Pages: 1 ... 42 43 [44] 45 46 ... 68

We are going to talk about seven new monitors on TN matrixes in Samsung’s Touch of Color series, including SyncMaster XL2370 solution with LED backlighting.

Read more...

0 Comments
<p><font size="2">The three new processor coolers that we are going to discuss today belong to the so-called tower-type. However, they look and perform very differently. Our today&rsquo;s review will tell you which solution is the best of the three and what its advantages are.<br /> <br /> <a href="http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/coolers/display/coolage-zalman-evercool.html">Read more...</a></font></p>

0 Comments

We are going to discuss another compact and affordable liquid-cooling system for the CPU. This time it is a solution from Corsair.

Read more...

0 Comments
Today we are going to check out a stylish and beautiful cooling solution for a wide range of graphics cards on ATI and Nvidia GPUs. Read our review for details about this new Thermaltake cooler.

Read more...

0 Comments
<span class="content"> <p><font size="2">Seagate has finally started shipping their new Barracuda XT 2TB drives that feature the new 6Gb/s SATA interface based on SATA Revision 3.x specifications. We had an early preview of the drive a few weeks ago and finally received a production level item for review. Just as important, we now have retail motherboards from Asus and Gigabyte featuring 6Gb/s capabilities. Well at least the Marvell 88SE9123 chipset included on both motherboards is theoretically capable of 6Gb/s operation. </font></p> <p><font size="2">Asus and Gigabyte took a different approach to implementing the Marvell 9123 chipset on their motherboards. Asus&rsquo;s top of the line P7P55D Premium (a very good board by the way, full review coming shortly) features a PEX PLX8613 PCIe bridge chip that will convert four of the P55&rsquo;s PCIe x1 lanes (250MB/s each) into two 500MB/s lanes. While still short of the maximum theoretical 600MB/s transfer speed of the SATA 6G specifications, it will provide more than enough burst bandwidth for the first generation 6G hard drives. The benefit is that the 6G capability is always on without affecting the other capabilities of the board and the same PLX chipset will be utilized for the upcoming USB 3.0 (NEC chipset) option on their upper-end boards. </font></p> <p><font size="2">Gigabyte&rsquo;s implementation will be utilizing an x8 PCIe 2.0 from the Lynnfield processor that will obviously provide more than enough bandwidth but the drawback is that CF/SLI capabilities will be disabled as only a single x8 PCIe 2.0 lane will be available to the GPU. The benefit in this approach is that the SATA 6G switch is disabled/enabled in the BIOS by the user based upon need. Since an additional hardware chipset like Asus is utilizing is not required, it should result in a slightly lower board cost. Gigabyte informed us this week that all P55A-xxx boards will feature both SATA 6G and USB 3.0 capabilities. We will compare the performance of Gigabyte&rsquo;s solution against Asus&rsquo; implementation shortly. </font></p> <p><font size="2">For today&rsquo;s preview we are utilizing the Asus P7P55D Premium motherboard, 8GB of GSkill&rsquo;s DDR3-1600 Ripjaw memory, Asus HD5870 video card, Corsair 750HX power supply, Windows 7 x64 RTM, Western Digital Caviar Black 2TB HD, WD VelociRaptor 300GB, Intel X25-M G2 160GB SSD, and Seagate&rsquo;s Barracuda XT 2TB HD. We will have a full review of both hard drives shortly with additional performance results along with temperature and noise tests.</font></p> <p><font size="2">We are utilizing the Intel 160GB SSD for our OS drive and comparing the Seagate XT drive to its closest competitor, the WD Caviar Black, on both the Intel P55 and Marvell 9123 controllers. The P55 is limited to SATA 3Gb/s operational mode when running either drive, while the Marvell controller will be operated in SATA 6Gb/s mode with the Seagate drive and in fallback 3Gb/s mode with the WD drive. We are utilizing Marvell&rsquo;s latest 1027 driver and Intel&rsquo;s 7.0.0.1013 driver set in AHCI mode.&nbsp;<br /> <br /> <a href="http://www.anandtech.com/storage/showdoc.aspx?i=3668">Read more...</a></font></p> </span>

0 Comments
Today we are going to talk about two top models from Thermaltake’s ISGC lineup that stands for Inspiration of Silent Gaming Cooling. Find out how well these coolers performed in our traditional tests.

Read more...

0 Comments
We would like to introduce to you ioSafe Solo storage solution. It differs dramatically from numerous other solutions based on 3.5-inch HDDs by a number of quite extraordinary features: it will preserve the data even after spending three days in a 3 m deep pool of water or after 30 minute heating up to 850°C.

Read more...

0 Comments
As you know, beauty and cooling efficiency are not always the combination that all solutions have. To illustrate this statement we are going to talk about two cooling solutions from Asus: a very beautiful one and a very efficient one.

Read more...

0 Comments
We are going to talk about a liquid-solution from Alphacool, one of the leaders in this field. Although this product is not very new anymore, it is still very up-to-date and has a lot of potential.

Read more...

0 Comments
<span class="content"> <p><font size="2">Intel used to be an ARM architecture licensee until 2006, when it sold its XScale division to Marvell. Intel had grown too large, too defocused, and in turn its core business had suffered. Don&rsquo;t be confused, the focus wasn&rsquo;t to be shifted back to desktop, but rather back to x86. </font></p> <p><font size="2">It wouldn&rsquo;t be until 2008 that Intel would reveal its more focused strategy unto the world: Atom.<br /> <br /> </font><span class="content"><font size="2">While ARM and its licensees played off Atom as not being remotely threatening, all of them knew that it was only a matter of time. Publicly they reasserted ARM&rsquo;s dominance in the market. Four billion ARM chips shipped last year alone. Intel sold on the order of tens of millions of Atoms. But privately, the wheels were in motion.</font></span></p> <p><font size="2">ARM inked a deal with Globalfoundries, AMD&rsquo;s manufacturing arm, to bring ARM based SoCs to the fab. This gives ARM the sort of modern manufacturing it needs to compete with Intel. The second thing that&rsquo;s changed is ARM licensees are now much more eager to talk about their architectures and what makes them special.</font></p> <p><font size="2">ARM offers two licensing arrangements to its partners: a processor license or an architecture license. A processor license allows the partner to take an ARM designed core and implement it in their SoC. An architecture license allows the partner to take an ARM instruction set and use it in their own processor. The former is easier to implement, while the latter allows the licensee the ability to optimize the architecture for its specific needs.<br /> <br /> </font></p> <p><font size="2">Companies like Samsung and TI hold ARM processor licenses. The Cortex A8 used in the iPhone 3GS (Samsung) and the Palm Pre (TI) is licensed directly from ARM. Marvell however has been an ARM architecture licensee for the past 5 years.</font></p> <h3><font size="2">It&rsquo;s an ARMADA</font></h3> <p><font size="2">Marvell is introducing a fleet of new SoCs (system on a chip) and the brand is called ARMADA. Get it ?<br /> </font><span class="content"><br /> <font size="2">These are SoCs so they&rsquo;ve got CPU, GPU, I/O and networking all included on a single chip. The entire ARMADA line is built on TSMC&rsquo;s 55nm process. The 100 is super low performance, useful in eBook readers, digital photo frames, IP cameras, etc... The 1000 is a multi-core version of the 100 with additional blocks designed for Blu-ray players, digital TVs and HD set-top boxes.<br /> <br /> <a href="http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=3662">Read more...</a></font></span></p> </span>

0 Comments
Pages: 1 ... 42 43 [44] 45 46 ... 68