Showing posts with label Catalyst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catalyst. Show all posts

Sunday, January 3, 2016

IT News Head Lines (TweakTown) 04/01/2016

TweakTown



Windows 95 can boot up on a Nintendo 3DS handheld
Homebrew creations never cease to amaze me. Just this week we saw hackers jailbreak a PS4 to run Linux and play a Pokemon handheld game, opening the doors for current-gen homebrew creations. Now those enterprising console-crackers have found a way to get Windows 95 to successfully run on Nintendo's New...

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Star Citizen developer reiterates its commitment to VR
During an end-of-year livestream by Roberts Space Industries last month, Chris Roberts gave some more details on the VR side of Star Citizen.
star-citizen-developer-reiterates-commitment-vr
Roberts said that RSI would be refocusing its VR efforts for Star Citizen in the coming months, adding "The status of VR integration is that we've been...
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Microsoft has 'more new IP' than ever before on Xbox One for 2016

Microsoft needs to have a huge 2016 for the Xbox One to be able to compete against the onslaught of mobile gaming, PC gaming, the PS4 and VR - with Oculus launching its Rift in Q1, and HTC with its Vive in April.
microsoft-more-new-ip-before-xbox-one-2016
Xbox boss Phil Spencer has taken to...
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Brooklyn and Manhattan can be explored in The Division

Ubisoft's upcoming tactical shooter, The Division, has passed the ESRB Rating - coming in at 'M' for Mature.
brooklyn-manhattan-explored-division
In the rating summary for The Division, we are learning a little more about what Ubisoft has in store for us later this year. We now know that The Division will feature...
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Myst and Riven creator teases new trailer for VR-ready Obduction

If you haven't heard about Obduction by now, you might have heard of some huge games from the 90s in the form of Myst and Riven. Cyan, the developer behind Obduction, released a new 30-second tease to Obduction over the holidays - check it out below.
The developer teases:...
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Have a peek at Qualcomm's new Snapdragon Flight drone technology

With CES 2016 incoming, Qualcomm hypes up its new Snapdragon Flight drone tech with a teaser clip.
Not content with just dominating the land with its mobile processors, the chipmakers at Qualcomm have now set their sights on the skies. Using its new tiny 58 x 40cm circuit board...
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Faith looks 'more mature' in Mirror's Edge Catalyst

Mirror's Edge Catalyst will be released this year, and we're finally hearing more information on the next adventure of Faith from EA and DICE.
According to DICE's senior concept artist, Per Haagensen, Faith will look "more mature" in Mirror's Edge Catalyst. Haagensen added that DICE wants to show off...
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EA has shipped over 12 million copies of Star Wars Battlefront

While gamers aren't too happy with Star Wars Battlefront, EA has shipped 12 million copies of the game to date, according to Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter.
ea-shipped-over-12-million-copies-star-wars-battlefront
Back in November, EA shipped 6 million copies, with another 6 million copies being shipped out in December. With these shipped copies of...
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Rise of the Tomb Raider bundled with GeForce cards starting January 7

We heard rumors that it was happening, but now it looks like NVIDIA will be providing copies of Rise of the Tomb Raider with certain GeForce cards starting next week.
rise-tomb-raider-bundled-geforce-cards-starting-january-7
As of January 7, Rise of the Tomb Raider will be bundled with the GeForce GTX 970, GTX 980, GTX...
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Activision buys the majority of eSports giant Major League Gaming

It was only back in October 2015 that Activision announced its new eSports division led by the founder of Major League Gaming and the former CEO of ESPN - but now, the company responsible for the Call of Duty franchise has secured the majority of MLG's assets.
activision-buys-majority-esports-giant-major-league-gaming
Activision paid $46...
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Xbox One with AMD's next-gen Polaris architecture teased

It was only a couple of days ago that we heard that AMD's next-gen GPU architecture would be called Polaris, but now we're hearing about a refreshed Xbox One that would feature this new GPU.
xbox-one-amds-next-gen-polaris-architecture-teased
The news is coming from a rumor posted on the Overclock.net forums, where you can...
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Oculus Rift touch controllers delayed to second half of 2016

Oculus VR has announced that the Oculus Rift's Touch controllers won't be launching alongside the VR headset, and have been delayed to the second half of 2016.
oculus-rift-touch-controllers-delayed-second-half-2016
In a recent blog post, the VR pioneers at Oculus said they need more time to perfect the wireless VR peripheral. Luckily, this...
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Just Cause 3 multiplayer mod in the making

The mod team that brought you the fantastic Just Cause 2 multiplayer mod is at it again, and by that I mean it's developing a multiplayer mod for the more recent Just Cause 3. You can see the early stages of progress in the video below. There certainly seems to...

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US Marine Corps put robotic mule project on backburner

The $32 million collaboration between the Google-owned Boston Dynamics team and DARPA has been put on the backburner indefinitely, as the US Marines Corps has decided not to go forward with the LS3 "robotic mule" produced by the project. The main reason: it's too damn loud. Repairs and squad integration...

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Windows 10 now installed on 1 in every 10 PCs

Earlier this week we reported Windows 10 had -- according to anonymous sources -- been installed on over 200 million devices. Now a new report by research firm Net Applications gives us something more concrete: a PC usage increase from 9% in November to 9.96% in December, meaning Windows 10...

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2015 was the Revolution of Resolutions, but 2016 is even more exciting

Introduction

I've been wanting to do a larger article about displays for a while now but thought it would be better positioned at the end of the year to talk about all things monitors, resolutions, refresh rates and variable refresh rates technologies in NVIDIA's G-Sync and AMD's FreeSync.
2015-year-gaming-monitors-2016-even-more-exciting
Up until...
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Samsung announces a new smart biometric processor for the mobile market

Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., a world leader in advanced semiconductor technology, today announced that it is addressing the growing trend of quantified health with an all-in-one advanced system logic chip for the health-oriented wearables market, the Bio-Processor. The Samsung Bio-Processor, now in mass production, is specifically designed to allow accelerated...

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Available Tags:Windows , Nintendo , Microsoft , Xbox , Catalyst , EA , GeForce , Activision , Gaming , Samsung ,

Sunday, December 27, 2015

IT News Head Lines (Guru of 3D) 28/12/2015

Guru of 3D



A friend in need of help
I'm not sure if I can put this here. If I can't I guess delete it, but in any case...

A friend of mine on the Mechwarrior Online community, his...

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Should I Buy a SoundBlaster Z Card for SBX Software? Or Just Buy the SBX Software?
First, I already have an Auzentech X-Fi Prelude card. It's an older card, but it's never given me any problems and I'm happy with it ...
...

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So... How do you feel about MGSV? Did you enjoy The Phantom Pain
Wondering how this community feels about TPP? Any MGS fans here ?

I didn't have a PS3, so I completed MGS4 only once, I love the series and MGSV...

Read More ...




Is it normal for a PG279Q to have this much backlight bleed? (pics included)
It's so annoying. The monitor has no dead pixels, dust or anything like that.

Would you RMA this? I hate the process because it costs money and...

Read More ...




Why does Samsung not make any 120-144 hz panels anymore ?
Are they out of gaming business ? or whats going on ?
I still have the Samsung S27A950D but i want a newer 144 hz 1440p IPS or TN panel and i dont...

Read More ...




8800 GT drive bug - 2nd attempt
Hi, first post for some years.

My XP (SP3) PC uses an 8800 GT with 512 MB. The driver version I have been using for several years is 306.3. I've...

Read More ...




8800 GT driver bug?
Hi, first post for some years.

My XP (SP3) PC uses an 8800 GT with 512 MB. The driver version I have been using for several years is 306.3. I've...

Read More ...




Zotac Arctic storm + MSI AB !!!!
hi

is there a way to allow AB to OC this card ( titanX arctic storm ) and control the fans too ?


it seems that only Firestorm can do that and...

Read More ...




KLONDIKE Pure Gold Case Mod 2015
*KLONDIKE Pure Gold Case Mod 2015*


*Worklog - Part 01*
By Coolone


*a.* *Name of mod:*
KLONDIKE Pure Gold Case Mod 2015

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no trust anymore btw users and the gaming industry
i always check websites before buying games, i check user reviews etc, it seems we are at a time that the gaming industry only cares about doing...

Read More ...




Catalyst Video Quality options don't work on youtube?
I have a R9 280x card using Catalyst 15.11.1 Beta drivers on win7 64. The video quality options in CCC don't work on youtube videos but they do work...

Read More ...




Request : Sapphire R9 380X Bios
Hi everybody I want to flash my R9 380 to R9 380X

If anybody could help me with an Sapphire R9 380X card I would be very happy :)

Read More ...




Display defect due to GPU.
Hello guys , if the notebook suddenly shuts down and when restarted the screen turns black with running red and blue dots vertically... Is it a GPU...

Read More ...




Is it possible to flash an R9 380 with an R9 380 X bios
As the title stated I'm just wondering if it is possibel to flash my R9 380 nitro with an R9 380 X bios as an upgrade ?

Read More ...




HDI Announces Dune HD Solo 4K
HDI has announced the all new Dune HD Solo 4K. It can play a wide varyity of video formats in ultra HD, including support forÂ*hevc-video, also known...

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Available Tags:Samsung , driver , Zotac , MSI , gaming , Catalyst , Sapphire

IT News Head Lines (Guru of 3D) 28/12/2015

Guru of 3D



A friend in need of help
I'm not sure if I can put this here. If I can't I guess delete it, but in any case...

A friend of mine on the Mechwarrior Online community, his...

Read More ...




Should I Buy a SoundBlaster Z Card for SBX Software? Or Just Buy the SBX Software?
First, I already have an Auzentech X-Fi Prelude card. It's an older card, but it's never given me any problems and I'm happy with it ...
...

Read More ...




So... How do you feel about MGSV? Did you enjoy The Phantom Pain
Wondering how this community feels about TPP? Any MGS fans here ?

I didn't have a PS3, so I completed MGS4 only once, I love the series and MGSV...

Read More ...




Is it normal for a PG279Q to have this much backlight bleed? (pics included)
It's so annoying. The monitor has no dead pixels, dust or anything like that.

Would you RMA this? I hate the process because it costs money and...

Read More ...




Why does Samsung not make any 120-144 hz panels anymore ?
Are they out of gaming business ? or whats going on ?
I still have the Samsung S27A950D but i want a newer 144 hz 1440p IPS or TN panel and i dont...

Read More ...




8800 GT drive bug - 2nd attempt
Hi, first post for some years.

My XP (SP3) PC uses an 8800 GT with 512 MB. The driver version I have been using for several years is 306.3. I've...

Read More ...




8800 GT driver bug?
Hi, first post for some years.

My XP (SP3) PC uses an 8800 GT with 512 MB. The driver version I have been using for several years is 306.3. I've...

Read More ...




Zotac Arctic storm + MSI AB !!!!
hi

is there a way to allow AB to OC this card ( titanX arctic storm ) and control the fans too ?


it seems that only Firestorm can do that and...

Read More ...




KLONDIKE Pure Gold Case Mod 2015
*KLONDIKE Pure Gold Case Mod 2015*


*Worklog - Part 01*
By Coolone


*a.* *Name of mod:*
KLONDIKE Pure Gold Case Mod 2015

Read More ...




no trust anymore btw users and the gaming industry
i always check websites before buying games, i check user reviews etc, it seems we are at a time that the gaming industry only cares about doing...

Read More ...




Catalyst Video Quality options don't work on youtube?
I have a R9 280x card using Catalyst 15.11.1 Beta drivers on win7 64. The video quality options in CCC don't work on youtube videos but they do work...

Read More ...




Request : Sapphire R9 380X Bios
Hi everybody I want to flash my R9 380 to R9 380X

If anybody could help me with an Sapphire R9 380X card I would be very happy :)

Read More ...




Display defect due to GPU.
Hello guys , if the notebook suddenly shuts down and when restarted the screen turns black with running red and blue dots vertically... Is it a GPU...

Read More ...




Is it possible to flash an R9 380 with an R9 380 X bios
As the title stated I'm just wondering if it is possibel to flash my R9 380 nitro with an R9 380 X bios as an upgrade ?

Read More ...




HDI Announces Dune HD Solo 4K
HDI has announced the all new Dune HD Solo 4K. It can play a wide varyity of video formats in ultra HD, including support forÂ*hevc-video, also known...

Read More ...






Available Tags:Samsung , driver , Zotac , MSI , gaming , Catalyst , Sapphire

Thursday, November 19, 2015

IT News Head Lines (techPowerUp) 19/11/2015

techPowerUp!



NVIDIA Details "Pascal" Some More at GTC Japan
NVIDIA revealed more details of its upcoming "Pascal" GPU architecture at the Japanese edition of the Graphics Technology Conference. The architecture will be designed to nearly double performance/Watt over the current "Maxwell" architecture, by implementing the latest tech. This begins with stacked HBM2 (high-bandwidth memory 2). The top "Pascal" based product will feature four 4-gigabyte HBM2 stacks, totaling 16 GB of memory. The combined memory bandwidth for the chip will be 1 TB/s. Internally, bandwidths can touch as high as 2 TB/s. The chip itself will support up to 32 GB of memory, and so enterprise variants (Quadro, Tesla), could max out the capacity. The consumer GeForce variant is expected to serve up 16 GB.



It's also becoming clear that NVIDIA will build its "Pascal" chips on the 16 nanometer FinFET process (AMD will build its next-gen chips on more advanced 14 nm process). NVIDIA is innovating a new interconnect called NVLink, which will change the way the company has been building dual-GPU graphics cards. Currently, dual-GPU cards are essentially two graphics cards on a common PCB, with PCIe bandwidth from the slot shared by a bridge-chip, and an internal SLI bridge connecting the two GPUs. With NVLink, the two GPUs will be interconnected with an 80 GB/s bi-directional data path, letting each GPU directly address memory controlled by the other. This should greatly improve memory management in games that take advantage of newer APIs such as DirectX 12 and Vulkan; and prime the graphics card for higher display resolutions. NVIDIA is expected to launch its first "Pascal" based products in the first half of 2016.







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AMD to Give Away Star Wars Battlefront with Radeon R9 Fury Series Graphics
AMD has a knack of pulling off some of the season's biggest game bundles, with its Never Settle Bundle legacy. The company is preparing to give away one of the season's biggest games, Star Wars Battlefront, with its Radeon R9 Fury graphics cards. Given away by participating retailers, purchases of the three cards will come with a voucher that can be redeemed on AMD website for an Origin key to the game.


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(PR) Seagate Engineers Tiered Archive System for HPC Storage
Seagate Technology plc. today introduced ClusterStor A200, a first-of-its-kind tiered archive storage system for high performance computing (HPC). The A200 helps reduce storage and operational costs by up to 50 percent compared to tier-one storage platforms.



The A200 was designed to complement the rest of Seagate's ClusterStor family of scale-out storage systems. It allows customers to non-disruptively migrate designated data off of the performance-optimized, primary storage tiers while keeping it online for fast retrieval. This avoids a common problem in shared HPC environments where the organization is forced to choose between having all of the data available to make the best analysis versus the time required to retrieve data from tape. Performance of the primary storage is often improved by migrating data and freeing up space for more efficient data layout. The pre-configured ClusterStor A200 solution includes an automatic policy-driven hierarchical storage management (HSM) system and near limitless scale-out capacity.


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Intel Readies "Never Stop Gaming" Game Bundle
Intel isn't new to giving away games or in-game DLC with its processors. The company is making a comeback on that front with an even bigger game bundle. Called "Never Stop Gaming," it rewards buyers of the company's Core i7 processors (Skylake, Haswell-E, and Haswell LGA1150); with $125 worth games/DLCs. These include Just Cause 3, Counter Strike: Global Offensive, and World of Warships ($50 worth items and in-game currency). The offer will be applicable to retail channel boxed processor purchases, as well as branded PCs with Core i7 processors. The bundle will be shipped as a voucher given with each Core i7 product purchase, which can be redeemed on Intel website. It is valued at $125, with the $60 Just Cause 3, $50-worth in-game goodies for World of Warships, and $15 worth Counter Strike: Global Offensive. The offer will be retailer specific.




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Intel 7th Generation Core "Kaby Lake" and 200-series Chipset Platform Outlined
Intel's tick-tock product development cycle is disturbed. The cadence of launching a new CPU microarchitecture on a given silicon fab process, miniaturizing it to a smaller fab process, and then launching an even newer micro-architecture on that process; is about to change with the company's 7th generation Core "Kaby Lake" processor. When launched, it would be the third microarchitecture built on the company's 14 nm process, besides "Skylake" (current new architecture) and "Broadwell" (miniaturization of "Haswell" to 14 nm.) Some of the very first documents related to Kaby Lake began to move about, making news along the way. The architecture is scheduled to launch along with its companion 200-series chipset some time in 2016.



To begin with, Core "Kaby Lake" will continue to be built on the LGA1151 package, and will likely be backwards compatible with existing 100-series chipset motherboards with a firmware update. From what we get to understand from leaked material, it will not be a vastly newer architecture than Skylake, at least not of the kind Skylake was to Broadwell. There are still CPU performance enhancements on offer, an "enhanced full-range BClk overclocking," which could mean improved overclocking on chips with upwards-locked multipliers (although we won't get our hopes too high and call it a return of the BClk overclocking era). A bulk of the R&D will fall into improving the integrated graphics, to support multiple 5K displays, 10-bit HVEC and VP9 hardware-acceleration; platform-integrated Thunderbolt 3, and platform interface support for Intel Optane (3D XPoint memory).


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Three AIB Branded Radeon R9 380X Graphics Cards Pictured
Here are the first pictures of three AIB-branded Radeon R9 380X graphics cards, including one each from ASUS, XFX, and GIGABYTE. The ASUS branded Radeon R9 380X graphics card, the R9 380X STRIX, features the company's dual-slot, dual-fan DirectCU II cooling solution. ASUS is also giving it a slick back-plate, and offering it in two variants based on factory-overclock (or lack of it).



The XFX branded R9 380X features a similar product size to the ASUS card, featuring a moderately long PCB, and a dual-slot, dual-fan "Double Dissipation" cooler. XFX will sell variants of this card in reference and factory-overclocked speeds. Lastly, there's GIGABYTE. Like the others, this card features a medium-size PCB, with the company's dual-slot WindForce 2X cooling solution. Based on the 28 nm "Tonga" aka "Antigua" silicon, the R9 380X reportedly features 2,048 GCN 1.2 stream processors, 128 TMUs, 32 ROPs, and a 256-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface, holding 4 GB of memory. It's expected to launch later this week.
Souces: VideoCardz, HardwareInfo, WCCFTech

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(PR) ADATA Showcases Full Industrial Product Range at SPS IPC Drives 2015
ADATA Technology, a leading manufacturer of high performance DRAM modules and NAND Flash products, is pleased to confirm participation in SPS IPC Drives 2015, Europe's leading industrial PC and automation trade show from Nov. 24 to 26 in Nuremberg, Germany. ADATA is ready to display a wide selection of industrial products that help customers create smart manufacturing with a high degree of connectivity, automation, and control. Smart industry depends on reliable memory and storage to drive it forward, and ADATA is at the forefront of providing these.



To fulfill the latest market demand, ADATA implements large capacities and high performance specifications, with PCIe Gen 3x4 and up to 2TB density for big data process across industrial sectors. In addition, the support of PLP (Power-Loss Protection), advanced LDPC ECC and wide temperature tolerance ensure great reliability, stability, as well as data security. As for those applications requires ultra-fast computing and high power efficiency, ADATA's DDR4 DRAM modules can offer lower energy draw and faster performance compared to DDR3 while adding robust durability.


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AMD Releases Catalyst 15.11.1 Beta Drivers
AMD released its latest Catalyst 15.11.1 Beta drivers in the run up to its major Radeon Software Crimson Edition launch. One of the last drivers to bear the name "Catalyst," these drivers come with performance optimization for all of the season's biggest releases - Star Wars Battlefront, Call of Duty: Black Ops III, Fallout 4, and Assassins Creed: Syndicate. These optimizations could include CrossFire profiles on games that support it. Grab them from the links below.
DOWNLOAD: AMD Catalyst 15.11.1 Beta 32-bit | AMD Catalyst 15.11.1 Beta 64-bit

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Available Tags:NVIDIA , AMD , Radeon , Seagate , Intel , Catalyst

IT News Head Lines (Tech Report) 19/11/2015





Microsoft Edge update protects users from unsigned DLL injection
Microsoft seems to be taking the security of its Edge browser seriously. Last May, the company announced Edge would drop support for the much hated ActiveX and Browser Helper Objects. This time around, the company is taking a hard stance against code injection.
Until recently, users could be affected by certain strains of malware which would hook unsigned DLLs directly into the Edge process without consent. One of the most "popular" outcomes was the ...
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We have a winner in our Skylake Damagebox giveaway
After two weeks and dozens of submissions, we have a winner in our competition to take home Scott's Skylake Damagebox. We asked The Tech Report's readers to create humorous comics related to PC hardware and the world of technology, and we got some amazing submissions from our community. You can see them all in the contest entry thread on the TR forums.
...
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Asus' Chromebit CS10 puts a Chromebox on a stick
Asus is no stranger to doing interesting things with Chrome OS systems, but none of those experiments have been as small or inexpensive as the Chromebit CS10. This little computer puts a complete Chromebox in an HDMI stick that's only about the size of a first-generation Chromecast, and it'll set you back less than a Benjamin (not me).
...
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Nvidia's Shield Tablet returns for the holidays at $199
Nvidia's Shield Tablet has been a staple of our past mobile staff picks, but it's been difficult to find a Shield in stock over the past few months. That might be because the company recalled some of its tablets in July to address a battery fire risk. Against that backdrop, the Shield Tablet is making a triumphant return of sorts. Nvidia says it's "bringing back" the slate today as the Shield Tablet K1. The K1 comes with 16GB of storage, and it'll cost $199—$100 less than the original 16GB Shield Tablet.
...
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Catalyst 15.11.1 beta is ready for the latest game releases
AMD may have announced that the refreshed Radeon Crimson drivers and control panel software will be released by the end of this year, but Catalyst isn't dead just yet. The Catalyst 15.11.1 beta is hot off the presses with support for some recently-released and upcoming games.
Performance and quality optimizations for four November releases headline this version's release notes. Star Wars Battlefront , Fallout 4 , Assassin's Creed Syndicate , and Call of Duty: Black Ops 3 ...
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Monday Shortbread
The Pick 6
  1. Intel @ SC15: Launching Xeon Phi "Knights

    Landing
    " & Omni-Path Architecture
  2. Legit Reviews: Intel Kaby Lake processor

    and 200 series chipet overview posted
  3. Neowin: Microsoft now confident Windows 10 is

    ready for the enterprise with November Update
  4. WCCFtech: Xbox Elite Controller will allow to fix

    deadzones and possibly to add more functions on PC
  5. Softpedia: Fallout 4 has major bug linked to

    Monsignor Plaza, workarounds are available
  6. BGR: Report says Apple won't wait until

    September to release first new iPhone of 2016
Read more...


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Available Tags:Microsoft , Asus , Tablet , Catalyst

IT News Head Lines (Overclockers Club) 19/11/2015

Overclockers Club



IOGear IKON Gaming Keyboard Review


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Raidmax Viper GX II Review


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ASUS Maximus VIII Gene Review


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Thermaltake Suppressor F51 Review


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G.SKILL Ripjaws MX780 RGB Gaming Mouse Review


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ASUS ROG Maximus VIII Hero Review


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Tesoro Excalibur Spectrum RGB Mechanical Keyboard Review


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Mad Max Review


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Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain Review


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G.SKILL Ripjaws KM780 RGB Mechanical Keyboard Review


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Sapphire R7 370 Nitro Review


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XFX R9 390X Review


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Kingston 32GB Data Traveler Micro Duo 3C Review


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NVIDIA Relaunches SHIELD Tablet
NVIDIA launched the original SHIELD Tablet as its foray into the mobile gaming market, but it was hit with a recall in July due to overheating batteries causing a fire hazard. The device was removed from the company store at the time and has now been relaunched under the SHIELD Tablet K1 branding. The K1 remains similar to the design of the original tablet with the exception of a new battery, silicon grips, and a removed LTE option. The K1 retains a Tegra K1 chip, 1920x1200 resolution, ten hours of battery life, and dual 5-megapixel cameras. NVIDIA also cut the price by $100 from the original tablet, giving the K1 an MSRP of $199 for the 16GB model.
Source: PC World


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The Crew Wild Run Expansion Launches Today
The Crew Wild Run Expansion Launches Today
The action-driving MMO The Crew has received its Wild Run expansion today. The expansion adds four new vehicle types to the game and The Summit challenge. The Summit will have players testing their various skills on different terrains at different iconic USA locations. Each summit will last an average of three days and there will be two Summit Qualifiers ever week, with the best participants getting to compete in the Monthly Summit Finale. The four new vehicle types added by Wild Run are dragsters, drift cars, monster trucks, and motorcycles. Wild Run can be downloaded today for the Xbox One, Playstation 4, and Windows PCs and will be available in stores on Thursday. The expansion is listed at $24.99 in the UPlay store.
Those with just the base game will still be getting a free update with improved graphics, new lighting effects, a new weather system, and redesigned areas for the new vehicles. Wild Run content will regularly receive new vehicles, specs, rewards, features, and more after its launch today.





Source: Press Release


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Hardware Roundup: Tuesday, November 17, 2015, Edition
Another day has arrived and with it comes several items for your viewing pleasure. There is a review of the Thermaltake Poseidon Z RGB mechanical gaming keyboard, which features Kailh switches and a multitude of lighting options. We have a look at the Alienware Steam Machine, a slim yet powerful computer running SteamOS to bring PC gaming into the living room by a different means. The THL 2015A smartphone gets tested to see what this revised edition of the previous model has to offer. Wrapping things up for today is a look at Intel Speed Shift and how it helps speed up interacting with your computer via a mouse or touchscreen.
Keyboards/Mice

Thermaltake Poseidon Z RGB Mechanical Gaming Keyboard @ Benchmark Reviews
Prebuilts

Alienware Steam Machine @ ThinkComputers
Mobile

THL 2015A Smartphone @ Madshrimps
Miscellany

Intel Speed Shift Tested - Significant User Experience Improvements @ PC Perspective


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Catalyst 15.11.1 Beta Driver Made Available by AMD
AMD has officially launched the Catalyst 15.11.1 beta driver, which is the last release of the Catalyst Software Center, as Radeon Software Crimson edition is right around the corner. The latest Catalyst driver contains version 15.201.1151.1010 of the AMD Catalyst Display Driver and primarily offers quality and performance optimizations for some of the most recent gaming titles. These gaming titles include Star Wars Battlefront, Fallout 4, Assassin's Creed Syndicate, and Call of Duty: Black Ops III.
AMD Catalyst 15.11.1 beta is supported on 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Windows 7 SP1 and higher, Windows 8.1, and Windows 10, and can be downloaded immediately from the source link below.
Source: AMD


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Laser Used to Cool Water for First Time
Lasers are a really cool technology that enables all kinds of other technologies and experiments. One thing fairly consistent with lasers is that they heat the targeted object up as the beam continues to strike it. Researchers at the University of Washington have changed that though, by actually cooling water by 36 ºF with an infrared laser.
This refrigeration effect was first demonstrated at Los Alamos National Laboratory in 1995, but in that case vacuum conditions were required. What the Washington researchers have achieved is under real-world conditions though, so it has many possible applications. It works by aiming the laser at a microscopic crystal that has been suspended in the water, or other liquid. When the crystal is hit by the light, it emits a glow, but this glow puts out more energy than the laser is providing. The extra energy therefore comes from the crystal's environment; the liquid it is suspended in.
This discovery has many applications, including in biology as it could allow lasers to precisely cool various cells when undergoing different processes. It could even be deployed to cool objects like computer chips. Currently though, the process takes a lot of energy, so the researchers are going to continue to work on ways to improve its efficiency.
Source: University of Washington


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Available Tags:Gaming , Keyboard , ASUS , Thermaltake , Sapphire , XFX , Kingston , NVIDIA , Tablet , Hardware , Catalyst , Driver , AMD

IT News Head Lines (HardOCP) 19/11/2015





Could Implantable LEDs Relieve Your Pain?
If you are going to have LEDs implanted in your skull, you might as well go all out and install a side window and a couple fans too.

Chronic pain is often tough to understand, much less treat. But a new flexible, implantable electronic device could illuminate why certain parts of your body hurt. And down the road, the system, which features a wirelessly activated light-emitting diode (LED), might even be able to provide pain relief with the flip of a switch.

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US Advised To Examine 'Hack Back' Options Against China
Congress is considering allowing U.S. companies "hack back" Chinese attackers to recover stolen data. Sounds good to me.

The United States remains ill-prepared to combat state-backed cyber intrusions from China and lawmakers should look at whether U.S.-based companies be allowed to 'hack back' to recover or wipe stolen data, a congressional advisory body said Tuesday.

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[H]ardware Round-Up II
Cases: IN WIN 805 Mid-Tower @ MadShrimps
Lian Li PC-Q10WX Mini-ITX @ ocaholic

Cooling: Enermax ETS-T40F-BK @ CowcotLand
Gelid Antarctica CPU Cooler @ HardwareSlave

ETC.: G.SKILL RIPJAWS MX780 @ Legit Reviews
Tt eSports Poseidon Z RGB @ OCInside

Storage: Samsung 950 PRO M.2 256GB @ Guru3D

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Introducing The New Google+
The handful of you that actually use Google+ (or know someone that does) will be interested in this announcement.

Today, we're starting to introduce a fully redesigned Google+ that puts Communities and Collections front and center. Now focused around interests, the new Google+ is much simpler. And it's more mobile-friendly—we've rebuilt it across web, Android and iOS so that you'll have a fast and consistent experience whether you are on a big screen or small one.

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Rightscorp Burns $4 For Every Dollar Pirates Pay in Fines
At this rate, you'd think these guys would be out of business by now.

Piracy monetization firm Rightscorp has just turned in another set of disappointing results for the third quarter of 2015. After losing $424K during the three months ended September 30, the company has recorded a net loss of $3.1m for 2015 thus far. That means that for every dollar it receives in fines, the company loses $4.

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GIGABYTE Z170X Gaming 7 Review
Vortez has posted a review of the GIGABYTE Z170X Gaming 7 motherboard today. For comparison purposes, you can see our evaluation here.

In our hands today is GIGABYTE's Z170X-Gaming 7; an Intel Z170 motherboard from the G1 Gaming lineup which seeks to provide gamers and enthusiasts with a whole host of cutting-edge features such as Thunderbolt 3, dual-M.2 slots, Creative Sound Core3D and much more. Join us as we explore this new offering and see how it matches up to the rest of the competition.

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Titan Becomes World's Largest GPU-Powered Visualization System for Scientific Discovery
Thanks to our Tesla Accelerated Computing Platform, researchers can now run computations and visualize the results on the same GPUs in a single system — either simultaneously ("in-situ") or separately. And Titan, the U.S.'s most powerful supercomputer, now holds the title of largest GPU-accelerated visualization system in the world. That's a major step forward. Researchers worldwide run high-powered supercomputer simulations to understand how the galaxy formed, how the human brain works and more. Then they create visualizations of their work to gain new insights.

Until recently, researchers did this work on two different systems. They used one for computation (running the science application). Then they switched to another to render the results visually. It could take days or weeks to complete the simulation before they could visualize it. And depending upon the configuration of the data center, this could require moving massive amounts of data from the simulation system to the visualization system. During this process, if researchers found an error or a parameter changed, they would have to re-run the entire simulation and render again. It's an arduous process that could delay scientific results.

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Uber Can't Appeal Class Certification Order Driver Lawsuit
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has delivered more bad news to Uber today. Those guys just can't seem to catch a break.

A U.S. appeals court on Tuesday denied ride service Uber's request to immediately appeal an order approving class certification in a lawsuit filed by drivers who wish to be deemed employees.

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14.5% Of Fallout 4 PC Players Still In Vault 111
Okay, I'll admit it, I am one of the 14.5% of Fallout 4 players on the PC that hasn't left Vault 111 yet. I'm guessing most people are like me and installed the game but just haven't had time to play it yet.



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Gaming [H]eadlines
EA's "Gigantic Action" Game Plans @ Blue's News
Fallout 4 Has Alien Easter Egg @ GameSpot
Sony Investigating Star Wars Battlefront Problems @ VG24/7
Star Wars Battlefront DLC Plans Revealed @ Shacknews

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SilverStone Strider Platinum ST55F-PT 550W PSU Review
SilverStone comes to us today with a Platinum rated PSU that is also billed as having a "Power Density (of) 305W per liter." While this is a bit odd, the messaging seems to be big power in a little footprint. Let's see how this "ultra silent" fully modular PSU stacks up when it comes to serving up big-time power under big-time pressure.

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AMD Catalyst 15.11.1 Beta Driver
The folks at AMD sent word that the new Catalyst 15.11.1 beta drivers are now out. This driver release includes quality and performance optimizations for Assassin's Creed Syndicate, Fallout 4, Star Wars: Battlefront and Call of Duty: Black Ops III. Grab em' if you need em'.

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Amazon: An Evil Empire Dawns On The Internet of Things
An evil empire? Really? That's a bit much, don't you think?

But Amazon has now drawn a line in the sand -- it will no longer sell Apple or Google's content streaming devices, the Apple TV and the Chromecast. Why? Because neither of these products support playback of Amazon Video.

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Google To Contest Russia's Antitrust Ruling On Android
Was there any doubt that Google would contest Russia's antitrust ruling on Android?

Google will contest in court a ruling by Russia's antitrust agency that it broke competition law by abusing its dominant position with its Android mobile platform, the U.S. technology company said on Tuesday. Russia's competition watchdog ruled in September that Google had broken the law by requiring pre-installation of certain applications on mobile devices running on Android.

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Overstock.com Has A Bunker Full Of Gold, Silver, And Food In Case Of Financial Collapse
I wonder if Overstock.com also gives employees a stocked bug out bag full of MREs and bottled water to keep under their desks?

Unless you work at Overstock. The publicly-traded company has disclosed to the Securities and Exchange Commission that it has about $6 million of gold and $4.3 million worth of silver that could be divided up and used for payroll (probably small coins) and also a 30-day supply of food. It's all stashed in an undisclosed location, and the company thinks of it as an insurance policy.

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[H]ardware Round-Up
Cooling: DeepCool Gamerstorm Captain @ Technic3D

ETC.: Cooler Master Barebones Novatouch @ LanOC
Phoronix Test Suite 6.0 @ Phoronix
Thermaltake Poseidon Z @ Benchmark Reviews

Motherboards: ASUS Z170I PRO GAMING @ eTeknix

Storage: Crucial BX100 SSD @ Hardware Secrets

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ASUS Sabertooth Z170 Mark 1 LGA 1151 Review
In our opinion ASUS' TUF series motherboards target the sweet spot in regard to features, price, and performance. TUF motherboards give you more features than most mid-range motherboards but lack certain features found on the high end. The Sabertooth Z170 Mark 1 is the flagship part of the current TUF series.

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MSI Z170A Gaming M7 LGA 1151 Motherboard Review
MSI has changed gears as of late vowing to be the number one motherboard manufacturer in the "gaming" segment. While a "gaming" motherboard MSI is still focused on overclocking with this model. We look at the Z170A Gaming M7 to see if it brings MSI one step closer or a step away from that very goal.

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Radeon R9 Nano Small Form Factor Video Card Review
This evaluation will compare the new retail purchased Radeon R9 Nano with a GIGABYTE GeForce GTX 970 N970-IX-OC small form factor video card in a mini-ITX Cooler Master Elite 110 Intel Skylake system build. We will find out if the higher priced Nano is worth the money for a 1440p and 1080p gameplay experience in a tiny footprint.

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Fall 2015 Solid State Drive Technology Update
Since our last SSD update article, the last 7 months have seen no shortage of exciting announcements, and the enthusiast market has rapidly evolved in both positive and confusing ways. Let's get up to speed on U.2, NVMe, 3D XPoint, M&A, and the rest of the buzzword soup that make up this market.

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Thermaltake Toughpower Grand 1200W (TPG-1200F) Review
Thermaltake is back with a new 1200 watt fully modular PSU. We have used Thermaltake power supplies on our test bench literally for years with excellent results. However the Toughpower line has not always been the best value out there, but today we see a 1200 watt PSU with revised pricing.

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Enermax ETS-T40Fit-RF Air Cooler Review
Enermax is back again today with a new CPU air cooler that looks to conquer size and noise once again. Enermax calls this a "Compact side flow air cooler for 100% RAM compatibility." Does a fan size bigger than the heatsink surfaces and its "side flow air" give us better performance than those we have seen previously?

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XFX R9 390X Double Dissipation Core Edition Review
On our test bench today is the XFX R9 390X Double Dissipation Core Edition Video Card which we will pit against its green team competition of a reference GTX 980 and a massively overclocked GTX 970 to determine whether it earns its place at a price point that lies between its two foes.

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MSI GeForce GTX 980 Ti LIGHTNING Video Card Review
We take the MSI GTX 980 Ti LIGHTNING video card and see how it plays the most demanding games. This video card "engineered to perfection" for extreme overclocking and has a TriFrozr cooling setup. We compare it to the overclocked ASUS GTX 980 Ti STRIX DCIII and an AMD R9 390X CrossFire configuration to find its true value.

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PowerColor Devil 13 Dual Core R9 390 Video Card Review
The PowerColor Devil 13 Dual Core R9 390 combines two AMD Radeon R9 390 GPUs in CrossFire on a single video card. We'll take this beast of a video card and see how it games at 4K. If you want a simple all-in-one AMD CrossFire solution for 4K gaming you won't want to miss this.

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GIGABYTE Z170X Gaming G1 Motherboard Review
The GIGABYTE Z170X Gaming G1 represents the flagship of GIGABYTE's Z170 family and the G1 line itself. Simply put, it is the most advanced and feature packed Z170 motherboard GIGABYTE builds. The Z170X Gaming G1 is overbuilt, feature-rich, and is possibly the ultimate Z170 motherboard so long as price isn't a factor.

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Thermaltake Toughpower DPS G 650W Review
The Thermaltake Toughpower DPS G 650W is a new PSU that heralds monitoring electricity cost, recording the status of your PC, and sharing that data in the cloud as its main features. All of that is great if that is what you are into, but as usual we first want to know how good of a PSU is it?

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Available Tags:Hack , Google+ , GIGABYTE , Gaming , Driver , AMD , Catalyst , Google , Android , ASUS , MSI , Radeon , Thermaltake , XFX , GeForce , GTX

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

IT News Head Lines (Guru of 3D) 19/11/2015

Guru of 3D



Some more motherboard problems
recently the 1st RAM slot died so used the other slots for two sticks.

Same thing happened tonight: sudden shutdown upon simple file transfer and...

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75 percent of Windows Phone Owners Migrate to Android or iOS
The drop-off rate of end-users with aÂ*Windows Phone migrating towardsÂ*Android or iOS is rather ginormous. Whenever users get a chance to upgrade,...

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More Details Intel 7th Generation Core Kaby Lake and 200-series Chipset
New slides have leaked onto the web shared tech specs onÂ*Kaby Lake. We already knew that Kaby lake would extend the Tick-Tick product release cycle....

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Nvidia talks Pascal 16GB OF Memory and 1TB/S bandwidth
At the Japanese edition of NVIDIAs GPU Technology Conference, NVIDIA revealed some details behind its 2016 graphics architecture, codenamed...

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Is 75***8453;PSU load to much ?
Hi I have a seasonic 430w S12II 80 plus certified bronze PSU, I calculated all my components power at maximum load (even overestimating them a bit)...

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AMD driver updates
Why in the world did it take AMD just now to release fallout 4 / cod / assassins creed related driver updates?

I can understand star wars (even...

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Getting started with rendering... ?
Hello all!

So just looking for some input.... I am considering getting into rendering 3d models. Are there any good starting resources to get me...

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New Sapphire TriXX allows the overvolting of Fury cards
First time thanks to Szaby59 for this news !

New Sapphire TriXX allows the overvolting of Fury cards (+75 mV)

LINK...

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36 cores / 72 HT
PART 1 of 4

Et Ali

I rebuilt the prior box and this is its new incarnation
Yes, dropped the water cooling



I tried to make an ultimate...

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unstable pc+overclock.need help
im having a few issues with my pc and need some help i have upgraded from a 7970 to sli 980tis. some examples bellow

in 3d games i seem to get...

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WD Black drive
WDBSLA0010HNC-N

IS this the retail packaging of WD black 1tb? i been reading confliction stories, on if it is or isnt

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What monitor should I buy?!!
Story: Looking to get a good monitor for computer gaming. I just upgraded my system with 16gb of ram and a R9 390x Strix graphics card. I'd like a...

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Star Wars Battlefront - Game Bundle with R9 Fury
Following a ripple in the force, AMD has announced that starting November 17th, qualifying purchases from participating retailers of an AMD Radeon R9...

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Radeon R9 380X gets caught on camera
There are multiple leaks on the web today showing photos of the upcomingÂ*Radeon R9 380X. The upcoming graphics card from AMD is spotted with brands...

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6870 dead?
Hello,

I have the card radeon hd 6870 and about 2 months ago it started failing on me. It suddenly crashed freezing my pc. The screen went black...

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Nvidia GeForce 306.23 WHQL 64-bit
Download Nvidia GeForce 306.23 WHQL 64-bit for Windows Vista 7 and 8

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Nvidia GeForce 306.23 WHQL 32-bit
Download Nvidia GeForce 306.23 WHQL 32-bit for Windows Vista 7 and 8

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GeForce 306.02 BETA 32-bit
Download GeForce 306.02 32-bit driver for Windows Vista 7 and 8

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GeForce 306.02 BETA 64-bit
Download GeForce 306.02 64-bit driver for Windows Vista 7 and 8

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A New Dawn Nvidia demo - AMD patch
Guru3D forum user TroudhuK made a patch so that you can try NVIDIA's A new Dawn Demo on AMD Radeon graphics cards.

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GeForce 305.68 WHQL Win 7 64-bit
This is a WHQL-certified GeForce GTX 660 Ti driver for Windows 7 64-bit

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GeForce 305.68 WHQL Win 7 32-bit
This is a WHQL-certified GeForce GTX 660 Ti driver for Windows 7 32-bit

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AMD Catalyst 12.8 XP 32-bit
Download AMD Catalyst Display Driverfor Windows XP 32-bit

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AMD Catalyst 12.8 WHQL 64-bit
Download AMD Catalyst Display Driverfor Windows Vista/Windows 7/Windows 8 64-bit

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AMD Catalyst 12.8 WHQL 32-bit
Download AMD Catalyst Display Driverfor Windows Vista/Windows 7/Windows 8 32-bit

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NVIDIA GeForce 305.53 64-bit
Download the NVIDIA GeForce 305.53 Vista 7-8 32-bit driver

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NVIDIA GeForce 305.53 32-bit
Download the NVIDIA GeForce 305.53 Vista 7-8 32-bit driver

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NVIDIA GeForce 305.53 XP 32-bit
Download the NVIDIA GeForce 305.53 XP 32-bit driver

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Intel Chipset Software Installation 9.3.0.1021
Download Intel Chipset Software Installation Utility 9.3.0.1021

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Afterburner 2.2.3
After months of Beta development MSI and Guru3D happily announce Afterburner 2.2.3

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NVIDIA A New Dawn DirectX 11 Demo
In A New Dawn, the demo starts not with the main character, but with a sweeping overview of a lush rainforest. Ferns gently sway in the moonlight, vines sprawl across an ancient tree, and budding flowers cast a gentle glow on the surrounding bark. As our character comes into view, we find her swinging on a vine in her new tree home. The tree is rendered to the finest level of detail using DirectX 11 tessellation. At its peak, over four million triangles are used to showcase Dawn's environment.

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Anvil's Storage Utilities
Anvil's Storage Utilities is a powerful tool that was designed in order to provide you with a simple means of assessing the read and writer performance of your Solid State Drive or Hard Disk Drive.

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Intel WHQL Graphics Driver Windows 8 32-bit
Intel released their WHQL-certified graphics driver for the Microsoft’s upcoming Windows 8 operating system. This is the 32-bit driver.

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Intel WHQL Graphics Driver Windows 8 64-bit
Intel released their WHQL-certified graphics driver for the Microsoft’s upcoming Windows 8 operating system.  This is the 64-bit driver.

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GeForce 304.79 Beta 64-bit
Download GeForce 304.79 Beta driver for Windows 7, 8 and Vista 64-bit

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Available Tags:Windows Phone , Windows , Android , iOS , Intel , Nvidia , AMD , driver , Sapphire , Radeon , GeForce , WHQL , Catalyst , Windows 8 , Windows 8

IT News Head Lines (AnandTech) 19/11/2015

AnandTech



ASUS Launches The Chromebit CS10 HDMI Stick
Earlier this year ASUS launched a pair of Chromebooks, and they also teased another product that would be launching later in the year. It was the Chromebit HDMI stick, and it's essentially a Chrome OS computer that you plug into the HDMI port on your monitor or television. ASUS thinks the Chromebit will be great for applications like digital signage, but pairing it with a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse allows it to be used as a consumer Chrome OS computer as well. You can check out the Chromebit CS10's specs below.

ASUS Chromebit CS10
SoC Rockchip RK3288-C

4 x Cortex A17 + Mali T764
RAM 2 GB LPDDR3
NAND 16GB NAND
Dimensions / Mass 123 x 31 x 17mm, 75g
OS Chrome OS
Other Connectivity 2x2 802.11a/b/g/n/ac + BT 4.0, HDMI 1.4, USB 2.0, DC-in
Price $85

A combination of size and price means we're not going to be seeing something like an Intel Core i5 in an HDMI stick any time soon. Thankfully, Chrome OS tends to run pretty well even with minimal hardware power. At $85, the Chromebit CS10 comes with 2GB of RAM, 16GB of eMMC NAND, dual-band 802.11ac, and a Rockchip RK3288-C SoC. RK3288-C is a quad core Cortex A17 part paired with a Mali T764 GPU. The same SoC has actually shown up in some of ASUS's actual Chromebooks as well, so it's not surprising to see it in the Chromebit.

As with all HDMI sticks, you still need a separate power adapter because HDMI 1.4 can't supply nearly enough power for even such a smaller computer. Even with that, the Chromebit could still make for an interesting computer of sorts that can be taken anywhere in your pocket.

The ASUS Chromebit CS10 will cost $85, and it comes with a year of 100GB Google Drive space. It'll begin shipping today.


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Best Android Phones: Holiday 2015
As we hit the middle of November, the holiday shopping season is starting up. As we have for the past several years, this year we are putting together a series of holiday guides with recommendations for various product categories and some quick links to those products. These holiday guides also act as a way for us to look over all the devices that have been released in a given year to see which still hold up.

We'll be starting things off this year with smartphones. Smartphones are an enormous market, and the average phone lifetime still being only 18-24 months, many gifts given this holiday season are going to be smartphones. So let's take a look at what we believe to be the best Android phones that you can buy this holiday season.

Best Android Phablet: Samsung Galaxy Note5



The term phablet is a bit silly in my opinion, but it has become a fairly common term to describe smartphones with very large profiles. The definition of a phablet is not exactly concrete, and it mainly has to do with a device's chassis size. For example, the Nexus 6 and Galaxy Note5 are clearly phablets, and it's fairly safe to say that the iPhone 6s Plus is one too. However, I don't know if I would describe the LG G4 as a phablet. It has the same screen size as the iPhone 6S Plus, but the use of on-screen buttons and smaller overall chassis size mean that it ends up straddling the line between your standard smartphone and a phablet. When looking at which devices are available in many regions, I think it's pretty clear which phablet offers the best value at the absolute high end, and which offers the best value for someone who is looking to spend less than what they would on a typical flagship.


I don't think it would be wrong to say that Samsung really pioneered the phablet category. The original Galaxy Note was laughed at by many, but as time has gone on Samsung has improved on it, and now every vendor offers a similarly sized device. With that in mind, it shouldn't come as a surprise that the Galaxy Note5 is my recommendation for a high end phablet. It comes with everything that makes the Galaxy S6 a great phone, but in a larger size and with some additional improvements. Just as an overview, you're getting a 5.7" 2560x1440 AMOLED display, Samsung's Exynos 7420 SoC, 4GB of LPDDR4 RAM, and 32, 64, or 128GB of internal NAND. Some differences from the Galaxy S6 apart from simply being larger include improved camera image processing, making it a serious contender for the title of best smartphone camera, and the inclusion of Samsung's S-Pen for navigation and drawing.

The Galaxy Note 5 costs $699 for the 32GB version in the US. There are often deals that can help bring the price down a bit, such as a recent $50 off offer from T-Mobile. The 64GB model bumps the price to $779. It's worth noting the prices for the Galaxy S6 Edge+ as well, which is to the Galaxy Note5 what the Galaxy S6 Edge is to the standard Galaxy S6. It starts at $779 for 32GB, and $859 for 64GB. I personally think the edge design looks cool, but there's definitely a trade off in terms of ergonomics, and I don't think it's worth the additional cost unless you really want to own Samsung's absolute highest end phone.


For buyers who aren't fans of the Galaxy Note5, or who are looking for something that isn't quite as expensive, the Nexus 6P is definitely worth considering. Like the Galaxy Note5 it has a 5.7" 2560x1440 AMOLED display, but inside you get Qualcomm's Snapdragon 810 paired with 3GB of LPDDR4 RAM and 32GB of NAND.

Some highlights of the Nexus 6P are the camera and the chassis. While we haven't published our Nexus 6P review yet, it uses the same sensor and lens arrangement as the Nexus 5X which I felt has one of the best cameras of any smartphone. The aluminum chassis of the 6P may also be more appealing than the metal/glass design of the Note5, although I didn't feel that the design and ergonomics were at the same level as devices like Huawei's own Mate S or the iPhone 6s Plus.

Of course, the biggest appeal of the Nexus 6P is its price. At $499 for 32GB, it undercuts most flagship phablets by $200 or so, while being competitive in many other respects. You definitely lose out on the performance of Samsung's Exynos 7420 SoC, but there are obviously tradeoffs that are made when targeting a lower price. The promise of software updates along with a great camera, an aluminum build, and a great fingerprint scanner make the Nexus 6P a very worthwhile choice for a phablet at a lower price than the latest and greatest flagships. European customers will notice that they get charged a significant premium for the Nexus 6P, with the 32GB model priced at around 700€. At that price I would probably consider other devices unless one is determined to stay with a Nexus phone for the support and updates.

Best High-End Android Smartphone: Samsung Galaxy S6



While phablets have grown immensely in popularity, the normal flagship devices from the players in the Android space tend to be smaller than the 5.7-6.0" displays that ship on phablets. Not having to push a large size also opens up more opportunities to offer a great device at a lower price than the competition. Taking that into consideration, I think there are two key flagship devices that are worth considering if looking for a flagship phone in a typical size, along with one clear winner for a smartphone that offers a lot for a lower price than flagship smartphones.


The Galaxy S6 really needs no introduction. Along with the Note5 it's really the only Android phone this year that was able to push the performance of Android devices forward, courtesy of its Exynos 7420 SoC. Along with still being the fastest Android phone around, the Galaxy S6 comes with a top notch 5.1" 2560x1440 AMOLED display, 3GB of LPDDR4 RAM, 32, 64, or 128GB of NAND, and the same 16MP camera that the Galaxy Note5 uses.

It is a bit disappointing that the Galaxy S6 is still the fastest Android phone out there many months after it was released. While some may feel it's actually best to wait for the next generation Galaxy phone from Samsung, such a launch is still one or two quarters away, and if someone is looking to get the most powerful Android smartphone for the holidays the Galaxy S6 is definitely it. As far as the price goes, the fact that the S6 is a bit older now means you can find some appealing discounts. Right now on T-Mobile USA you can get the 32GB model for $579, and at $659 you get 128GB which is a pretty great deal. Like the Note5, I wouldn't recommend paying the extra money for the Edge version of the phone unless you really want the more unique design, as the ergonomics are honestly a downgrade.


If you're looking for something a bit larger, or less expensive than the Galaxy S6, the LG G4 is definitely worth considering. Although it has a 5.5" display, it's much smaller than a phone like the iPhone 6s Plus due to its small bezels on all sides, and the use of on screen buttons. In my experience it's still a bit too big to be used comfortably in a single hand even with affordances like the back-mounted volume rocker, but it's not really a phablet either. As far as its specs go, you get Qualcomm's Snapdragon 808 SoC, 3GB of LPDDR3 RAM, 32GB of NAND, and a 16MP Sony IMX234 rear-facing camera. It also has microSD expansion and a removable battery for the users who were upset with Samsung's removal of those features on this year's Galaxy flagships.

Price wise, the LG G4 sells for around $479, which is about $100 less than you'd pay for the Galaxy S6. The size of the phone is definitely worth considering in addition to the price, as the S6 is much easier to use with a single hand, but if you want a phone with a larger display without moving completely into phablet territory the G4 is definitely a phone to heavily consider.

Best Mid-Range Android Smartphone: Google Nexus 5X



Next we come to the lower cost high end, and here's there's only one real Android device worth mentioning, the Nexus 5X. This is actually my personal favorite Android device from this year, and I published my review of it last week. In many ways it's similar to the LG G4, which isn't surprising when you consider that it's made by LG. It has a Qualcomm Snapdragon 808 SoC, 2GB of LPDDR3 RAM, 16 or 32GB of NAND, and the same great 12MP camera that you get in the Nexus 6P.

To sum up my thoughts on the Nexus 5X from my review, I'll say that it's imperfect, but I think it's unbeatable at $379. Snapdragon 808 doesn't deliver the performance jump that you'd expect from two years of technological advancement since the Nexus 5, but you still get a great display, an amazing camera, good battery life, a quick and simple fingerprint scanner, and a plastic but very solid chassis. The fact that the 5X includes the same camera as the Nexus 6P at its $379 price is really what gives it an edge, and if you're looking to get something smaller than a phablet without paying the $600-700 commanded by flagship phones I don't think you can go wrong with the Nexus 5X. Like the 6P, the 5X is unfortunately more expensive in Europe, coming in at around 449€, and so in those markets it may be best to consider some other options.

Best Budget Android Phone: Motorola Moto G (2015)



The last category on the list is the budget phone, which to me includes anything from $250 down, although $250 is certainly pushing it. There are certainly a large number of Android devices that fit this category, and I'm sure some people will feel that it makes the most sense to look at importing phones from Xiaomi rather than buying a phone from a more global brand where you may not get as much for your money. I can only really speak from experience, and I think importing comes with its own issues regarding the warranty, customs fees, and carrier compatibility. There was only one budget device from the big Android players that I looked at this year and feel is really worth considering, and it's the 2GB version of the 2015 Moto G.


The 2015 Moto G comes in two versions. Both have a Qualcomm Snapdragon 410 SoC, a Sony IMX214 13MP camera, and a 1280x720 IPS display. However, while $179 gets you a version with 8GB of NAND and 1GB of RAM, $219 doubles both of those to 16GB and 2GB respectively. With the amount of RAM overhead created by Java applications that use garbage collection I really don't think 1GB is a usable amount of memory on an Android device unless you're shopping in the sub $100 range where you're not likely to be using many apps at all. For that reason, I think the 2GB model is the best budget smartphone, as it includes a relatively good camera for its price, has enough RAM, and should be fast enough for the needs of anyone shopping for a smartphone at this price. It's also waterproof, and has an extremely long battery life.

While there are other budget Android phones, you end up having to pay significantly more than the Moto G to get any significant improvement, and dropping the price even lower ends up coming with a number of compromises that aren't worth the money you save.


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NVIDIA Re-launches the SHIELD Tablet as the SHIELD Tablet K1
The life of the NVIDIA SHIELD Tablet has had some ups and downs. Josh reviewed it last year, and at the time he found that NVIDIA's tech for game streaming offered an interesting value proposition. Unfortunately, NVIDIA was forced to issue a total recall on the tablets due to overheating concerns earlier this year, and while they shipped replacement devices to consumers, the SHIELD Tablet ended up being removed from sale. This was quite unfortunate, and it left a gap in the Android tablet market that I really haven't seen any vendor fill.

Today NVIDIA is re-introducing the SHIELD Tablet with a new name. It's now called the SHIELD Tablet K1, something I hope implies we will soon see a SHIELD Tablet X1.


While the name is new, we're looking at the exact same tablet that launched last year. I've put the specs in the chart below as a refresher.

NVIDIA SHIELD Tablet K1
SoC NVIDIA Tegra K1 (2.2 GHz 4x Cortex A15r3, Kepler 1 SMX GPU)
RAM 2 GB DDR3L-1866
NAND 16GB NAND + microSD
Display 8” 1920x1200 IPS LCD
Camera 5MP rear camera, 1.4 µm pixels, 1/4" CMOS size. 5MP FFC
Diameter / Mass 221 x 126 x 9.2mm, 390 grams
Battery 5197 mAh, 3.8V chemistry (19.75 Whr)
OS Android 5.1.1 Lollipop
Other Connectivity 2x2 802.11a/b/g/n + BT 4.0, USB2.0, GPS/GLONASS, Mini-HDMI 1.4a
Accessories SHIELD DirectStylus 2 - $19.99

SHIELD Controller - $59.99

SHIELD Tablet K1 Cover - $39.99
Price $199

The NVIDIA SHIELD Tablet K1 still has NVIDIA's Tegra K1 SoC, with four Cortex A15 cores and the incredibly fast single SMX Kepler GPU. The SoC is paired with 2GB of LPDDR3 RAM and 16GB of NAND, with the original 32GB model being dropped. There's still microSD expansion for storing media, and with Android Marshmallow expandable storage will lose much of its third class status on Android which will be helpful.

Of course, the biggest change here beyond the fact that the SHIELD Tablet is being put back on sale is its new price. At $199 it's $100 cheaper than when it first launched, and it makes it one of the only good tablets that you can actually get at that price point with the Nexus 7 having been gone for some time now. NVIDIA's optional accessories are all available as well, and if you plan to use the gaming features of the SHIELD Tablet K1 I would definitely factor the price of the controller into your cost consideration. In any case, it's good to see the SHIELD Tablet K1 back on sale, and at $199 I think it's definitely worth considering if you're looking for a tablet at that price.


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AMD Releases Catalyst 15.11.1 Beta Drivers
With AMD continuing to deliver beta driver updates left and right lately, today they come to us with another update. Another one of AMD’s point driver updates, Catalyst 15.11.1 primarily brings performance updates to some of the headlining tiles of the season, and ups the Display Driver Version to 15.201.1151.1010.

Overall this driver is a very straightforward performance driver, with AMD pushing out a batch of performance optimizations for Star Wars: Battlefront, Fallout 4, Assassin's Creed Syndicate, and Call of Duty: Black Ops III. Otherwise there are no bug fixes listed, though AMD does list some known issues, including that Assassin's Creed Syndicate and Star Wars: Battlefront cannot launch in full screen mode on some laptops with an Intel CPU and an AMD GPU.

Meanwhile, it’s worth noting that this is likely one of the last Catalyst driver releases we’ll see from AMD. Earlier this month AMD announced their new Crimson driver branding and overhaul of their control center, and while AMD has not announced a specific launch date yet, we do know it’s expected before the end of the year, only a short 6 weeks away.

Anyhow, as always those interested in reading more or installing the updated beta drivers for AMD's desktop, mobile, and integrated GPUs can find them on AMD's Catalyst beta download page.


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NVIDIA Announces Jetson TX1 - A Tegra X1 Module & Development Kit
Although NVIDIA’s original plans for Tegra haven’t quite panned out as NVIDIA wanted to – at this point even tablet wins are few and far between – the company has continued to invest in developing their line of ARM SoCs and products built around them such as the SHIELD platform. One of the less public investments NVIDIA has put into Tegra has been on the development kit side; starting with Tegra K1 in 2014, NVIDIA began releasing a full development kit for the Tegra platform. Dubbed Jetson, the TK1 Jetson was a full commercial off the shelf Tegra system containing the SoC, memory, storage, a Linux distribution pre-configured for the board, and all of the necessary I/O interfaces a developer could want. With Jetson NVIDIA was looking to bootstrap the development of products around Tegra K1 by giving developers the means to easily prototype their devices around the dev board, before going into traditional full production.

However since it was a full COTS implementation of Tegra K1, something unexpected happened for NVIDIA: developers started using Jetson TK1 outright as a production board. For small developers doing similarly small product runs, or just projects that didn’t require a highly integrated solution (e.g. embedded systems as opposed to mobile devices), some developers would just stick with Jetson since it meant they could skip system hardware development and focus on software and/or peripherals.


Moving on to the present, after announcing their latest-generation Tegra X1 SoC at CES 2015 and integrating it into some of their own products over the past several months (Drive PX, SHIELD Console, etc) NVIDIA is now rolling out an updated Jetson product based on the X1. The latest Jetson, which NVIDIA is appropriately calling the Jetson TX1, is designed to refresh the platform with the more powerful Tegra X1 SoC and its full ARMv8 AArch64 CPU + Maxwell GPU capabilities. At the same time however, based on their unexpected success as a COTS product, NVIDIA has redesigned Jetson to better serve the COTS market while also continuing to serve the Tegra developer kit market.


The end result is that for its TX1 iteration Jetson has been split in two, and now comes as stand-alone compute module with a separate carrier board for I/O. The Jetson TX1 module itself – which is for all practical definitions Jetson TX1 in its entirety – contains a full working TX1 system. NVIDIA tells us that Jetson TX1 should offer 2-3 times the performance of Tegra K1, particularly where the GPU is involved, and while we don’t have the CPU clockspeed some quick math on NVIDIA’s 1 TFLOPS claim puts the GPU clockspeed at 975MHz (assuming FP16) with the complete module rated for approximately 10W.

Otherwise along with the TX1 SoC, NVIDIA has attached 4GB of LPDDR4-3200, a 16GB eMMC flash module, a 2x2 802.11ac + Bluetooth wireless radio, and a Gigabit Ethernet controller. By providing a complete TX1 system on a board a bit smaller than a credit card, NVIDIA is looking to further the COTS usage of Jetson by giving product developers a smaller dedicated board specifically designed for COTS usage and quick integration into shipping products.


Meanwhile I/O connectivity is now provided by a separate board, be it a product-specific developer design or the official Jetson TX1 carrier board, with the Jetson TX1 using a 400 pin board-to-board connector to attach to other devices. Similar to the original Jetson TK1, the official Jetson TX1 carrier board is designed to offer TX1 as a development kit and contains a full suite of I/O including Ethernet, WiFi + BT antenna connectors, HDMI, USB, M.2, a large number of GPIOs, a camera serial interface with 5MP camera, and a PCIe 2.0 x4 slot. Relative to Jetson TK1, the newer TX1 includes more GPIOs, the camera, a full-size PCIe interface, and it can now work from a more traditional 3.3v power supply.



Moving on, not unlike TX1’s discrete GPU counterparts, with the Jetson TX1 platform NVIDIA is strongly focusing on machine learning and autonomous machines. The company believes that machine learning is the next great frontier for GPUs – both discrete and integrated – and is capitalizing on neural net research that has shown GPUs to be capable of both quickly training and quickly executing neural nets. This is an important differentiator for NVIDIA given their strengths in GPU development (both from a tech perspective and overall SoC GPU performance), and because it is a market that they feel no one else is truly aiming for (or at least competitive in) at this time. The Drive PX system already uses TX1 on this basis, and now with Jetson TX1 NVIDIA is looking to extend that relationship to a much wider group of developers.


Similar to Jetson TK1 then, Jetson TX1 comes with a suite of software and SDKs in order to simplify the development process and to give developers a good starting point for implementing machine learning. Along with the Linux for Tegra environment, NVIDIA is including their cuDNN neural network library and VisionWorks computer vision toolkit. Coupled with other APIs and software packages such as OpenVX and various neural network systems, NVIDIA is aiming to make the Jetson SDK an ecosystem in and of itself.

Finally, along with today’s announcement NVIDIA also unveiled the pricing and availability of the Jetson TX1 module and the full development kit. NVIDIA will begin taking pre-orders for the dev kit on the 12th with kits to start shipping as soon as the 16th, and will sell for $599 retail/$299 education. The dev kits will contain the module, carrier board, camera board, a heatsink-fan for cooling (which we’re told is grossly overpowered for TX1), and all of the necessary cables. Meanwhile the stand-alone Jetson TX1 module for use in commercial products will go on sale in Q1 of 2016, priced at $299 in 1K quantities.




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Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 Experience: HMP Kryo and Demos
While the Snapdragon 820 has had a number of announcements about various aspects of the SoC, some details have been mostly left to the imagination. Today, Qualcomm held an event to release some details about Snapdragon 820, but also to show off what can be enabled by Snapdragon 820. Some of the main details released today include some estimates of power, and some additional disclosure on the Kryo CPU cores in Snapdragon 820.


In power, Qualcomm published a slide showing average power consumption using their own internal model for determining days of use. In their testing, it shows that Snapdragon 820 uses 30% less power for the same time of use. Of course, this needs to be taken with appropriate skepticism, but given the use of 14LPP it probably shouldn’t be a surprise that Snapdragon 820 improves significantly over past devices.

The other disclosures of note were primarily centered on the CPU and modem. On the modem side, Qualcomm is claiming 15% improvement in power efficiency which should eliminate any remaining gap between LTE and WiFi battery life.


On the CPU side, while the claims of either doubled performance or power efficiency have been discussed before, new details on the CPU include that the quad core CPU is best described as an HMP solution with two high-performance cores clocked at 2.2 GHz and two low-power cores clocked at 1.6 or 1.7GHz when looking at previous Qualcomm SoCs with two clusters that share an architecture. Qualcomm also disclosed that the CPU architectures of both clusters are identical, but with differences in cache configuration. However, the differences in cache configuration weren’t disclosed. I wasn't able to get an answer regarding whether this is an ARM big.LITTLE design that uses CCI-400 or CCI-500, but given that there's an L3 cache shared between clusters it's more likely that this is a completely custom HMP architecture.



In addition to these disclosures, we saw a number of demos. Probably the single most interesting demo shown was Sense ID, in which it was shown that fingerprint sensing worked properly through a sheet of glass and aluminum. To my recollection both the glass and aluminum were 0.4mm thick, so the system seems to be relatively robust. For those unfamiliar with Sense ID, rather than relying of high-resolution capacitive touch sensing the system uses ultrasonic sound waves to map the fingerprint, which allows it to penetrate materials like glass and metal and improves sensitivity despite contaminants like water and dirt.


One area of note was that Qualcomm is now offering their own speaker amp/protection IC that would compete with ICs like the NXP TFA9895 that are quite common in devices today. The WSA8815 chip would also be able to deliver stereo sound effects in devices with stereo front-facing speakers. It seems that the primary advantage of this solution is cost when bundled with the SoC, but it remains to be seen whether OEM adoption would be widespread.


One of the other demos was improved low light video and photos by using the Hexagon 680 DSP and Spectra 14-bit dual ISP. The main area of interest in this demo was improved visibility of underexposed areas by boosting shadow visibility, while also eliminating the resulting noise through temporal noise reduction.



On the RF side, in addition to showing that the Snapdragon 820 modem is capable of UE Category 12/13 LTE speeds Qualcomm also demonstrated that the Snapdragon 820 is capable of dynamically detecting WiFi signal quality based upon throughput and other metrics that affect VOIP quality and seamlessly handing off calls from WiFi to LTE and back. We also saw a demo for Qualcomm’s closed-loop antenna tuning system which allows for reduced impedance mismatch relative to previous open-loop antenna tuners which loaded various antenna profiles based upon things like touch sensing of certain critical areas.


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ARM Announces New Cortex-A35 CPU - Ultra-High Efficiency For Wearables & More
Today as part of the volley of announcements at ARM's TechCon conference we discover ARM's new low-power application-tier CPU architecture, the Cortex-A35. ARM follows an interesting product model: The company chooses to segment its IP offerings into different use-cases depending on market needs, designing different highly optimized architectures depending on the target performance and power requirements. As such, we see the Cortex-A lineup of application processors categorized in three groups: High performance, high efficiency, and ultra-high efficiency designs. In the first group we of course find ARM's big cores such as the Cortex A57 or A72, followed by the A53 in more efficiency targeted use-cases or in tandem with big cores in big.LITTLE designs.


What seems to be counter-intuitive is that ARM sees the A35 not as a successor to the A53, but rather a replacement for the A7 and A5. During our in-depth analysis of the Cortex A53 in our Exynos 5433 review earlier this year I claimed that the A53 seemed to be more like an extension to the perf/W curve of the Cortex A7 instead of it being a part within the same power levels, and now with the A35 ARM seems to have validated this notion.

As such, the A35 is targeted at power targets below ~125mW where the Cortex A7 and A5 are still very commonly used. To give us an idea of what to expect from actual silicon, ARM shared with us a figure of 90mW at 1GHz on a 28nm manufacturing process. Of course the A35 will see a wide range of implementations on different process nodes such as for example 14/16nm or at much higher clock rates above 2GHz, similar to how we've come to see a wide range of process and frequency targets for the A53 today.

Most importantly, the A35 now completes ARM's ARMv8 processor portfolio with designs covering the full range of power and efficiency targets. The A35 can also be used in conjunction with A72/A57/A53 cores in big.LITTLE systems, enabling for some very exotic configurations (A true tri-cluster comes to mind) depending if vendors see justification in implementing such SoCs.


At heart, the A35 is still an in-order limited dual-issue architecture much like the A7 or A53. The 8-stage pipeline depth also hasn't changed so from this high-level perspective we don't see much difference in comparison to preceding designs. What ARM has done though is to improve the individual blocks for better performance and efficiency by having bits and pieces of architectural enhancements that are even newer than what big cores such as the A72 currently employ.


Areas where the A35 had focused attention on are front-end efficiency improvements, such as a redesigned instruction fetch unit that improves branch prediction. The instruction fetch bandwidth was balanced for power efficiency while the instruction queue is now smaller and also tuned for efficiency. 



It's especially on memory benchmarks where the A35 will shine compared to the A7: The A35 adopts a lot of the Cortex A53's memory architecture. On the L1 memory system of which A35 can have configurable 8 to 64KB of instruction and data caches we now see use of multi-stream automatic data prefetching and automatic write stream detection. The L2 memory system (configurable from 128KB to 1MB) has seen increased buffering capacity and resource sharing while improving write stream efficiency and introducting coherency optimizations to reduce contention.


The NEON/FP pipeline has seen the biggest advancements, besides improved store performance the new units now add fully pipelined double precision multiply capability. The pipeline has also seen improvements in terms of area efficiency, part of the reason enabling the A35 to be smaller than the A53.


In terms of power management, the A35 much like the A53 now implements hardware retention states for both the main CPU core and NEON pipeline (separate power domains). What seems to be interesting here is that there is now a hardware governor within the CPU cluster able to arbitrate automatic entry and exit for retention states. Until now we've seen very little to no use of retention states by vendors, the only SoC that I've confirmed to use it was the Snapdragon 810 and that was subsequently disabled in later software updates in favour of just using the core power collapse CPU idle state.


At the same frequency and process, the A35 architecture (codenamed Mercury), promises to be 10% lower power than the A7 while giving an 6-40% performance uplift depending on use-case. In integer workloads (SPECint2006) the A35 gives about 6% higher throughput than the A7, while floating point (SPECfp2000) is supposed to give a more substantial 36% increase.

What is probably more interesting are apples-to-apples performance and power comparisons to the A53. Here the A35 actually is extremely intriguing as it is able to match the A53's performance from 80% to up to 100% depending on use-case. Browser workloads are where the A35 will trail behind the most and only be able to provide around 80% of the A53's performance. Integer workloads are quoted at coming in at 84-85% of the Apollo core, while as mentioned earlier, memory-heavy workloads are supposed to be on par with the larger bretheren.


What puts things in perspective though is that the A35 is able to achieve all of this at 75% the core size and 68% the power of the A53. ARM claims that the A35 and A53 may still be used side-by-side and even envisions big.LITTLE A53.A35 designs, but I have a hard time justifying continued usage of the A53 because of the cost incentive for vendors to migrate over to the A35. Even in big.LITTLE with A72 big cores I find it somewhat hard to see why a vendor would choose to continue to use an A53 little cluster while they could theoretically just use a higher clocked A35 to compensate for the performance deficit. Even in the worst-case scenario where the power advantage would be eliminated by running a higher frequency, vendors would still be able to gain from the switch due to the smaller core and subsequent reduced die size.


The A35 is touted as ARM's most configurable processor with vendors able to alter their designs far beyond simple choices such the core-count within a cluster. Designers will now also be able to choose whether they want NEON, Crypto, ACP or even the L2 blocks included in their implementations. The company envisions this to be processor for the next billion smartphone users and we'll likely see it in a very large variety of SoCs powering IoT devices such as wearables and embedded platforms, to budget smartphones and even high-end ones in big.LITTLE configurations.

ARM expects first devices with the A35 to ship by the end of 2016. Due to the sheer number of possible applications and expected volume, the Cortex A35 will undoubtedly be a very important CPU core for ARM that will be with us for quite some time to come.


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ARM Announces ARMv8-M Instruction Set For Microcontrollers – TrustZone Comes to Cortex-M
Kicking off today in Santa Clara, California is ARM’s annual developer conference and expo, TechCon. Although ARM announces products year-round, they always have a couple of announcements reserved for TechCon and this year is no exception. Being unveiled at 2015’s show is the ARM Cortex-A35 CPU and the ARMv8-M instruction set architecture, the latter being the focus of this article.

As a brief bit of background since we don’t extensively cover ARM’s microcontroller efforts, in recognition of the unique power and performance requirements for microcontrollers, ARM produces a separate instruction set architecture and lineup of CPU cores specifically for these kinds of products. These are the ARM-M ISAs and the Cortex-M series of CPUs respectively. The ARM-M ISAs can be thought of as a cut-down version of ARM’s full ISAs, paring down the features to allow for simpler CPUs as needed in microcontrollers.


At this year’s TechCon, ARM is announcing the latest iteration of the ARM-M ISA, the ARMv8-M ISA. Unlike the full ARMv8 (i.e. ARMv8-A) ISA that we’re accustomed to seeing implemented in products like ARM’s Cortex-A57 CPU, Apple’s Twister CPU, and other products, ARM’s focus on their microcontroller ISA is a bit narrower. Here the focus isn’t on performance or memory space – factors that led to the expansion to 64-bit CPUs with ARMv8-A AArch64 – but rather on continuing with microcontroller-suitable 32-bit CPUs while investing in the new features ARM sees as important over the next half decade or so.

To that end, ARM’s big focus with ARMv8-M is on security. Key to that is that ARM’s TrustZone technology is coming to microcontrollers for the first time.


Previously only available to ARM-A architecture CPUs, TrustZone is now being extended to ARM based microcontrollers. And like their bigger siblings, ARM’s aim here with TrustZone is to lay the groundwork for their customers to build highly secure devices, for all the benefits and drawbacks such a device entails. This includes protecting cryptography engines and certain stored assets (e.g. the secure enclave) against attack, locking down systems to prevent userland applications from breaking into the operating system itself, and various degrees of DRM (one example, as ARM gives is, is firmware IP protection).


ARM over the last few years has been betting increasingly heavy on wearables and ioT, so the announcement of ARMv8-M and their focus on TrustZone is consistent with those bets. ARM microcontrollers are used in a number of devices as the sole processor, and in more devices still as a specialized processor working alongside a full ARMv8-A application processor. So as ARM microcontroller use increasingly expands from industrial devices and simple black boxes to complex devices that end-users interact with, there is a need for better security to follow into these products.

With that said, as microcontrollers are the lowest of the low power devices in the ARM ecosystem, ARM had needed to take some care in implementing that security within the constraints of a microprocessor. Seeking to avoid compromising response time or efficiency, the ARMv8-M TrustZone retains the deterministic properties developers need on such devices, so a TruzeZone interrupt has a low and deterministic latency to the operation. Similarly, the core of the implementation is based on switching states rather than hypervisors, avoiding the overhead and higher resource requirements of the latter.


Of course like the ARMv8-M ISA itself, TrustZone is an ISA and a model for just the CPU. To flesh out the full technology ARM is also making a couple of other ARMv8-M announcements. The first is that the company is announcing the ARM Advanced Microcontroller Bus Architecture 5 (AMBA 5) Advanced High-performance Bus 5 (AHB5) specification. The main system bus for ARM’s microcontrollers, AHB5 goes hand-in-hand with TrustZone to extend the security model to the rest of the SoC. Through AHB5, TrustZone microcontroller CPUs can interact with both trusted and non-trusted devices, including trusted segments of SRAM and flash memory as required for implementing separated storage.


Also being announced today is TrustZone CryptoCell, ARM’s implementation of a TrustZone crypto block, which provides the fixed function hardware necessary for a full TrustZone implementation. The TrustZone CryptoCell includes a secure enclave, key generation/provisioning/management, and the actual fixed function hardware crypto engines.


Ultimately with today’s ARMv8-M and associated security announcements, ARM is looking to further flesh out the ARM ecosystem to support full security at every level and every device from end to end. ARM believes that developers now need an easier and more standardized way to implement security on their microcontroller-equipped devices, and this is what ARMv8-M will provide.


Finally, and not all that surprising, today’s announcement of the ARMv8-M ISA is just for the ISA itself, and not for any specific CPUs. ARM has traditionally announced new Cortex CPU designs separately from the ISA, and in this case it’s no different. To that end ARM isn’t specifically talking about when we’ll see ARMv8-M Cortex-M designs announced, but after today’s announcement it’s safe to say that it’s only a matter of time.



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Google Begins Offline Maps Rollout on Android
Earlier this year at Google I/O it was announced that Google Maps for Android and iOS would be receiving an update that would add the ability to save maps for offline viewing. Interestingly enough, this feature has actually existed and been removed from Google Maps on more than one occasion, and so such a prominent announcement gave some hope that it would stick around for good this time. Today the update is finally rolling out to Maps users on Android.




The feature works in a fairly straightforward manner. When searching a location in maps there will now be a download button in the information page about that location. You can then scroll around to fit the parts of the map you need into the box shown on screen, and when you name and save it the maps for that area will be permanently stored on your device. The applications for this feature are fairly obvious, such as storing maps of areas where you won't have a cell signal, or of places you'll be travelling to in other countries where your phone won't work.

The new version of Google Maps with offline maps is rolling out now on Android, and an updated version for iOS will be coming in the near future.


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NVIDIA Announces Tesla M40 & M4 Server Cards - Data Center Machine Learning
Slowly but steadily NVIDIA has been rotating in Maxwell GPUs into the company’s lineup of Tesla server cards. Though Maxwell is not well-suited towards the kind of high precision HPC work that the Tesla lineup was originally crafted for, Maxwell is plenty suitable for just about every other server use NVIDIA can think of. And as a result the company has been launching what’s best described as new breeds of Maxwell cards in the last few months.

After August’s announcement of the Tesla M60 and M6 cards – with a focus on VDI and video encoding – NVIDIA is back today for the announcement of the next set of Tesla cards, the M40 and the M4. In what the company is dubbing their “hyperscale accelerators,” NVIDIA is launching these two cards with a focus on capturing a larger portion of the machine learning market.


NVIDIA Tesla Family Specification Comparison
Tesla M40 Tesla M4 Tesla M60 Tesla K40
Stream Processors 3072 1024 2 x 2048

(4096)
2880
Boost Clock(s) ~1140MHz ~1075MHz ~1180MHz 810MHz, 875MHz
Memory Clock 6GHz GDDR5 5.5GHz GDDR5 5GHz GDDR5 6GHz GDDR5
Memory Bus Width 384-bit 128-bit 2 x 256-bit 384-bit
VRAM 12GB 4GB 2 x 8GB

(16GB)
12GB
Single Precision (FP32) 7 TFLOPS 2.2 TFLOPS 9.7 TFLOPS 4.29 TFLOPS
Double Precision (FP64) 0.21 TFLOPS (1/32) 0.07 TFLOPS (1/32) 0.3 TFLOPS (1/32) 1.43 TFLOPS (1/3)
Transistor Count 8B 2.94B 2x 5.2B 7.1B
TDP 250W 50W-75W 225W-300W 235W
Cooling Passive Passive

(Low Profile)
Active/Passive Active/Passive
Manufacturing Process TSMC 28nm TSMC 28nm TSMC 28nm TSMC 28nm
GPU GM200 GM206 GM204 GK110
Target Market Machine Learning Machine Learning VDI Compute

First let’s quickly talk about the cards themselves. The Tesla M40 marks the introduction of the GM200 GPU to the Tesla lineup, with NVIDIA looking to put their best single precision (FP32) GPU to good use. This is a 250 Watt full power and fully enabled GM200 card – though with Maxwell this distinction loses some meaning – with NVIDIA outfitting the card with 12GB of GDDR5 VRAM clocked at 6GHz. We know that Maxwell doesn’t support on-chip ECC for the RAM and caches, but it’s not clear at this time whether soft-ECC is supported for the VRAM. Otherwise, with the exception of the change in coolers this card is a spitting image of the consumer GeForce GTX Titan X.


Joining the Tesla M40 is the Tesla M4. As hinted at by its single-digit product number, the M4 is a small, low powered card. In fact this is the first Tesla card to be released in a PCIe half-height low profile form factor, with NVIDIA specifically aiming for dense clusters of these cards. Tesla M4 is based on GM206 – this being the GPU’s first use in a Tesla product as well – and is paired with 4GB of GDDR5 clocked at 5GHz. NVIDIA offers multiple power/performance configurations of the M4 depending on server owner’s needs, ranging from 50W to 75W, with the highest power mode rated to deliver up to 2.2TFLOPS of FP32 performance.


Both the Tesla M40 and M4 are being pitched at the machine learning market, which has been a strong focus for NVIDIA since the very start of the year. The company believes that machine learning is the next great frontier for GPUs, capitalizing on neural net research that has shown GPUs to be capable of both quickly training and quickly executing neural nets. Neural nets in turn are increasingly being used as more efficient means for companies to process vast amounts of audio & video data (e.g. the Facebooks of the world).

To that end we have seen the company focus on machine learning in the automotive sector with products such as the Drive PX system and lay out their long-term plans for machine learning with the forthcoming Pascal architecture at GTC 2015. In the interim then we have the Tesla M40 and Tesla M4 for building machine learning setups with NVIDIA’s current-generation architecture.


Given their performance and power profiles, Tesla M40 and M4 are intended to split the machine learning market on the basis of training versus execution The powerful M40 being well-suited for quicker training of neural nets and other systems, while the more compact M4 is well-suited for dense clusters of systems actually executing various machine learning tasks. Note that it’s interesting that NVIDIA is pitching the M40 and not the more powerful M60 for training tasks; as NVIDIA briefly discussed among their long-term plans at GTC 2015, current training algorithms don’t scale very well beyond a couple of GPUs, so users are better off with a couple top-tier GM200 GPUs than a larger array of densely packed GM204 GPUs. As a result the M40 occupies an interesting position as the company’s top Tesla card for machine learning tasks that aren’t trivially scalable to many GPUs.


Meanwhile, along with today’s hardware announcement NVIDIA is also announcing a new software suite to tie together their hyperscale ambitions. Dubbed the “NVIDIA Hyperscale Suite,” the company is putting together software targeted at end-user facing web services. Arguably the lynchpin of the suite is NVIDIA’s GPU REST Engine, a service for RESTful APIs to utilize the GPU, and in turn allowing web services to easily access GPU resources. NVIDIA anticipates the GPU REST Engine enabling everything from search acceleration to image classification, and to start things off they are providing the NVIDIA Image Compute Engine, a REST-capable service for GPU image resizing. Meanwhile the company is also be providing their cuDNN neural net software as part of the suite, and versions of FFmpeg with support for NVIDIA’s hardware video encode and decode blocks to speed up video processing and transcoding.


Wrapping things up, as is common with Tesla product releases, today’s announcements will predate the hardware itself by a bit. NVIDIA tells us that the Tesla M40 and the hyperscale software suite will be available later this year (with just over a month and a half remaining). Meanwhile the Tesla M4 will be released in Q1 of 2016. NVIDIA has not announced card pricing at this time.



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The Microsoft Surface Book Review
Microsoft has released what they are calling "The Ultimate Laptop" and with their first attempt at moving outside the tablet segment, we take a look at the new Surface Book and how it compares. Competition in the notebook segment is much more intense than the high end tablet market, and Microsoft is aiming for the top.


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Imagination Announces New P6600, M6200, M6250 Warrior CPUs
Today Imagination launches three new MIPS processor IPs: One in the performance category of Warrior CPUs, the P6600 and two embedded M-class core, the M6200 and M6250.

Warrior P6600


Starting off with the P6600, this is Imagination's new MIPS flagship core succeeding the P5600. The P5600 was a 3-wide out-of-order design with a pipeline depth of up to 16 stages. The P6600 keeps most of the predecessor's characteristics such as the main architectural features or full hardware virtualization and security through OmniShield, but adds compatibility for MIPS64 64-bit processing on top. Imagination first introduced a mobile oritented 64-bit MIPS CPU back with the I6400 a little more than a year ago but we've yet to see vendors announce products with it.


We're still lacking any details on the architectural improvements of the P6600 over the P5600 so it seems that for now we're left with guessing what kind of performance the new core will bring. The P5600 was directly competing with ARM's Cortex A15 in terms of IPC, but ARM has since then not only announced but also seen silicon with two successor IPs to the A15 (A57 and A72), so the P6600 will have some tough competition ahead of itself once it arrives in products.


The P6600, much like the P5600 can be implemented from single-core to six-core cluster configurations. What is interesting that as opposed to ARM CPU IP, the MIPS cores allow for asynchronous clock planes between the individual cores if the vendors wishes to implement the SoC's power management in this way (It can also be set up to work in a synchronous way).

"MIPS P6600 is the next evolution of the high-end MIPS P-class family and builds on the 32-bit P5600 CPU. P6600 is a balanced CPU for mainstream/high-performance computing, enabling powerful multicore 64-bit SoCs with optimal area efficiency for applications in segments including mobile, home entertainment, networking, automotive, HPC or servers, and more. Customers have already licensed the P6600 for applications including high-performance computing and advanced image and vision systems."

Warrior M6200 & M6250


Also as part of today's announcement we see two new embedded CPU cores, the M6200 and M6250. Both cores are successors to the microAptiv-UP and UC but able to run at up to 30% higher frequency. The new processors also see an ISA upgrade to MIPS32 Release 6 instead of Release 5.


The M6200 is targeted at real-time embedded operating systems with minimal funtionality for cost- and power-savings. It has no MMU and as such can only be described as a microcontroller part.


The M6250 is the bigger brother of the M6200 and the biggest difference is the inclusion of a memory management unit (MMU) that makes this a full fledged processor core that can run operating systems like Linux.

"M6200 and M6250 are configurable and fully synthesizable solutions for devices requiring a high level of performance efficiency and small silicon area including wireless or wired modems, GPU supervisors, flash and SSD controllers, industrial and motor control, advanced audio and more."


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Intel's Xeon D Product Family Updated with Storage and Networking-Specific SKUs
Intel's Xeon D has been one of the most exciting platforms to come out of Intel this year. Xeon D has created more excitement in the micro-server / edge server market compared to the introduction of Avoton and Rangeley (based on Silvermont x86 Atom cores) a few years back. In introducing the 22nm Atom-based server SoCs, Intel clearly delineated different SKUs for different market segments. While Avoton (C2xx0) concentrated on the storage server market, Rangeley (C2xx8) added some communication accelerators that made it a good fit for networking and communication applications.

Xeon D was launched with two SKUs (D1520, a 4C/8T SiP, and the D1540, a 8C/16T SiP) earlier this year. While those two SKUs covered the web hosting applications, today's launches cover the storage and edge network applications. Intel's slide from a presentation made earlier today sums up the various products in the lineup. Eight new Xeons and three new Pentium processors are being launched in the D-1500 lineup and they come in both 45W and 35W TDP versions. Interestingly, Intel indicated that 12-core and 16-core Xeon D SiPs can be expected early next year.


Note: The Pentium D Processors indicated in the above slide were not launched despite being part of the slide set. Currently, there are a total of 10 Xeon-D SKUs (as of Q4 2015).

Patrick at ServeTheHome has a nice graphic summarizing the clock speeds and pricing of these products. The D15x1 SKUs target the storage market, while the D15x7 and D15x8 target the networking / communication segments.

Intel claims that the new storage SKUs provide as much as 6x the performance of the high-end Avoton-based platforms.


Intel's Storage Acceleration Library (ISA-L) provides accelerators for compression, checksumming, parity calculation and cryptograhic functions (encryption as well as hashing).


The Storage Performance Development Kit (SPDK) provides better optimization compared to the native Linux drivers - particularly as the number of storage devices in the system ramps up.


On the networking front, Intel claims up to 5.4x higher performance compared to the Rangeley-based platforms. Intel is promoting their  Data Plane Development Kit (DPDK) to achieve better performance for L3 packet forwarding, VM packet forwarding with Open vSwitch, and IPSec forwarding (VPN applications).



ServeTheHome talks about how the communication accelerators have gained extensive software support since they were launched with the Rangeley SoCs in 2013.

One of the disappointing aspects with respect to the D1520 and D1540 (at least for those intending to use them as virtualization hosts) was the pulling back of the advertised SR-IOV feature. It remains to be seen if the new SKUs have the feature enabled.

In addition to the new Xeon D SKUs, Intel also announced the FM10000 Ethernet multi-host controller family that can provide up to 36 Ethernet lanes. The FM10000 family supports 1Gbps, 2.5Gbps, 10Gbps, and 25Gbps Ethernet ports and the ability to group four lanes as 40Gbps or 100Gbps ports. The integrated Ethernet controllers can be configured as four 50Gbps or eight 25Gbps host interfaces,.


The new X550 single-chip, low-cost 10GbE platform was also launched. It supports NBASE-T technology (for 2.5Gbps as well as 5 Gbps operation, in addition to 10Gbps).


Operating via a PCIe 3.0 x1 / x4 / x8 link, the new 10GBASE-T controller integrates both MAC and PHY in a single package, and comes in both single and dual-port varieties. Power consumption is just 11 W with both 10GbE ports active, making it amenable to passive heatsink thermal solutions.


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TAG Heuer Unveils The Intel-Powered Connected Smartwatch
Today TAG Heuer, a traditional Swiss watchmaker, announced their entry into the world of smartwatches with the TAG Heuer Connected. This is really the first example of a luxury Android wear watch, and also the first example of a traditional mechanical watch manufacturer moving into the smartwatch space.

The TAG Heuer Connected has a diameter of 46mm, a thickness of 12.8mm, and a mass of 52 grams. The chassis of the watch is made of titanium, and the LCD display is covered by a sheet of sapphire glass. The display itself is a 1.5" 360x360 fully circular transflective LTPS LCD, which means it can use the reflection of light to improve visibility and drive down power consumption. The last time I remember hearing about these sorts of displays was Pixel Qi's transflective LCDs, but the tech hasn't really gone anywhere since that time. It'll be interesting to see who is making the panel for the TAG Heuer Connected and how it fares in bright light compared to other smartwatches, as well as compared to a traditional mechanical watch which doesn't use an LCD at all.

TAG Heuer Connected
SoC Intel Atom Z34xx
RAM 1GB
NAND 4GB
Display 1.5" 360x360 LCD, 240ppi
Diameter / Mass 46mm / 52g
Battery 410mAh
OS Android Wear
Other Connectivity 802.11b/g/n + BT 4.1
Price $1499

Interestingly, the TAG Heuer connect is powered by an Intel SoC rather than the Snapdragon 400 chip that has shown up in most Android Wear devices. More specifically, it's an Intel Z34xx series SoC, which has a peak frequency of 1.6GHz but TAG Heuer notes that the nominal frequency will be more like 500MHz. The SoC is paired with 1GB of RAM and 4GB of NAND, which puts it ahead of the 512MB of RAM found in most Android Wear watches. The sensors include an accelerometer and a gyroscope, but no heart rate monitor which is definitely a letdown for fitness-oriented buyers. The watch is also advertised as having IP67 water resistance.

Because 30% of the Connected's parts are made outside of Switzerland the watch isn't officially "Swiss made", and I don't expect that's going to be an easy problem to overcome when there are now many electrical parts inside the watch being made overseas. Something interesting is that the Connected is modeled off of TAG Heuer's Carrera mechanical watch, and after two years the company will allow you to trade in your Connected along with $1500 to receive an actual Carrera. To me that move seems a bit pessimistic about the company's own future in the smartwatch space, as it seems like there's an assumption that users will give up a smartwatch and go back to owning a mechanical watch. It would make more sense to me if you could trade up to newer versions of the Connected.

The last, and possibly most important detail about the TAG Heuer Connected is the price. TAG Heuer's mechanical watches can cost several hundred dollars, and so it's no surprise that the TAG Heuer Connected will have a retail price of $1500


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The Google Nexus 5X Review
Google's first hardware collaboration with LG brought us the Nexus 4. Like the Nexus 7, the Nexus 4 followed a philosophy of bringing as much power and quality as possible to a reasonably affordable price point. The Nexus 4 definitely wasn't a perfect phone, but it was certainly good relative to its price, and it showed that a phone can still be good even if it doesn't cost $600. About one year later Google and LG collaborated again to bring us the Nexus 5, a device which I and many other users fondly remember as an affordable phone that actually brought many of the specifications you would expect to see in a device that costed significantly more.

While I'm sure many hoped that 2014 would bring the next iteration of an LG Nexus device, it wasn't meant to be. Instead we got the Nexus 6 made by Motorola, which didn't really follow the pricing philosophy of the LG Nexus devices, and wasn't very competitive with devices like the Galaxy Note 4 despite its equivalent cost. At that point the future of affordable Nexus devices was unclear, and I wasn't even sure if we'd see a true successor to the Nexus 5. Fortunately, this year is the year that LG returns to bring us the next iteration of their Nexus phones, with the new device appropriately being named the Nexus 5X. Read on for the full review, and find out if the Nexus 5X is a worthy successor to the Nexus 5.


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Examining Intel's New Speed Shift Tech on Skylake: More Responsive Processors
Modern computer processors are constantly changing their operating frequency (and voltage) depending on workload. For Intel processors, this is often handled by the operating system which will request a particular level of performance, known as the Performance State or P-State, from the processor. The processor then adjusts its frequencies and voltage levels to accomodate, in a DVFS (dynamic voltage and frequency scaling) sort of way, but only at the P-states fixed at the time of production. While the best for performance would be to run the system at the maximum all the time, due to the high voltage, this is the least efficient way to run a processor and wasteful in terms of energy used, which for mobile devices means a shorter battery life or thermal throttling. With the P-state model, to increase efficiency, the operating system can request lower P-states in order to save power, but if a task requires more performance, and the power/thermal budgets are sufficient, the P-State can be changed to accomodate. This 'technology' on Intel processors has historically been called 'Speed Step'.



With Skylake, Intel's newest 6th generation Core processors, this changes. The processor has been designed in a way that with the right commands, the OS can hand control of the frequency and voltage back to the processor. Intel is calling this technology 'Speed Shift'. We’ve discussed Speed Shift before in Ian’s Skylake architecture analysis, but despite the in-depth talk from Intel, Speed Shift was noticably absent at the time of the launch of the processors. This is due to one of the requirements for Speed Shift - it requires operating system support to be able to hand over control of the processor performance to the CPU, and Intel had to work with Microsoft in order to get this functionality enabled in Windows 10. As of right now, anyone with a Skylake processor is actually not getting the benefit of the technology, at least right now. A patch will be rolled out in November for Windows 10 which will enable this functionality, but it is worth noting that it will take a while for it to roll out to new Windows 10 purchases.

Compared to Speed Step / P-state transitions, Intel's new Speed Shift terminology, changes the game by having the operating system relinquish some or all control of the P-States, and handing that control off to the processor. This has a couple of noticable benefits. First, it is much faster for the processor to control the ramp up and down in frequency, compared to OS control. Second, the processor has much finer control over its states, allowing it to choose the most optimum performance level for a given task, and therefore using less energy as a result. Specific jumps in frequency are reduced to around 1ms with Speed Shift's CPU control from 20-30 ms on OS control, and going from an efficient power state to maximum performance can be done in around 35 ms, compared to around 100 ms with the legacy implementation. As seen in the images below, neither technology can jump from low to high instantly, because to maintain data coherency through frequency/voltage changes there is an element of gradient as data is realigned.


The ability to quickly ramp up performance is done to increase overall responsiveness of the system, rather than linger at lower frequencies waiting for OS to pass commands through a translation layer. Speed Shift cannot increase absolute maximum performance, but on short workloads that require a brief burst of performance, it can make a big difference in how quickly that task gets done. Ultimately, much of what we do falls more into this category, such as web browsing or office work. As an example, web browsing is all about getting the page loaded quickly, and then getting the processor back down to idle.


For this short piece, Intel was able to provide us with the Windows 10 patch for Speed Shift ahead of time, so that we could test and see what kind of gains it can achieve. This gives us a somewhat unique situation, since we can isolate this one variable on a new processor and measure its impact on various workloads.

To test Speed Shift, I’ve chosen several tasks which have workloads that could show some gain from Speed Shift. Tests which run the processor at its maximum frequency for long periods of time are not going to show any significant gain, since you are not limited by the responsiveness of the processor in those cases. The first test is PCMark 8, which is a benchmark which attempts to represent real-life tasks, and the workload is not constant. In addition, I’ve run the system through several Javascript tests, which are the best case scenario for something like Speed Shift, since the processor has to quickly complete a task in order to allow you to enjoy a website.

The processor in question is an Intel Core i7-6600U, with a base frequency of 2.6 GHz, and turbo frequency of 3.4 GHz. Despite the base frequency being rated on the box at 2.6 GHz, the processor can go all the way down to 400 Mhz when idle, so being able to ramp up quickly could make a big impact even on the U-series Skylake processors. My guess is that it will be even more beneficial to the Y series Core m3/m5/m7 parts since they have a larger dynamic range, and typically more thermal constraints.

PCMark 8


PCMark 8 - Home

PCMark 8 - Work

Both the Home and Work tests show a very small gain with Speed Shift enabled. The length of these benchmarks, which are between 30 and 50 minutes, would likely mask any gains on short workloads. I think this illustrates that Speed Shift is just one more tool, and not a holy grail for performance. The gain on Home is just under 3%, and the difference on the Work test is negligible.

JavaScript Tests


JavaScript is one of the use cases where short burst workloads are the name of the game, and here Speed Shift has a much bigger impact. All tests were done with the Microsoft Edge browser.

Mozilla Kraken 1.1

Google Octane 2.0

WebXPRT 2015

WebXPRT 2013

The time to complete the Kraken 1.1 test is the least affected, with just a 2.6% performance gain, but Octane's scores shows over a 4% increase. The big win here though is WebXPRT. WebXPRT includes subtests, and in particular the Photo Enhancement subtest can see up to a 50% improvement in performance. This bumps the scores up significantly, with WebXPRT 2015 showing an almost 20% score increase, and WebXPRT 2013 has a 26% gain. These leaps in performance are certainly the kind that would be noticeable to the end user manipulating photographs in something like Picasa or watching web-page based graph adjustments such as live stock feeds.

Power Consumption


The other side of the coin is power consumption. Having a processor that can quickly ramp up to its maximum frequency could mean that it will consume more power due to the greater penalty of increasing the voltage, but if it can complete the task quickly and get back to idle again, there is a chance to be more efficient when work is done in 10s of milliseconds rather than 100s of milliseconds, as the frequency ramps up and down again before the old P-state method has decided to do anything. The principle of 'work fast, finish now' was the backbone of Intel's 'Race To Sleep' strategy during the ultrabook era and focused on the impulse of response-related performance, however the drive for battery life means that efficiency has tended to matter more, especially as devices and batteries get smaller.

Due to the way modern processors work, we don’t have the tools to directly measure the SoC power. Intel has told us that Speed Shift does not impact battery life very much, one way or the other, so to verify this, I've run our light battery life test with the option disabled and enabled.

Core i7-6600U Battery Efficiency

This task is likely one of the best case scenarios for Speed Shift. It consists of launching four web pages per minute, with plenty of idle time in between. Although Speed Shift seems to have a slight edge, it is very small and would fall within the margin of error on this test. Some tasks may see a slight improvement in efficiency, and others may see a slight regression, but Speed Shift is less of a power savings tool than other pieces of Skylake. Looking at it another way, if, for example, the XPS 13 with Skylake was to get 15 hours of battery life, Speed Shift would only change the result by about 7 minutes. Responsiveness increases, but net power use remains about the same.

Final Words


With Skylake, while there was not the large leap in clock for clock performance gain that we have become accustomed to with new Intel microarchitectures, but when you look at the overall package, there was a decent net gain in performance combined with new technologies. For example, being able to maintain higher Turbo frequencies on multiple cores has increased the stock to stock performance more than the smaller IPC gains.

Speed Shift is just one small part of the overall performance gain, and one that we have not been able to look at until now. It does lead to some pretty big gains in task completion, if the workloads are bursty and short enough for it to make a difference. It can’t increase the absolute performance of the processor, but it can get it to maximum performance in a much shorter amount of time, as well as get it back down to idle quicker. Intel is billing it as improved responsiveness, and it’s pretty clear that they have achieved that.

The one missing link is operating system support. We’ve been told that the patch to enable this is coming to Windows 10 in November. While this short piece looks at what Speed Shift can bring to the table in terms of performance, if you'd like to read more about how it is implemented, please check out the Skylake architecture analysis which goes into more detail.

Update: Daniel Rubino at Windows Central has tested the latest Windows 10 Insider build 10586 and it appears to enable Speed Shift on his Surface Pro 4, which is in-line with the November timeline we were provided.


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Jumbo Joust: iPad Pro vs. Surface Pro 3 vs. Surface Pro 4
May the best oversized tablet win

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Twitter Senior VP: "Diversity is Important, But We Can’t Lower the Bar"
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"Prepare to be Punished": Microsoft is Killing OneDrive With Cuts, Blames Users
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Leak: Apple Preps for First Real Android App Foray With New Apple Music App
App is expected to drop within the next month, appears to support all the same features that iOS users enjoy

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Consumer Reports Flexes Muscle, Hits Slumping Tesla Motors Stock
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CNN Resorts to Internet Censorship to Promote Clinton Over Senator Sanders
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Quick Note: Windows 10 Insider Preview Build 10565 Fixes Boot Camp 6.0 Issues
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Pepsi Smartphone? Empty Calories Coming Soon to the Midrange
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Legere Blasts Microsoft for "Bull***t" Snub of T-Mobile and Verizon
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Quick Note: Windows 10 Hits 110 Million Devices, VMs
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Microsoft Lumia 950 and 950 XL Finally Launch, w/ Windows 10, Liquid Cooling
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Why the U.S. Won't be Able to Ban Google's New Huawei Marshmallow Flagship Phone
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Tag Heuer Admits Its $1,800 Smartwatch Was Inspired By Apple -- Price-Wise
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Breaking Bad: How to Crash Google's Chrome Browser With Just 8 Characters
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Ghost in the Machine: Apple, Developers Unwittingly Aid App Store Malware
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Fakebook Pt. I: From "The Chive" to "AskMen"; How Facebook's Phonies are Born and Used
Shady promotion, sex trafficking, and data mining are just some of the tricks of the trade for Facebook's growing population of fakers

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