What forum category/place do i post everything I need the PC to be able to do: so I can inquire as to a referral to whom can build it?
Cost is no concern to me. I checked locally and all the places that I checked said it was out of their league.TBH, unless you are planning on paying some ungodly shipping, you should probably seek out services in your local area that will do such and talk to them directly.
IIRC places like Micro Center will build your parts for a nominal fee.
I decided to ask which category or what part of the forum should I be having this discussion so that I am in the correct place? I am new here, yet could not find any categories to cover what I am needing to speak about: unless I am missing it. Thank you; Though, I do not know what Puget means.Puget would be one place to look into for special builds if you have deep pockets.
Would help to know what is so special about your requirements that you are having trouble finding local shops that can build it for you.
Thank you: all of the "Customer Specific Build" experts I have thus far found only work with Motherboards made by other companies. Yet My needs are quite unique: as I am needing it all built from scratch according to my own Blueprints: and will in the end accomodate 278 total i9 Processors. On a side project I am working on a Miniature Desktop model: and am almost done with the final touches of the Processor I have designed; It is all based on Vortice mathematics. Yet no current boards to-date can handle a CPU shaped like a cube: having seating points on all sides. I will also need to find someone that can build this as well according to my specs/blueprints.Carey Holzman of YouTube fame does customer specific builds. He is based in Arizona IIRC.
Now that the thread is here, post up.
Neither AMD or Intel mainstream CPUs support more than one socket per motherboard so the only way to put 278 i9 together would be to build 278 individual i9 and then use mesh technology to form a compute cluster out of them, this is a physical limitation of the CPU itself as the package lacks the extra pins necessary to directly connect CPUs to each other and the internal logic to manage multi-socket. Unless the software you will be working with supports clustering, you would be better off going with multi-socket Xeon or EPYC.built from scratch according to my own Blueprints: and will in the end accomodate 278 total i9 Processors.
You can post it here and people will give you suggestions in the form of a PCPartPicker bill for you to go buy the parts.What forum category/place do i post everything I need the PC to be able to do: so I can inquire as to a referral to whom can build it?
Thank you: all of the "Customer Specific Build" experts I have thus far found only work with Motherboards made by other companies. Yet My needs are quite unique: as I am needing it all built from scratch according to my own Blueprints: and will in the end accomodate 278 total i9 Processors. On a side project I am working on a Miniature Desktop model: and am almost done with the final touches of the Processor I have designed; It is all based on Vortice mathematics. Yet no current boards to-date can handle a CPU shaped like a cube: having seating points on all sides. I will also need to find someone that can build this as well according to my specs/blueprints.
My own PC has two CPUs, then again its a Server Board and beyond the "mainstream" category of those that takes only one "socket". I am not good at communicating since I do not know how to be diplomatically appealing or soft in my presentation of intent or self. So I apologize in advance for how I talk. To speak about this in detail: of which I am more than capable of doing is a challenge as I am realizing I am failing at communicating. Learning what to say and shouldn't be said is a trial and error journey for me and hopefully not at anyone's painful expense during this learning process for me. I am hoping to say enough without giving away every detail so as to not lose the invention. I have never, and I mean literally never reached out to the public for help regarding my own inventions. It is not a question to me as to will it work or what if it doesnt: becaus I know it will because I created it to. So, in short, there are two separate projects I have been working on. #1) a processing platform unlike anything ever done before utilizing the limited capabilities of 278 i9 processors [and this was only until I am able to get the processors I created manifested from paper to production]. and #2) a much smaller version utilizing 6 i9 processors: think of a cube: each side of the cube is where it will seat All connection points based on Vortice mathematics.Neither AMD or Intel mainstream CPUs support more than one socket per motherboard so the only way to put 278 i9 together would be to build 278 individual i9 and then use mesh technology to form a compute cluster out of them, this is a physical limitation of the CPU itself as the package lacks the extra pins necessary to directly connect CPUs to each other and the internal logic to manage multi-socket. Unless the software you will be working with supports clustering, you would be better off going with multi-socket Xeon or EPYC.
:WOW:
Yeah, I would say your build goes beyond the average "computer guy".
I used to know a semiconductor physicist at MIT who'd be able to help with that...but I think he was atomized in an RF generated plasma beam. At any rate, nobody's heard from him for several years but there was a strange light flashing in rythmic patterns observed by one of the rovers that offers some hope. NASA won't release that data so we can determine anything specific, however.Thank you: all of the "Customer Specific Build" experts I have thus far found only work with Motherboards made by other companies. Yet My needs are quite unique: as I am needing it all built from scratch according to my own Blueprints: and will in the end accomodate 278 total i9 Processors. On a side project I am working on a Miniature Desktop model: and am almost done with the final touches of the Processor I have designed; It is all based on Vortice mathematics. Yet no current boards to-date can handle a CPU shaped like a cube: having seating points on all sides. I will also need to find someone that can build this as well according to my specs/blueprints.
I suppose the best way to speak about this is to say I am creating a Computer from scratch utilizing base materials/ingredients used to make every computer component imaginable that a computer uses. T...
What forum category/place do i post everything I need the PC to be able to do: so I can inquire as to a referral to whom can build it?
Thank you: all of the "Customer Specific Build" experts I have thus far found only work with Motherboards made by other companies. Yet My needs are quite unique: as I am needing it all built from scratch according to my own Blueprints: and will in the end accomodate 278 total i9 Processors. On a side project I am working on a Miniature Desktop model: and am almost done with the final touches of the Processor I have designed; It is all based on Vortice mathematics. Yet no current boards to-date can handle a CPU shaped like a cube: having seating points on all sides. I will also need to find someone that can build this as well according to my specs/blueprints.
I am serious and thank you kindly for the reference and help.If you really are being serious: I think you should contact engineering/science department of a university heavily involved in basic research. Ask around for one of their research instrumentation engineers. They live in the world of arcane, rare and one-of-a-kind designs and fabrication projects. If any body could help you get started, it would be they.
I am being serious with that suggestion too: the research instrumentation engineers I knew were usually grad students and extremely eager for any kind of unique project. Also super eager to discuss all the ins and outs of YOUR project, no consulting fees.I am serious and thank you kindly for the reference and help.
I'd be curious about how putting six motherboards on a cubic support structure is supposed to confer extradimentional properties to them.
Add enough RGB fans to it and anything is possible XDI'd be curious about how putting six motherboards on a cubic support structure is supposed to confer extradimentional properties to them.
Building it isn't your biggest hurdle. Cooling is. While the math and engineering might physically support such a venture, the inside of that polygon will be nothing but a huge water block using a car radiator and hose to supply the necessary volume for wattage displacement, and even that may not be enough. You are looking at 5000w+ by necessity. Physical limitations are going to be primary concerns.
I'd be curious about how putting six motherboards on a cubic support structure is supposed to confer extradimentional properties to them.