Remember the humble days of static images and unwaveringly still materials? How about when a heatsink was a heatsink and not a chance to throw more energy into your rig and more RGB out upon your desk? Those were the days. These days, however, we have screens on SSD coolers.
No, I'm not joking. The (via ) is an M.2 SSD cooler that has a screen on it to display info such as your SSD's current speed, temperature, or utilisation. It gets this info beamed to it via a USB header with H25 com สล็อต the help of the Thermalright software.
I've seen more than my fair share of screens on things that don't need screens this year—just —but this might be one step too far. Admittedly I'm saying this as someone who doesn't even have a windowed side-panel, so I'm a little biased, but come on, an w69 slot SSD heatsink? I'm still not even sure I'm okay with SSDs requiring actively cooled heatsinks at all.
The Digital version is a little taller than the *yawn* plain brushed metal version. But apart from this it's the same copper heat pipe deal.
The new Digital version doesn't seem to be retailing in the West, yet, but if you're fine foregoing all that vital inside-chassis LED data, you can pick up the . It'll certainly help with those toasty PCIe 5.0 drives, although the , now. There might be little market for such coolers before long.

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