hybrid cooling system

About this tag
The hybrid cooling system tag on WindowsForum.com covers discussions about advanced thermal management in high-performance computing devices. Recent threads highlight the ASUS ExpertCenter Pro ET900N E3, a desktop workstation with enterprise-grade AI capabilities that requires efficient cooling for its NVIDIA GB300 Blackwell superchip. The AYANEO Flip 1S DS handheld gaming console also features a hybrid cooling system to manage heat from its powerful components in a compact form factor. Additionally, Microsoft's Virtual Datacenter Tour explores cooling innovations in Azure cloud infrastructure, including hybrid approaches that combine air and liquid cooling for sustainability and performance. These examples show how hybrid cooling systems are critical for enabling powerful, compact, and energy-efficient computing across workstations, gaming devices, and data centers.
  1. ASUS ExpertCenter Pro ET900N E3: The Desktop Supercomputer with NVIDIA GB300 Blackwell Chip

    Quietly humming on a workstation, an inconspicuous desktop tower now boasts the capacity to rival server rooms for artificial intelligence workloads—a development that reshapes expectations for on-premises computing. ASUS’s newly unveiled ExpertCenter Pro ET900N E3, equipped with the NVIDIA...
  2. AYANEO Flip 1S DS: The Ultimate Dual-Screen Handheld Gaming Powerhouse

    AYANEO's latest innovation, the Flip 1S DS, is poised to redefine the handheld gaming landscape with its dual-screen design and robust performance capabilities. This device not only challenges existing models like the ASUS ROG Ally X but also introduces features that cater to both gaming...
  3. Microsoft’s Virtual Datacenter Tour: Unlocking Cloud Infrastructure Transparency and Innovation

    Amid the accelerating digital transformation of business, education, and society, few forces are as quietly essential as the modern datacenter. Behind nearly every online service, financial transaction, remote work session, and AI-enabled application runs the quiet hum of server racks inside...