12GB of large video memory, the GPU is priced at 2,969 yuan (436 US dollars) after applying national subsidies.

5 days ago | [YT] | 6

Ramtech ENG

Suddenly, on my ASUS Z790-H motherboard, 4 USB 3.0 ports on the rear panel died (you can see it in the photo). And it was only those 4 USB 3.0 ports. I reinstalled the drivers, updated the BIOS — nothing helped. Then I reconnected the USB 3.0 header for the front panel on the motherboard and completely powered off the PC. And… everything started working again! What that was, only God knows…
So keep this in mind: if something suddenly stops working, the first thing you should do is completely cut power to the PC (shut it down, unplug the cable, and hold the power button for 10–15 seconds). That way, all residual electricity will drain from the board.

1 month ago (edited) | [YT] | 53

Ramtech ENG

Friends, I’m not sure if you’re still watching me today. At first, I wanted to record a video, but then I decided it would be faster to write a text.

I want to explain why videos are released so rarely on the channel. The thing is, I have a main channel in Russian: youtube.com/channel/UCLf3xbgb...

I’ve been running the main channel for a very long time, and I created the English channel much later. The issue is that managing two channels in two languages is quite difficult and takes a lot of time. On top of that, the algorithms have changed, and videos no longer get as many views as they used to.

Because of this, I sometimes have to choose between one channel or the other. Since the Russian channel had better view dynamics, I tried to upload new videos there first, and only later to the English channel.

I’m currently in Russia, and today the internet here is being heavily restricted. Even most VPNs are not working. This has negatively affected the views on my main channel, since most of the audience is from Russia. In a way, you could say the Russian channel is “dead.”

I’m not planning to leave YouTube, so the only way for me to continue making videos is to learn English and upload them here—which is exactly what I’ll be focusing on in the near future.

Because the internet in Russia is being severely limited, I’ll have to move to another country. Without proper internet access, I won’t be able to live or create videos.

I have more than 200 videos on my Russian channel that haven’t been uploaded to the English channel. The problem is that translating them would take at least a full day per video, so it would take over half a year to go through all of them.

I still want to show you what was in those older videos, so there’s a faster way—using AI translation. Here’s an example of such a translation https://youtu.be/OLh-9qmVJ9A. Let me know in the comments if you’d be able to watch videos like this.

As for recent uploads, I recently released a video about the early-2000s gaming vibe, where I built almost a top-tier 2004 PC. The video is nearly 2 hours long, and I hope I’ll be able to translate it as well.

1 month ago | [YT] | 4

Ramtech ENG

The video about golden era of 2000’s will be around 60 minutes or so!

3 months ago | [YT] | 40

Ramtech ENG

Another confirmation that old games should be played on old monitors. Just look at how intensely green the radioactive waste appears in Half-Life 1 on the Blast Pit level. A CRT monitor also gives the feeling of an image being projected right in front of your eyes. Moreover, at such a low resolution (1024x768), which the monitor is currently set to, it doesn’t even feel like a very low resolution.

All of this feels the way it does because CRT monitors don’t have a visible pixel grid — they use electron beams that glow with a halo rather than forming a single sharp point. That’s why the image appears smoother. This, by the way, creates a completely different gaming experience: the lighting feels more natural, and the graphics don’t look blocky. The only downside is that your eyes get tired more quickly. More details in a separate video.

3 months ago | [YT] | 55

Ramtech ENG

Let’s go! This a almost top 2004 PC build

3 months ago (edited) | [YT] | 50

Ramtech ENG

Here is it my dear friends!

3 months ago | [YT] | 65

Ramtech ENG

Were you interested in watching detailed game reviews on this channel? Or would you prefer to see videos only about Windows?

3 months ago | [YT] | 2

Ramtech ENG

Replaced the capacitors — it powered on! :) There will be content!

3 months ago | [YT] | 54