Imagination releases new PowerVR GPUs



6-series brings DX11.1, loads of performance


Mobile graphics specialists Imagination Technologies have unveiled their next generation GPU architecture, codenamed Rogue

The new 6-series PowerVR parts feature the latest APIs, including Open CL1.x, Open GL ES, Open GL 3.x/4.x and DirectX 10 across the range, while some high end parts should even feature DirectX 11.1 support

In terms of raw performance, the new architecture should deliver a 20-fold increase over current mobile GPUs, with five times the efficiency. The first cores to appear will be the G6200 and G6400, featuring two and four clusters respectively, but there are no performance projections for these parts yet

Current 5-series PowerVR graphics are used on a wide array of devices, ranging from Apple’s iGear to Google’s latest Nexus Galaxy phone and some Intel Atom parts. Imagination Technologies has already struck a deal with Texas Instruments, ST Ericsson, Renesas and MediaTek to license 6-series parts

Powercolor Radeon HD 7970 Vortex in the works

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Non-reference PCB pixellized 


It is no secret that AMD partners are working on non-reference Tahiti Radeon HD 7900 series cards and we managed to score one of the first pictures of a non-reference PCB and an actual card from PowerColor

PowerColor is a major AMD partner and we already saw their Vortex cooler in action back on the HD 6970. As far as the PCB is concerned we don't have much details other than it has a beefier VRM and that the card will draw power from two 8-pin PCI-Express power connectors so we guess that it could end up with a nice factory overclock and more overclocking room when compared to the reference card

Of course, the card should end up to be quieter and a bit less hot thanks to the Vortex cooler. The date is still unknown but we'll surely try to dig out more info

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Razer details its Project Fiona at CES

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Gaming tablet


While the Switchblade concept and Blade gaming notebook were first signs that Razer is making a push into new markets, the new Project Fiona tablet certainly confirms it. We are bound to call it a concept, but Razer claims that Project Fiona is certainly much more as there are solid plans that this PC gaming tablet shows up in the second half of this year

The details regarding the new PC gaming tablet are still scarce but some pieces of info managed to find its way online claiming that this 10.1-inch 1280x800 tablet with integrated nunchuk-like controllers might pack Intel's Core i7 Ivy Bridge CPU, and those game titles previewed in the official trailer and some live action video certainly shows it packs quite a decent punch

Currently, beside the Intel Core i7 and 10-inch 1280x800 screen specs, Razer's official site for Project Fiona also lists full-screen user interface supporting multi-touch, 3-axis gyro, magnetometer and accelerometer, force feedback, Dolby 7.1 surround sound and Bluetooth 3.0 and WiFi 802.11bgn WiFi. Razer also noted that it should ship with Windows 8 OS

A couple of key things like battery life, precise date or the estimated price weren't revealed by Razer but some sites overheard talk of a sub-$1,000 price tag. Razer also noted that, unlike the Switchblade concept, Project Fiona is a prototype rather than concept and it might show up sometime in second half of this year
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Nvidia shows off Splashtop on Tegra 3



CES 2012: Perfect for lazy gits


Nvidia used its Tegra 3 demo at CES to show off Splashtop, a pretty demanding app that enables users to enjoy a proper PC experience on their tablets

In the demo, an Asus Transformer Prime was used to control some relatively basic PC functions, play media and check Facebook. However, the tablet also proved capable of showing some more demanding stuff, like gaming

Although we don’t see many users using their tablets to play PC games, Splashtop seems like a pretty handy feature, allowing users to access their media libraries or documents, straight off the PC. Sounds great for people who don’t like getting out of bed. Everyone then? Ed

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Samsung announces second-gen Series 9 ultraportables

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 High-end notebooks, not quite ultrabooks

 

We have seen a plethora of new ultrabooks crop up here at the 2012 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. While 2011 brought many advancements in the thin computing profiles of ultra-slim notebooks with Core i5 and Core i7 processors, 2012 is seeing improvements on original designs by addressing common user criticisms and more focus on the final user experience


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Today, Samsung just announced a pair of slimmed-down, redesigned flagship Series 9 notebooks. Interestingly enough, Samsung is branding these devices as "high-end notebooks" rather than ultrabooks for reasons. It is important to consider that the first-generation Series 9 notebooks were introduced in February 2011, just months before Intel announced its Ultrabook campaign throughout summer 2011.

samsung series_9_ultrabook 

The first model is a second-generation revision of the original 13-inch model, while the second is an all-new 15-inch model with the same new redesign. These new Series 9 weighs in at just 2.5 pounds (1.13kg) and measures at just 0.5 inches (12.7mm) thin. According to Samsung, this product is the result of over 30,000 painstaking hours of development and design. It features a single-shell aluminum body, fingerprint resistance and a backlit keyboard

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What many might consider to be the flagship specification of these premium high-end notebooks are their beautiful 1600x900 LED-backlit displays. Both 13-inch and 15-inch models feature up to 600 nits of brightness, suberb viewing angles and stunning visual clarity. Both models also pack Intel second-gen Core i5 Sandy Bridge processors, 4GB of RAM, 128GB SSDs, six-hour batteries and LED-backlit keyboards

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Samsung will be pricing these notebooks at $1,399 and up for the 13-inch model, and $1499 and up for the 15-inch model. They will be available starting in February 2012.

Broadcom demos reference 802.11ac

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CES 2012: 2Gbits per second

 

Broadcom is showing the latest in 802.11 technology at CES in their private suite. The latest iteration of 802.11ac promises Gigabit wireless speeds

"5G WiFi" is the branding that Broadcom has chosen for their 802.11ac chipsets. Broadcom’s implementation of 802.11ac improves the wireless range in the home, allowing consumers to watch  HD-quality video from more devices, in more places, simultaneously

The increased speed enables users to download web content from a mobile device faster and quickly sync large files, such  as videos, in a fraction of the time it would take on a similar 802.11n device.  The new IEEE 802.11ac chips are three times faster and up to six times more power efficient than equivalent 802.11n solutions

bcm routerreference_performance 

Broadcom announced four chips this week at CES. At the high end, the hardware supports three spatial streams and PHY (physical) rates of up to 1.3Gbps. Even at its low-end chip’s slowest speed though, a single-stream radio has a theoretical top speed of 433Mps which leaves 802.11n, where even multiple-stream devices don’t usually go over 300Mbps, eating its dust

Although the 802.11ac is still being developed, Broadcom is already showing working silicon that meets the current pre-draft specifications of the IEEE standard. We managed to get pictures of their reference "performance" router design supporting 802.11ac as well as 802.11n radios

This is how the router looks below

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bcm routerreference_top

 

 

Sony rolls out sleek Xperia S with 720p screen



CES 2012: 12MP camera, 32GB storage, Bravia engine


Sony has officially announced its first Sony branded phone in a decade. The outfit bought out Ericsson and dropped the Sony Ericsson brand late last year, and now it’s on track to invade the Android smartphone in style

The Sony Experia S is the first smartphone from Sony’s NXT, or next generation series. Looking at the spec, the new Experia lives up to the next generation promise. It features a 4.3-inch 1280x720 screen, 12-megapixel camera and 32GB of internal storage. Performance should not be an issue, as it boasts a 1.5GHz processor and 1GB of memory, with LTE to boot. In addition, the phone has PlayStation certification and boasts Sony’s Bravia Engine for some additional image quality

Sony knows a thing or two about industrial design and we believe the new Experia is one of the best looking Android phones on the market today, if not the best. The uncluttered design looks great in white or black, and the phone looks very sleek and thin. The only downside is the OS. Yes, it’s , Gingerbread but Sony claims it will offer an ICS update shortly

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Zotac rolls out three new ZBOX nettops



CES 2012: AMD and Intel flavored triplets


Zotac has revamped its ZBOX nettop lineup with three new models based on the latest AMD and Intel chips

All three feature virtually the same design as previous ZBOX models, but the design has stood the test of time and we still think it’s top notch. However, this time around Zotac included quite a few new features, including Bluetooth 3.0 and a bundled media remote with USB IR receiver. An external WiFi antenna is also included

The ID81 version packs a 1.2GHz dual-core Intel Celeron 857 processor based on the Sandy Bridge core, with integrated graphics. The ID80 is based around the new, extremely power efficient Atom D2700 processor, with Nvidia GT 520M graphics

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The AD04 is probably the most interesting model. It’s based on AMD’s E-450 APU with integrated HD 6320 graphics, and given the pricing of earlier models, it could also end up cheaper than Intel versions. We tested the previous E-350 based version last summer and we loved it

All three models will be available as barebones, or complete Plus systems, with 320GB of storage and 2GB of RAM. If you are interested in barebones, you can count on two SODIMM DDR3 slots and one 2.5-inch drive bay

Asus shows off 7-inch Tegra 3 tablet



CES 2012: $249 Kindle killer


Affordable Android tablets seem to be the way forward, and following the success of Amazon’s Kindle Fire, other vendors are entering the value market

Asus is picking up the gauntlet with a new 7-inch tablet based on Nvidia’s Tegra 3 chip. It features an 1280x800 IPS panel, but more importantly it costs just $249. This makes it a pretty good deal, as the Kindle costs $199 and Barns & Noble’s Nook tablet also goes for $249.

We are still not sure about the RAM and storage, but even so the new 7-incher promises excellent value for money, since it will probably perform on par with its 10-inch siblings, at just half the price

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Toshiba X10 tablet pictured

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CES 2012: 7.7 mm, claims the thinnest so far

There is not much you can do with tablets other than make them as thin and as light as possible. This is how Toshiba came up with X10 tablet that is supposed to start shipping by middle of Q1 2012, so let’s guess sometime in February

The specs are impressive, with a OMAP 4 4420 dual-core chip with 1.2GHz core clock and 1GB memory. Toshiba claims that the tablet is the lightest on the market, weighing in at only 535 grams (1.2 lbs.) and is 7.7 mm or 0.3 inch thick. The resolution is the usual 1280x800, and the tablet has 2Mpixel front and 5Mpixel back camera. It uses the original gorilla glass not the latest gorilla glass two, which makes it's debut at CES this year.  The back is made of quite popular brushed aluminum


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What we also like about this tablet is that its packed with a lot of connectors including micro USB, mini HDMI out, and a micro SD card slot

It is currently being shown with Honeycomb Android 3.2, but it is Ice Cream Sandwich compatible and support for it is planned as well with no exact date as of yet

Pricing starts from $525 for 16GB version and it gets more expensive if you are after more memory.  The thinnest tablet claim, probably won’t last that long as the competition is not sleeping

toshiba x10-side_ces2012 
 

Samsung announces new Series 5 Ultrabooks

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CES 2012: Available January 30th

 

Today, Samsung has announced that it will release a new lineup of Series 5 ultrabooks at the 2012 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada. In order to differentiate this new class of ultrabooks from the company's existing Series 5 Chromebook lineup, Samsung is naming them Series 5 ULTRA - obviously, with special emphasis on the "ultra" for aesthetic purposes, the ultra-thin form factors and lightweight designs

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Samsung is introducing two new Series 5 ULTRA models, a 13-inch model and a 14-inch model with an optical drive. Both models feature a 1366 x 768 display, Intel second-gen 32nm Core i5 2467 1.60GHz Sandy Bridge processor, 4GB of RAM, a 500GB SATA II 5400RPM hard drive, and an option for up to 128GB SSD storage and 16GB of express cache for faster boot times

To offer maximum connectivity, the 14-inch model also offers a variety of ports, including a full-size HDMI, VGA, two USB 3.0, one USB 2.0, a 4-in-1 multi SD card slot and an Ethernet port. The 13-inch model also features a full-size HDMI port along with one USB 3.0, two USB 2.0, a 4-in-1 multi SD card slot and an Ethernet port

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"The Series 5 ULTRA was designed to meet consumer demands for a thin and light laptop that offers advanced computing power and ample storage, while still remaining affordable," said Todd Bouman, vice president of product marketing at Samsung Electronics America. "We're confident that consumers will truly be impressed with the product's design and performance, as well as the fact that we are one of the first companies to release an Ultrabook with an optical drive, which brings a new level of productivity and entertainment capabilities to the category

Based on our initial impressions, both models feel very heavy to the touch and may be considered "borderline" ultrabook products. Both models weigh in at 3.5 pounds, which is somewhat of an issue considering that the flagship Samsung Series 9 weighs in at a mere 2.5 pounds in comparison. These may be considered "borderline ultrabooks" by our standards, but they definitely learn towards the sight of being ultraportable notebooks

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Both 13-inch and 14-inch Samsung Series 5 ULTRA models will be available starting January 30, 2012 with prices ranging between $899 and $1099. The ultrabooks actually showed up for US pre-order a few days ago on J&R but were shortly pulled thereafter

Sapphire launches its own HD 7970

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Reference board


Following almost every other AMD AIB partner on the market, Sapphire has also officially launched its own HD 7970 graphics card. Based on the new 28nm Tahiti GPU, the new Sapphire Radeon HD 7970 features reference design and stock clocks

The new Sapphire Radeon HD 7970 features the same reference dual-slot cooler like most other HD 7970 graphics cards on the market and works at stock clocks set at 950MHz for the GPU and 5.5GHz for 3GB of GDDR5 memory paried up with a 384-bit memory interface. The card packs 2048 stream processors, has support for DirectX 11.1 and AMD HD3D Technology and AMD Eyefinity

The recent rumours suggested that Sapphire is gearing up to release a full lineup of non-reference HD 7970 cards with Atomic and Toxic edition branding. The new Sapphire HD 7970 graphics card is launched with a suggested price set at US $549 while in Europe, the cheapest Sapphire HD 7970 is currently listed at €528,80.

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OCZ unveils external SATA HDD with Thunderbolt port

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Blazing fast throughput speed of 750MB/s

 

Earlier this afternoon at Storage Visions 2012, a sideshow preceding CES 2012 that deals exclusively with emerging technology trends and architectures in storage technology, OCZ unveiled a few new products that the company has planned for release over the course of the year


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Image Credit: PC Perspective

The first and most interesting consumer product we saw was the OCZ Lightfoot external SATA hard drive. Lightfoot is essentially a successor to the OCZ Enyo external USB 3.0 SSD and the physical footprint of the new device is slightly bigger due to its increased storage capacity. The device utilizes an Intel Thunderbolt port to transfer data bidirectionally with transfer rates as high as ~750MB/s according to OCZ representatives

During the unveiling, OCZ stated that the main benefit of migrating to Intel's Thunderbolt technology is the improved latency and highly accurate time synchronizations that will allow for transferring high-bandwidth video and audio content to and from the drive. Nevertheless, we are still awaiting more hardware manufacturers to license Intel's Thunderbolt technology so the ecosystem of products can emerge and a successful generation of high-performance data can be realized

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Image Credit: PC Perspective

OCZ did not comment on pricing or a release date for the Lightfood external SATA HDD, other than it will be released in 2012.

Samsung prepares 27-inch Plane Line Switching LCD

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 LED 2560 x 1440 resolution, Mobile HD Link (MHL) port

 

Samsung has decided to jump the gun on several announcements related to upcoming displays that it will announce to the general public at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas next week. Of course, we take no hesitation with early announcements, especially if they involve new and promising display technologies that every enthusiast consumer may consider in his or her gadget portfolio

On the high-end, Samsung is announcing the S27A950, a new 27-inch Series 9 LED-backlit LCD display featuring a 2560 x 1440p resolution, Plane Line Switching (PLS) technology (contrast with In-Plane Switching and Twisted Nematic LCDs), edge-to-edge anti-glare class, an adjustable aluminum stand with USB, DisplayPort, dual-link DVI and HDMI ports

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Plane Line Switching is a new display technology developed by Samsung, which bears similarities to IPS panels and touts improved viewing angles and image quality, increased brightness and lower production costs. The first PLS displays to be released were the Samsung S24A850 and Samsung S27A850 in September 2011. Nevertheless, Samsung expects to release more PLS-based displays over the course of 2012.

The display also features a 7-watt speaker and a new upcoming industry standard port called Mobile High-Definition Link (MHL,) which allows for a mobile smartphone or tablet to be connected while displaying 1080p video content and simultaneously charging the device

The Samsung S27A970 27-inch display will be featured at CES 2012 next week and will retail for $1,199.


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Ivy Bridge works in 60 series boards



Manufacturers confirm


We spoke with a few motherboard manufactures and got word that the test version of Ivy Bridge they have works just fine in a few 60 series motherboards available today
 
In order to run Ivy Bridge 22nm CPUs branded Core I 3000 series on Cougar Point chipset, you will need a new bios and drivers to make it happen, as well as M8 firmware. In that case Ivy bridge processors will work in H61, H67, P67 as well as Z68 boards

Ivy Bridge won’t work in business edition Q65, Q67 and B65 chipsets as Intel hopes that business will buy complete platforms, not just upgrade CPUs

Still, 70 series chipset codenamed Panther Point will be the first Intel chispet to offer native USB 3.0 support as well as PCI 3 gen for graphics enthusiasts as well as three display support. Our sources are telling us that Ivy Bridge looks fine, and that all should be ready for launch in March or April

Atom D2500 doesn’t support Blu-Ray 2.0



D2700 does


Now, even in the last weeks of 2011, Intel’s next generation Atom D2700 or D2500 Cedar Trail-D desktop processors are nowhere to be found

Intel will tell you that it has been shipping Atom D2700 and D2500 since Q3 2011, or September, but so far there is not a single system or integrated board available, at least we are not aware of one. The systems based on Cedar View 32nm platform were delayed due some driver certification issues, and we heard a few times that Microsoft charges companies some extra penalty money if they don’t use WHQL drives

This kind of explains why no one dared launch a system based on Windows and the latest Atom processors. It was rather interesting to find out that only faster and more expensive Atom D2700 clocked at 2.16GHz will be able to support Blu-Ray 2.0. This has to be related to its 640MHz graphics core. Atom D2500 clocked at 1.86GHz with two cores and two threads and same 10W TDP, 400MHz graphics won’t include Blu-Ray 2.0 in its spec sheet

We are sure that we will see them at CES on January 10th at Intel’s booth but not sure when to they hit the stores

AMD Radeon HD 7900 press event on 22nd of December

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Partners still bound to 9th of January launch


According to our sources, the 22nd of December is the date for the Radeon HD 7900 series press event. This means that reviews will go up on 22nd of December and AMD will probably brag about being having the first 28nm desktop cards in 2011, while there will be no cards or partner annoucements until 9th of January 2012.

Some select members of the press have already gotten their hands on cards yesterday and some will get them today. All performance figures and estimates that came before yesterday are pretty much off the table since AMD did a good job in keeping the 12.1 RC driver offline until a day before yesterday. Some estimates that Tahiti is about 15 percent faster than Cayman are way off and simply unreal judging by the specs of the Tahiti GPU. Of course, there are some AMD slides that show performance of the new Tahiti, but history has taught us to rather stick to our sources about those or wait for some real benchmarks rather than to look at AMD official slides

Currently, most of our sources are sticking to the same story, AMD partners are still bound to the 9th of January launch date and, although some might start to list the HD 7900 series cards, it is quite possible that they won't be available until that date. Of course, AMD can give a green light earlier but currently partners have the 9th of January 2012 as the launch date

Radeon HD 7970 close to HD 6990

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In 3DMark 11


We managed to score some fresh info on the performance of AMD's upcoming Radeon HD 7970 card. Of course, as it was the case with previous performance figures we wrote about, these are only 3DMark 11 figures and are done with the first "usable" driver, but gives at least some insight about the performance that can only get better once the final driver shows up

When compared to the HD 6970, the HD 7970 is around 50 percent faster in 3DMark 11 Extreme test. It scores around 2800 points while the HD 6970 can get up to around 1800 points. The HD 6990 scores around 3400 points in the same test, but according to our sources, HD 7970 is more than happy with a good OC that draws the card an inch away from the HD 6990. The previously reported 30ish percent was probably taken from 3DMark 11 Entry setting test where all the cards are closer in performance

We were also told about the 3DMark 11 Performance setting performance that ends up on par with the HD 6990 but we aren't sure if these are with or without OC

These numbers also mean that the HD 7970 ends up faster than the Nvidia GTX 590 in some cases. Of course, as always, take these numbers with a grain of salt as final driver could change a thing or two, but we guess that we'll know for sure on 22nd of December

HD 7970 up to 60 percent faster than GTX 580

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At 2560x1600


According to the leaked AMD slides, it appears that the upcoming Radeon HD 7970 is between 30 and 60 percent faster than the GTX 580 at 2560x1600 and at various levels of AA and AF

Of course, as we are talking about AMD slides these results are probably the best case scenarios that Radeon HD 7970 can offer, but these are well in line with those performance figures that we have heard from our sources. The best, or 60 percent gain, is in titles like BattleForge, Shogun 2 and Civilization 5, while the worse 30 and 35 percent gain is in AVP (@1920x1200 1xMSAA) and at Crysis 2 at 2560x1600 resolution. You can check out other titles from the graph below

Unfortunately, 2560x1600 resolution isn't the one that most users use as 1920x1080, or 1920x1200 one is more common these days. Of course, we'll have to wait for some official third party reviews rather than make any conclusions based on in-house performance tests to see the actual performance of the HD 7970, and those are just two days away. So far, things are looking pretty good for AMD

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AMD officially announces new A-series APUs

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Five desktop and eight notebook SKUs


AMD has now officially updated its A-series lineup of Llano based APUs including a total of five desktop and eight mobile SKUs

The lineup starts with previodetailed and rumoured A8-3870K and A6-3670Kusly , both unlocked quad-core APUs. The rest of the desktop lineup includes the A8-3820 quad-core, packing 4MB of L2 cache, 400 stream processors, clocked at 2.5GHz (2.8GHz Turbo) for the CPU part and 600MHz for the HD 6550D GPU part (the same one on the A8-3870K). The next one is the A6-3620 quad-core clocked at 2.2GHz (2.5GHz Turbo) for the CPU part, with same 4MB L2 cache, 320 stream processors and a GPU clock of 444MHz. Both the A8-3820 and the A6-3620 will have the same 65W TDP. The last in the desktop lineup is the dual-core A4-3420 clocked at 2.8GHz with 1MB of L2 cache, 160 stream processors, GPU clock of 600MHz and a same 65W TDP

The mobile lineup is a bit more serious and packs a total of eight new APUs including the top A8-3550MX quad core APU with 2.0GHz CPU clock (2.7GHz Turbo), featuring Radeon HD 6620G graphics part with 400 stream processors, 444MHz GPU clock, 4MB of L2 cache and a 45W TDP. The lowest ranked mobile part is the dual-core A4-3305M clocked at 1.9GHz (2.5GHz Turbo) with 1MB of L2 cache, featuring Radeon HD 6480G graphics with 160 stream processors and a 592MHz clock

The new dekstop APUs should start showing up in the next two weeks while mobile ones depend on the notebook manufacturers and their speed. You can check out the full lineup in the tables below. via hardwareluxx.de

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Archos announces 70b Honeycomb tablet

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To ship next month at US $199.99/£179.99


Archos has finally announced its first Honeycomb-based tablet that will ship with a price tag under US $200, the Archos 70b Internet Tablet

As far as the specs are concerned, the new 70b Internet Tablet features a 1.2GHz CPU, a 7-inch 1024x600 capacitive touchscreen, 512MB of RAM, 8GB of storage space expandable by microSD card, all running on Android 3.2 Honeycomb OS. The rest of the known features include WiFi and HDMI output

The availability for the USA and the UK is scheduled for next month while we expect it to be officially presented over at CES show in Las Vegas. The price stands at $199.99/£179.99, so it will have to compete with similarly priced tablets from Amazon, Lenovo and Barns & Noble

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No more CES for Microsoft after 2012

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No more keynotes or booths going forward

After having over a 20-year presence at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Microsoft claims that the 2012 show will be its last. In an announcement by corporate vice president Frank Shaw, he explained that the timing of the show in January does not align well with Microsoft’s product news milestones. While Microsoft will still participate in the show as it is a great place to connect with partners and customers, it will no longer be involved in delivering the keynote or having a booth at the show

With the demise of Comdex, the focus has been on CES; and computer companies from the industry have gravitated to CES as the show to be seen at. While Computex in Twain is still the big show in Asia, it, too, has grown smaller over the years, as has Cebit in Germany. Microsoft has also been involved with those shows on a much different scale recently

Our suspicion is that going forward Microsoft will take a page from the Apple playbook and host its own events for making announcements and showing things off, rather than vying for exposure and presence at a huge show like CES. At CES, everyone is fighting for the spotlight and journalists can only cover and write so much. With your own show you get journalists to cover and write a story just about your products, news and event. We can see how this is appealing to Microsoft going forward

AMD unleashes Radeon HD 7970



Fastest single GPU card on the planet


AMD’s first Southern Islands card is finally here. The Radeon HD 7970 was officially announced today and the new 28nm GPU is said to deliver world beating performance

There’s not much point in talking about the specs, since we’ve been talking about Southern Islands cards for months, but here’s a brief recap of AMD’s flagship just in case you missed anything. The card features 2,048 shaders, 3GB of GDDR5 memory on a 384-bit bus, 6- and 8-pin power connectors and a bunch of video outputs, including two micro DisplayPort connectors, DVI, HDMI and Eyefinity support. The memory is clocked at 1375MGz, so bandwidth stands at an impressive 264GB/s. The new Tahiti GPU consists of 4.3 billion tiny 28nm transistors and it runs at 925MHz

So how does it stack up against the previous generation, and perhaps more importantly, against Nvidia’s high end cards? Well, according to early reviews it easily beats previous single-GPU cards from both camps, but it still lags behind the dual-headed HD 6990 and GTX 590 in most tests.

Of course, one of the more interesting aspects of the new architecture is power efficiency, as it will give us a rough idea of what to expect from future 28nm cards. Anand ran a few comprehensive tests and the figures seem pretty good. Idle power consumption has been vastly improved and it is second to none, the same goes for idle temperature. Under load the HD 7970 also performs admirably so it is safe to assume that 28nm cards will have a lot of overclocking potential

We will have more on the HD 7970 launch/review bonanza later in the day, so stay tuned. So far so good, kudos AMD

Asus Transformer Slider reviewed

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Review: Writer’s best Android pal


Asus recently announced the Transformer Prime, a Tegra 3 powered quad-core tablet that can also be used with a keyboard dock, but we won’t write about that one this time around

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Many people who would like a tablet shy away from the whole concept due to the lack of a physical keyboard and the main argument against tablets is that you need a keyboard for any serious work. Don't get me started that tablet with a keyboard is a notebook, but at the same time Asus Transformer slider is actually a tablet with a slide keyboard, as the name implies



We did a little experiment and showed off the Asus Eee Pad Slider, Lenovo Pad and Sony S 7-inch tablet and ask our non IT friends asking for an opinion. Surprisingly both female and male said that the Asus Transformer Slider would be their choice as it had a keyboard and an integrated stand. Some ladies preferred the Sony due to its slick design and we agree that Sony S got the looks

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The full name of the tested device is Asus Eee Pad Slider SL101 and the dominant feature you notice once you see it is the slider keyboard. If you don’t slide the keyboard out, the Eee Pad slider is just as any other tablet, but significantly heavier than the competition. It’s a 10.1-inch tablet with an LED backlit 1280x800 IPS screen, which is standard for most tablets around. The display has ultra-wide 178-degree viewing angle and it’s protected by scratch resistant Corning Gorilla Glass. Overall the display looks just fine

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The Eee Pad slider is based on the Tegra 2 SoC, clocked at 1.0GHz and performance wise you cannot really tell the difference between this tablet and Eee Pad Transformer, or Samsung Galaxy 10.1, or any other Android 3.x tablet

The Slider comes with 1GB of RAM, 16GB or 32GB of storage plus a one year of unlimited Asus web storage. The tablet features 802.11n support, along with Bluetooth v2.1, but unfortunately it doesn’t come with 3G or faster mobile internet support. It has two cameras, 1.2Mpixel front facing camera and 5Mpixel rear camera. GPS, light sensor, gyroscope and compass are also on board

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On the back side, you will find a mini HDMI connector and charger, while the right hand side holds the micro SD slot, power and reset buttons as well as volume buttons. The left side features a much needed USB port and audio jack. The device comes with Android 3.2 at the time but Asus claims it will get its portion of Ice Cream Sandwich at some point. The Eee Pad slider packs a 25Wh lithium-polymer battery rated at 8 hours of battery life

Let’s not forget to mention that this 273 x 180.3 x 17.3 mm tablet weights 960 grams, which is significantly more than the competition, all due to the integrated keyboard, of course

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Once you pop the keyboard out, the first thing you notice is that the keyboard is quite narrow, much more cramped than on a standard netbook. Despite that, keys are comfortable and after a short adjustment period, you will be able to type just fine. The keys are quite big and comfortable to use. This keyboard beats any touchscreen input system and for anyone that does a lot of emails, writing [Like us. Ed], the keyboard makes these everyday tasks much faster. Asus Transformer and Transformer Prime also have keyboards that can be removed, but for people that don’t want to carry a removable keyboard around the Slider might be a better choice

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The bad side of the slide out keyboard is that you cannot adjust the screen angle, it is always at a fixed angle that will fit your reading from sitting position but it won’t do well in bed. You just won’t be able to adjust a proper angle if you are at your sofa and tablet is on your belly, it just won’t work, while the Transformer or any laptop will let you adjust an angle on a display

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Popping out the keyboard on an Eee Pad slider for the first time is a somewhat traumatic experience as you don't know how much force you should put behind the keyboard sliding motion. Personally, I was concerned I would break something, but luckily I didn’t. Once you do it a few times, you will get use to this, it will feel natural, but we believe the mechanism could have been better

OS, Everyday Use
 
Android 3.2 works similar to what we've seen on other Tegra 2 based tablets, but we have to say that the integrated USB port makes a difference. You can use your USB key and copy a file and you would be surprised how complicated this basic task can be with other Android tablets, not to mention the iPad


For PC lovers this will be a big plus, you will be able to use your USB key at all times without any hassle. The thing that we didn’t like was the camera. The photos were really terrible, and in low light home environments, they were pretty much unusable. The camera is definitely the biggest downside to the Slider

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Asus also tries to differentiate its tablets from the rest of the Honeycomb crowd with its own applications and it comes with Polaris office. You can type on it, it’s not Word but it can compete with some parts of Open office package. The rest of the software list includes ASUS Launcher, MyLibrary, MyNet, MyCloud, File manager, Kindle books, Zinio Magazine, PressReader and ASUS sync. Naturally you can install everything that Android market or other app store offers

We tried to play HD videos from YouTube as well as some HD Video clips and this worked just fine. The speakers are decent, but the Sony Tablet S is better in the sound quality department.  HDMI works well, and we like the fact that Asus gives you a way to connect your tablet to a TV, so it works out of the box

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The battery was not the Slider’s strongest point. We managed to squeeze some six to seven hours of battery life, mostly browsing the internet, typing an occasional email and watching some vides – basically what everyone is likely to do with media tablets. Watching videos continuously will drop you to the 5 to 6 hour range which is not great. We've seen much better scores from tablets that weights much less, but in Slider’s defense, they didn’t had a slide-out keyboard. Transformer Prime or the original Transformer both have much better battery life when they are used with a keyboard dock

The Asus Eee Pad slider SL101 32GB currently sells for around €500 in Europe, while in the US Best Buy will gladly sell you a 16GB version for $480, or the 32GB version for $580.  The price is comparable to Transformer without a dock, as well as other competing tablet based on Tegra 2 and Android 3.2. Let’s just mention that €499 gets you a Transformer Prime with Tegra 3 quad-core without keyboard

Conclusion

The Slider comes with an integrated keyboard and this is its strongest point. The keyboard is somewhat cramped but it beats serious typing on the touchscreen. The only real downside to the slide keyboard is its fixed angle

Its main competitors are other models from Asus’ own stable, the Transformer and Transformer Prime, both of which are available with keyboard docks, but only European customers should consider them as direct competition, as in States the keyboard dock sets you back an additional $150. In Europe you can get the Transformer with keyboard dock for close to €500 or a tad more

So, this is a tablet that will let you browse the internet and type emails or IM with ease, but it is not that big on battery life. Still, it beats keyboardless models in terms of productivity. Also, it’s slightly heavier and thicker than plain tablets

If you do any serious typing and you don’t want to get separated from your tablet keyboard ever, this is might be the right tablet for you. It is one of the better Android tablets we've seen, but it’s not perfect

Galaxy Nexus 32GB listed in EU



Coming soon


For those who think that 16GB of storage, coupled with the lack of an SD slot, are not enough to go for a Galaxy Nexus, it now looks like the 32GB version is just around the corner
 
We still don’t have a price, since it’s Christmas and no one is there to confirm it [We need more atheists in retail. Ed], but the phone should be coming very soon. This is what we learned from some retailers last week, but due to the holidays, it was too early to get a solid date

The phone has an extra 16GB internal storage, but it still lacks SDHC slot for extra expansion. With Google Music storing your music and Nexflix taking care of your movies, at least in US [And EU via proxy. Ed.] even 16GB should be enough

The European version of Galaxy Nexus 16GB is still stuck with Android 4.0.1, while Americans already have 4.0.2 and the promise of 4.0.3 coming soon. We don’t think that these increments make a big difference, but update geeks like to have them anyway

We will tell you what we thing about the Galaxy Nexus 16GB very soon, as soon as we are done with the review. Hint, it’s a great piece of hardware, among the best we’ve seen