General Gaming Article |
- Updated Dell XPS 15 Packs Ivy Bridge, Gorilla Glass Display
- Aussie E-tailer Begins Taxing IE7 Holdouts
- TSMC Plans New 450mm Wafer Facility As 28nm Production Woes Continue
- AMD Reveals Trinity Desktop APU Specs, Confirms Release Is "On Schedule"
- Innovative Rockstar Punishment Forces Max Payne 3 Cheaters To Fight Infinite Fire With Infinite Fire
- Opera 12 with "Sexier Security" and Themes Galore Now Available to Download
- Western Digital Drives Hard into Router Market with My Net Series
- Nokia Readies 10,000 Pink Slips in Major Cost Reduction Effort, Lowers Outlook
- Acer Announces Aspire S5, "World's Thinnest" Ultrabook, First to Feature Thunderbolt
Updated Dell XPS 15 Packs Ivy Bridge, Gorilla Glass Display Posted: 14 Jun 2012 08:45 PM PDT
All XPS 15-related developments seem to be taking place in Europe, with the latest bit of XPS 15 news also coming from there. Dell recently flaunted the new Ivy Bridge-powered XPS 15 at a special event marking the fourth anniversary of its partnership with Romanian company Asesoft Distribution. According to Romanian site B1.ro, the new XPS 15 sports a 15.6-inch Gorilla Glass display (full HD), Core i5-3210M (2.5-GHz )/ i7-3612QM (2.10 GHz), Nvidia GT GeForce 630m/ 640m GT graphics with up to 2GB VRAM, up to 16GB of RAM, and an option of either a 1TB HDD or up to 512GB SSD. The notebook will reportedly begin shipping during the ongoing quarter. However, there has been no official word from Dell. Image Credit: B1.ro |
Aussie E-tailer Begins Taxing IE7 Holdouts Posted: 14 Jun 2012 08:15 PM PDT When browsers overstay their welcome they not only become a security concern, but they also make cross-browser compatibility a tall order for web developers. In recent times, silent updates have emerged as an effective means of tackling this problem. Recently, Microsoft too jumped on the silent update bandwagon. While the move seems to be yielding the desired result where IE8 is concerned—IE9 is gaining market share at the expense of IE8—it has had little or no effect on IE6 and IE7. An Australian online retailer is so frustrated with all this that it has decided to take things in its own hands. In an unprecedented move, Australian online retailer Kogan has announced a 6.8-percent tax on all products purchased using the "antique browser." Avoiding taxes is usually very tough (and often criminal), but as Kogan pointed out in its announcement, the "Internet Explorer 7 Tax" can be avoided simply by updating away from IE7, which is estimated to command anywhere between 1.5-5% share of the browser market despite being released in 2006. "The way we've been able to keep our prices so low is by using technology to make our business efficient and streamlined. One of the things stopping that is our web team having to spend a lot of time making our new website look normal on IE7," Kogan said in a blog post. "This is an extremely old browser, so from today, anyone buying from the site who uses IE7 will be lumped with a 6.8% surcharge - that's 0.1% for each month IE7 has been on the market." |
TSMC Plans New 450mm Wafer Facility As 28nm Production Woes Continue Posted: 14 Jun 2012 11:39 AM PDT
TSMC Chairman Morris Chang told reporters that "18-inch (450mm) is something we have to do, but the technology is not ready yet," Reuters reports. "If we can overcome it, it'll be a big breakthrough." He went on to say that the technical difficulties in creating 450mm wafers could last up to five years. Technical difficulties are nothing new for TSMC; the company has had a notoriously difficult time with its 28nm manufacturing process, which has resulted in lower than expected yields. The poor yields have reportedly contributed to the low levels of availability for Nvidia's GTX 600-series GPUs and Qualcomm's Snapdragon S4 SoCs. Neither company is said to be pleased with the problems, and both Nvidia and Qualcomm have been rumored to be looking for alternative wafer suppliers. Despite the OK for the new facility for larger wafers, the 28nm woes aren't expected to end anytime soon. Yesterday, Chang said that TSMC already expects to fail to meet customer demands in both the third and fourth quarter of the year, with 2013 being the earliest that the 28nm kinks are worked out. Then again, TSMC's competitors (like Samsung and Globalfoundries) haven't exactly had the best 28nm yields either, so the grass isn't exactly greener anywhere else, either. Image credit: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Ltd. |
AMD Reveals Trinity Desktop APU Specs, Confirms Release Is "On Schedule" Posted: 14 Jun 2012 10:47 AM PDT
AMD has also recently confirmed reports that major OEMs such as Acer, Asus and HP are already receiving Trinity desktop chips, and in fact, the company told TechReport yesterday that Trinity desktop APUs are slated to start appearing in all-in-ones by the end of June. However, it looks like only the big name players are currently invited to the party; smaller mobo manufacturers say they aren't yet in on the hot Piledriver action. We could try to sum things up with witty speech, but since we're talking hard data, here are screen grabs of the Trinity spec table over on the AMD website. You'll notice that some of the 15 processors listed are unlocked "K" versions, while all are made for the FM2 socket. So, any thoughts as you're looking over the Trinity specs? |
Innovative Rockstar Punishment Forces Max Payne 3 Cheaters To Fight Infinite Fire With Infinite Fire Posted: 14 Jun 2012 10:10 AM PDT
"Anyone found to have used hacked saves, modded games, or other exploits to gain an unfair advantage in Max Payne 3 Multiplayer, or to circumvent the leaderboards will be quarantined from all other players into a "Cheaters Pool", where they'll only be able to compete in multiplayer matches with other confirmed miscreants," Rockstar explained in a recent blog post. We'd love to see a feed of some of those matches! In any case, spoilsports will also be scrubbed from the game's leaderboards. There's a chance that Rockstar could let reformed exploit-lovers back into the general pool, but if they flub their second chance at civilized play, the Eternal Banhammer will drop with impunity. If you see someone mucking around in the game, Rockstar encourages you to vote the transgressors onto the island by contacting maxpayne3.banhammer@rockstargames.com with the platform you were playing on, the cheater's gamer ID and a description of the exploit. Bonus points if you include a screenshot or video. So whaddaya think about the Max Payne 3 Cheater Pool? If it works, we think it's kinda elegant, in amusing sort of way. Now, Rockstar just needs to extend the Jackass Island concept to GTA IV. Hat tip to Nate Supplee for pointing this out! Image credit: Rockstar |
Opera 12 with "Sexier Security" and Themes Galore Now Available to Download Posted: 14 Jun 2012 07:34 AM PDT
Browser themes are new to Opera 12, and there are hundreds to choose from, ranging from Cookie Monster and Halo, to nature scenes and anime, and everything in between. The neat thing about Opera 12's themes is that you can apply different ones without having to restart the browser. Plug-ins now run as a separate process in Opera 12, there's experimental full hardware acceleration, and a host of other changes and additions, which you can glance in the Changelog. If you decide to give Opera 12 a spin, you can download and install the browser by going here (including a 64-bit version), and you can find themes for it here. Follow Paul on Google+, Twitter, and Facebook
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Western Digital Drives Hard into Router Market with My Net Series Posted: 14 Jun 2012 07:09 AM PDT
WD's flagship router is the My Net 900 Central. It boasts a 900Mbps 'combined' transfer speed (450Mbps + 450Mbps on the 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands, which can't actually be combined, mind you), integrated 1TB or 2TB hard drive for automatic wireless backups, 4-port switch, a USB port, printer and media sharing, range amplifier antennas, and DLNA certification. There's also the My Net N900, essentially the same router sans integrated storage, and with a 7-port switch instead 4. Below that is the My Net 750 (300Mbps + 450Mbps on the 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands), My Net N600 (300Mbps + 300Mbps), and the My Net Switch with eight GbE ports. WD's My Net series is available today with MSRPs of $70 (My Net Switch), $80 (My Net 600), $120 (My Net N750), $180 (My Net N900), $300 (My Net N900 Central 1TB), and $350 (My Net N900 Central 2TB). Image Credit: Western Digital Follow Paul on Google+, Twitter, and Facebook
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Nokia Readies 10,000 Pink Slips in Major Cost Reduction Effort, Lowers Outlook Posted: 14 Jun 2012 06:41 AM PDT
"These planned reductions are a difficult consequence of the intended actions we believe we must take to ensure Nokia's long-term competitive strength," said Stephen Elop, Nokia president and CEO. "We do not make plans that may impact our employees lightly, and as a company we will work tirelessly to ensure that those at risk are offered the support, options and advice necessary to find new opportunities." It's not just employees getting the axe. Nokia plans to reduce its factory footprint by closing facilities in Ulm, Germany and Burnaby, Canada, scale down certain research and development projects, and make reductions to non-core assets, including possible divestments. While changes abound on the horizon, Nokia lowered its second quarter outlook, the third time it's down so in barely more than a year. News of the shakeup and revised outlook sent Nokia's stock into a landslide, which is down by around 13 percent. Follow Paul on Google+, Twitter, and Facebook
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Acer Announces Aspire S5, "World's Thinnest" Ultrabook, First to Feature Thunderbolt Posted: 14 Jun 2012 06:11 AM PDT
Not only is the Aspire S5 purportedly the world's thinnest, it's also the first Ultrabook to feature a Thunderbolt port, which sits behind a MagicFlip I/O panel just beneath the hinge that also hides other connectivity options, such as USB 3.0 and HDMI. A press of the MagicFlip key pops open the panel. Despite its thin and light stature, Acer managed to cram some hard hitting components inside. A 3rd Generation Intel Core i7 3517U handles the CPU chores, while storage duties are relegated to a 256GB solid state drive. It also has a 13.3-inch widescreen LED backlit display with a 1366x768 resolution, 1.3MP HD webcam, and Dolby Home Theater v4 sound technology. It will be available in the last week of June starting at $1,400. On a related note, Acer said it refreshed and expanded its Aspire S3 Series to include Core i3 and Core i7 Ivy Bridge processors, along with certain models configured solely with a 256GB SSD. These will land in the U.S. next week ranging in price from $648 to $1,000. Image Credit: Acer Follow Paul on Google+, Twitter, and Facebook
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