Monday, May 23, 2016

IT News Head Lines (TechSpot) 24/05/2016

TechSpot



All About Those MHz: DDR4 at 4000 MHz, does it make a difference?

For the most part we test using DDR4-3000, as it occasionally shows some benefits over the more typical 2400 and 2666 MHz speeds. Going to 4000 MHz and beyond is a massive increase in frequency (and cost) and I struggled to imagine where this would be useful, particularly when gaming....

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This 1996 Sega Test training video highlights the not-so-glamorous side of game testing

In the mid-90s, Nintendo, Sega and Sony were locked in a heated battle for video game supremacy – at least, in North America. This was well before the Internet enabled public beta testing which meant game developers and publishers like Sega had to do all of their own testing.

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Dell's new 43-inch, 4K desktop monitor can output four 1080p displays simultaneously

Philips a few weeks ago launched a massive 43-inch, 4K-compatible desktop monitor, the BDM4350UC. Now, it’s Dell’s turn at bat.

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Weekend tech reading: Billion hour HDD reliability stats, IMAX plans VR rollout, Vegas eyes eSports

For Q1 2016 we are reporting on 61,590 operational hard drives used to store encrypted customer data in our data center. There are 9.5% more hard drives in this review versus our last review when we evaluated 56,224 drives. In Q1 2016...

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DDR4 Memory at 4000 MHz, Does It Make a Difference?
For the most part we test using DDR4-3000, as it occasionally shows some benefits over the more typical 2400 and 2666 MHz speeds. Going to 4000 MHz and beyond is a massive increase in frequency (and cost) and I struggled to imagine where this would be useful, particularly when gaming. Then again, curiosity had gotten the better of me...

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Available Tags:DDR4 , Sega , HDD

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