

Stuff- Epicgear defiant (solderless swappable switches), g600, moutned mic and other stuff. Screens- 3 ASUS VN248H-P IPS 1080p screens mounted on a stand, some old tv on the wall above it. Workstation(desk)- 3770k, 970 reference, 16GB of some crucial memory, a motherboard of some kind I don't remember, Micomsoft SC-512N1-L/DVI, CM Storm Trooper (It's got a handle, can you handle that?), 240mm Asetek based AIO, Crucial M550 256GB (upgrade soon), some hard drives, disc drives, and hot swap bays Stuff- k70 with reds, steel series rival, g13, full desk covering mouse mat

Screens- Acer preditor XB241H (1080p, 144Hz Gsync), LG 1080p ultrawide, (all mounted) directly wired to TV in other room Gaming and HTPC (reparations)- ASUS 1080, MSI X99A SLI Plus, 5820k- 4.5GHz 1.25v, asetek based 360mm AIO, RM 1000x, 16GB memory, 750D with front USB 2.0 replaced with 3.0 ports, 2 250GB 850 EVOs in Raid 0 (why not, only has games on it), some hard drives I really think Microsoft made the correct decision.

I'm mainly waiting on some detailed reports on the data collection Microsoft's Edge is doing versus Google's Chrome. Assuming it can keep full chrome add-in compatibility, better performance, and better battery life that is. but I may actually switch back to Microsoft's web browser. I honestly never thought I'd be saying this in my lifetime. It’s clear we’re only at the starting phase of a Chromium-powered Edge, and Microsoft is also developing versions that will run on Windows 8, Windows 7, and macOS. Microsoft’s Edge engineering team is due to reveal more about its Chromium work during a BlinkOn 10 keynote tomorrow. Microsoft is also working on ARM support for Chromium, alongside PDF enhancements, battery life improvements, smooth scrolling, editing, layout, dev tools, and web authentication. Microsoft also notes that “building Edge on Chromium was a relatively smooth process,” and that it has made hundreds of changes to Chromium to produce its Edge version with more than 300 merges so far. The company has revealed all of the Google services it has replaced or removed from its new Chromium-powered browser to optimize performance. Microsoft has removed or replaced more than 50 of Google’s services that come as part of Chromium. It even performs better than Google’s own Chrome browser on Windows 10, despite being built on the same Chromium open-source project. It’s very stable and performs surprisingly well. Microsoft just released preview versions of its Chromium-powered Edge browser today.
