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  • Scott_T - Friday, July 26, 2024 - link

    passive as long as you dont count all the fans a server has pushing air through them.
  • Oxford Guy - Friday, July 26, 2024 - link

    Exactly. Calling this passive in a bit of a stretch.
  • ballsystemlord - Friday, July 26, 2024 - link

    I agree. These are passive in name only.
  • Khanan - Saturday, July 27, 2024 - link

    Huge blunder by the Author.
  • PeachNCream - Saturday, July 27, 2024 - link

    You must be new here. Welcome to Anandtech Pipeline News!

    Joking aside, it's clearly stated in the article text that the card requires a server's airflow and though the title is misleading and a structured to act as clickbait, the body is relatively well-written for once.
  • Ryan Smith - Saturday, July 27, 2024 - link

    The author did nothing wrong.

    The industry nomenclature for a card/accelerator without a fan to create its own airflow (i.e. active) is that it's a passive card.

    It's not a particularly good definition, since it overlaps with convection-cooled cards, but it is what it is.
  • Oxford Guy - Saturday, July 27, 2024 - link

    Industry standards are malleable, as with how Samsung chose to (deceptively) market TLC and QLC products as 'MLC.'

    That's an example of terminology being abused as a regression from the preceding norm. Terminology that conflates convention-based cooling with extreme-noise server room airflow is an example of poor terminology in need of a change. How many things in tech have a larger conceptual gap than passive cooling versus server room fan-based cooling?

    It's over the top to chastise the author for a 'huge blunder' but it's also overstatement to say that there's nothing wrong in using terminology that is known to be misleading simply because it is currently popular.
  • Khanan - Saturday, July 27, 2024 - link

    I meant the author of the source article. It’s also a joke based on BBT (Steven Hawking)

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