Quote (Ghot @ 7 Jan 2017 17:02)
I never made sushi.
Why can't you just roll it like a big cigarette in the wrapper? Why the device?
You need bamboo to roll it or the seaweed rips.
Quote (Wydz @ 7 Jan 2017 17:05)
because thats too much work
bazooka:
put rice in both sides of tube
make divet in rice
put in ingredients
close tube
poop out the sushi
cut
enjoy

who is your avatar?
Quote (Ghot @ 7 Jan 2017 17:24)
Yeah...I just watched a Youtube about how to roll Sushi. I see why that 'device' is selling. :)
Heh yeah.
Quote (t_y_k_o @ 7 Jan 2017 19:37)
*i got the full warranty too considering my card was new. not to mention evga support would send me a 1080 if my card broke right this second.
power draw is irrelevant considering anyone buying either card is an enthusiast. at the end of the year it's pennies on the dollar. i don't see a notable difference between the two cards in that chart either. 10 more fps at the default entry resolution, 7 at what should be standard, and what could be seen as a margin of error for those with an actual enthusiast monitor. are you arguing better at high resolutions or multiple monitor setups? because the higher you go in pixel count for an enthusiast card the less impressive it looks for costing more.
vram is moot point. even at 4k it was landing 44fps instead of 40 which still isn't playable. neither of those cards are 4k cards. and of course they clock higher, the 1080 clocks to 2000 standard, but ppc is lower. both cards at 2,000 and you'd find the 980ti winning by a landslide.
tl;dr 980ti is more than sufficient and not getting a 1080/pascal titan/waiting for the 1080ti was a giant mistake.
still cannot believe you compared overclocking between different architectures though lmao :rofl:
I didn't compare clocks. There is a difference.
Also you don't need to max the graphics at 4k to play at 4k. Pfffft.
