General Gaming Article

General Gaming Article


HP Envy TouchSmart 4 Review

Posted: 24 Apr 2013 02:40 PM PDT

The most enviable part is the price

This we know: Windows 8 is more usable with a touchscreen, plain and simple. Whether that's a practical scenario for tower-and-monitor setups is arguable, but it turns out that using touch on a laptop comes pretty naturally—even more so than we expected. So it's good news for consumers that touchscreen laptops are now legion, and that they run the gamut in features and price.

Optional keyboard backlighting spruces up the Envy 4's black and brushed-metal interior.

Optional keyboard backlighting spruces up the Envy 4's black and brushed-metal interior.

Representing the midrange is the HP Envy TouchSmart 4 Ultrabook. What you see is what you get with this 14-inch clamshell—it doesn't assume the persona of a tablet with the twist of a hinge, like some of its higher-profile touch brethren. That keeps the price in check—the Envy TS 4 starts at $800—but there's more to a laptop than a modest price.

Since the touchscreen is such a key feature of the Envy 4, let's start there. It's 14 inches on the diagonal, has a native resolution of 1366x768, and consists of a TN panel with a glossy finish. If that sounds thoroughly ho-hum, you've got the picture. It looks pretty down-market—not very crisp, not very bright, with an annoyingly narrow vertical viewing angle. It's redeemed to some extent by the highly responsive capacitive-touch overlay, which registered our every tap, swipe, and poke at the screen accurately. Be warned, however: All that touching on the glossy surface makes for some spectacular fingerprintage.

Thank goodness for the touchscreen, though, because the touchpad had some issues—the usual sort of inconsistent performance found in many clickpads. Sometimes Win8 gestures registered, sometimes they didn't; other times programs seemed to launch just because the pointer drew near—that kind of thing. You can do some tweaking of the pad in the control panel, but we found ourselves just using the touchscreen for many chores.

The chiclet keyboard is nicely sized and spaced, and the keys have a slightly rubberized surface. All-in-all, typing on the Envy 4 was fairly comfortable and error-free. Our model featured the optional keyboard backlighting, which can be switched on and off with a top-row key, but not otherwise adjusted.

Our model also featured another upgrade option: the 1.7GHz Core i5-377U (versus a Core-i3). This makes its configuration very similar to the Lenovo Yoga Ultrabook. As with that device, the Envy 4 fell behind our 1.8GHz zero-point in every benchmark test—not surprising, given the ZP's slightly higher base and Turbo clocks. More interestingly, the Envy 4 performed about 10-15 percent faster than the Yoga in our computing tests. That's the result of thermal management. While the Yoga's CPU had a tendency to throttle down at regular intervals of testing, the Envy 4 held its high clock speed consistently. Of course, the Yoga is also a bit smaller at 13 inches, and a bit thinner (not to mention more than a pound lighter), so it makes sense the thermals would be adjusted accordingly.

Despite the Envy 4's slight speed advantage and its lower price, we'd be inclined to plunk down the additional $100 for the Yoga. That laptop has a far superior screen, a better keyboard and touchpad, a sturdier build quality, and the ability to fold into a tablet for times when that makes sense. And did we mention that it weighs more than a pound less? But, if you really need to count your sheckles, the Envy 4 is a serviceable touchscreen option at an affordable price.

$905, www.hp.com

Helm's Deep Expansion for Lord of the Rings Online Pushes Level Cap to 95

Posted: 24 Apr 2013 11:39 AM PDT

LOTROThe fifth expansion is set to debut in Fall 2013.

Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment today announced that a fifth expansion to its Lord of the Rings Online free-to-play MMORPG, Helm's Deep, is slated for release this Fall. The new expansion stretches the story into the western plans of Rohan where players will battle for direct control of Helm's Deep, introducing 10 new levels and advancing the level cap from 85 to 95 in the process.

"With Helm's Deep, we're bringing the War of the Ring to players on a monumental scale," said Kate Paiz, Executive Producer of The Lord of the Rings Online, Turbine. "Our team is thrilled to create another iconic moment in Middle-earth, and put players in the center of the action."

Helm's Deep will also include new skills and completely updated class specializations. Gamers will get to explore new landscapes, engage in both mounted and unmounted combat, and will encounter familiar characters such as Aragorn, Éowyn, and Éomer.

Follow Paul on Google+, Twitter, and Facebook

Newegg Daily Deals: Hard Drive Specials

Posted: 24 Apr 2013 10:36 AM PDT

WD blackNewegg

Top Deal:

If you're installing a bunch of games and saving high quality media to your computer, you know that you can never have too much storage space. Today's 2TB HDD deal can help you fill any space needs you may have. Western Digital's WD Black 2TB is running for $140 with free shipping (normally $170 - use coupon code: EMCXSVT23). Because it's a WD's Black model, you'll be getting a high performing 7,200rpm HDD with 64MB cache.

Other Deals: 

Seagate 4TB 64MB cache 3.5" internal hard drive for $170 with free shipping (normally $200 - use coupon code: EMCXSVT22

Toshiba Canvio 1TB USB 3.0 Black portable hard drive for $70 with free shipping (normally $120 - use coupon code: EMCXSVT26

Fantom Drives GreenDrive Pro 2TB USB 2.0 eSATA external hard drive for $110 with free shipping (normally $140 - additional $20 mail-in rebate

Western Digital Scorpio Black 500GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache 2.5" internal notebook hard drive for $50 with free shipping (normally $65 - use coupon code: EMCXSVT25

Digital Storm's Vanquish Gaming PCs Nearly Eliminate Pre Built Pricing Premium

Posted: 24 Apr 2013 09:14 AM PDT

Digital Storm VanquishNew Vanquish line of gaming PCs make a strong argument in favor of pre built versus DIY.

One of the beneifts of rolling your own rig is that you can potentially save money versus buying a pre built machine. That isn't always true of bulk OEMs that shovel piles of trialware and other third-party bloat as a way of reducing costs, but more often than not, boutique system builders attach hefty premiums to off-the-shelf parts you can purchase and assemble on your own. Digital Storm is looking to change the game.

The boutique system builder today made a strong statement in favor of pre built machines by launching its new Vanquish line of gaming PCs. What makes the Vanquish line notable is that Digital Storm was able to reduce the pricing premium to less than the cost of a triple AAA video game.

"For years, enthusiasts have claimed they could build systems with the same high-end components Digital Storm configures for significantly less. The Vanquish line narrows that gap to a mere $23-$58 difference making the difference a no brainer -- DIY is simply not worth the hassle," Digital Storm said in a statement.

We don't agree that going the DIY route isn't "worth the hassle" since part of the fun is the actual building process, but we still have to hand it to Digital Storm for offering a cost effective alternative for gamers who don't have the time or interest to research and piece together their own system.

The Vanquish line is available in four "Levels" ranging in price from $699 (Level 1) to $1,399 (Level 4). A baseline Level 4 setup features a Corsair Carbide Series 300R case (with window), Intel Core i7 3770K processor, Asus P8Z77-V LX motherboard, 8GB of DDR3-1600 Corsair Vengeance RAM, Corsair CX 600W power supply, Corsair Neutron GTX Series 120GB solid state drive, 1TB hard drive (7200 RPM, 32MB cache), DVD writer, GeForce GTX 660 Ti video card, Corsair H60 liquid cooler, internal case lighting, Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit, and "Stage 1" overclocking (Digital Storm will goose the CPU to 4GHz to 4.4GHz).

Digital Storm's Vanquish line is available to configure and purchase now.

Follow Paul on Google+, Twitter, and Facebook

Samsung Nabs 30 Percent of Global Smartphone Market

Posted: 24 Apr 2013 08:37 AM PDT

Samsung Galaxy S4Three out of 10 smartphones around the world are built by Samsung, DRAMeXchange says.

According to recent data revealed by DRAMeXchange, a division of global research firm TrendForce, smartphone shipments jumped 9.4 percent sequentially to 216.4 million units during the first quarter of 2013. Despite seasonality, smartphone shipments have climbed every quarter since the beginning of 2012, DRAMeXchange says, and no company should be happier than Samsung.

Samsung is expected to ship 65 million smartphones this quarter, which would account for 30 percent of the global market. The company's Galaxy S III phone has proven especially popular, and its upcoming S4 will likely draw a large audience, though HTC plans to give the Android device maker a run with its One device.

With regards to Apple, DRAMeXchange says "the iPhone 5 has been unable to satisfy consumers' desire for innovation, and shipments were unsatisfactory as Android manufacturers stepped up to the plate." Apple's iPhone 5 sales came to 37.5 million for the first quarter, which translates into a 17.3 percent share of the market, or barely more than half of Samsung's share.

"As for the second quarter, although smartphone shipments will continue to grow, manufacturers are facing problems with component supply; for instance, the shortage of memory products like eMCP," DRAMeXchange explains.

According to DRAMeXchange, companies with strong supplier ties will have an advantage heading into the next quarter, while others will have to deal with shortages.

Follow Paul on Google+, Twitter, and Facebook

AMD Radeon HD 7990 First Look

Posted: 24 Apr 2013 12:05 AM PDT

Radeon HD 7990

Nvidia's GTX 690 finally has some serious competition

Today the embargo is lifting on the AMD Radeon HD 7990 that was teased back at GDC, so here's the TLDR version; yes it's just as fast and a tiny bit quieter than the Nvidia GTX 690, and it includes a mega bad ass eight-AAA-game bundle and costs the same price as its nemesis, making it quite a tempting package for those with the budget for it. Whether or not that will be enough to convince anyone to actually buy it remains to be seen of course, but at least AMD can no longer be knocked for conceding the $1,000 GPU market to Nvidia. It also signifies somewhat of a resurgence for AMD, who first came off the bench late last year and early this year with its totally righteous Never Settle game bundles, then attacked the midrange recently with the surprisingly powerful and quiet Radeon HD 7790 card, and is now going for the jugular with the dual-slot and triple-fan HD 7990. Whether AMD wins or loses that battle is slightly less important than the overall significance of this introduction, as in our minds its designed to not only beat Nvidia's offering, but also to send a very clear signal to hardcore PC enthusiasts everywhere — AMD is still in the game, and doesn't intend to give an inch of ground to Nvidia any time soon.

Radeon HD 7970

Spec Speak

Let's start with the card's basic specs: It features dual HD 7970 Tahiti GPUs clocked at 1,000MHz, which is a bit higher than we expected them to be, and higher than the clocks on a stock HD 7970 (925MHz) and the GTX 690 (915Mhz). Each GPU sports 3GB of GDDR5 RAM and has 2,048 Stream Processors, and the two connect to each other and the motherboard via a PCIe Gen 3 PLX bridge chip. The card takes up two slots, is 12 inches long, has a triple-fan cooler with copper heatpipes, and sports a semi-high TDP of 375w. For comparison, the GTX 690's TDP is 300w. Power is provided by dual eight-pin PCIe connectors, which is the same requirement of the GTX 690, and one less than what was required on the dual-Tahiti PowerColor Devil 13 board. The board supports five displays with its four Mini DisplayPort connectors and single Dual-Link DVI port. The card will cost $999 and includes an eight-game bundle featuring: Bioshock Infinite, Crysis 3, Far Cry 3, Far Cry 3 Blood Dragon, Tomb Raider, Hitman Absolution, Sleeping Dogs, and Deux Ex: Human Revolution. We thought Battlefield 4 would be included as well since the game was demo'd at GDC on the HD 7990, but that deal appears to have fallen through. The card should be available two weeks from the day this is published from all the standard add-in board partners such as Sapphire, HIS, Gigabyte, MSI, etc. 

Benchmarks

When it comes to performance, the card performs just as well as you would imagine, if you were imagining that AMD would only bring this to market when it was sure it could beat Nvidia's card. To do otherwise would be a fool's errand, so naturally the HD 7990 is faster than the GTX 690 in most tests that we ran, but not in all of them (see benchmark chart below). Overall performance with both the GTX 690 is very close though, enough to effectively call it a draw. It's not as fast as the overclocked and water-cooled Asus Ares II, however, but nobody can buy those cards so the point is somewhat moot. When compared to a CrossFireX setup, the results are in favor of the HD 7990, but the CrossFireX results were achieved last month with an older driver, so it's quite possible that two cards would be a tiny bit faster than the HD 7990 if using updated drivers. Even more surprising is the card's lack of noise and heat, as the other dual Tahiti boards we've seen so far have either been water-cooled (Ares II) or so loud and hot as to require earplugs and heat shields (Devil 13), but not the HD 7990. It got up to about 85C in gaming and was a tiny bit audible, but not "loud" at all, which is an amazing development for AMD. We'd say all in all it's probably just a bit quieter than the GTX 690, and gets about as hot. 

Benchmarks

Radeon HD 7990 benchmarks

Best scores are bolded. Our test bed is a 3.33GHz Core i7 3960X Extreme Edition in an Asus P9X79 motherboard with 16GB of DDR3/1600 and a Thermaltake ToughPower 1,050W PSU. The OS is 64-bit Windows Ultimate. All games are run at 2560x1600 with 4X AA except for the 3DMark tests.

Frame Latency and micro-stutter

There's been a lot of discussion lately about ditching frames per second as a standard for how "smooth" a game runs on given hardware, and instead examining frame latency or frame times instead. The reason why is that sometimes frames per second can be misleading, as we all equate anything over 30fps to be "smooth" when in fact a game can be run at even 50fps and still be somewhat choppy if the frames aren't being delivered on a consistent schedule. For example, if the GPU alternatively sends frames to the system at 20ms and 100ms or higher throughout a test, it's possible to still have an average framerate above 30fps, but to have it feel like you're dropping frames. This is not usually something that you notice when running a single GPU, but it's more prominent in multi-card setups since both cards are sending individual frames to the system, hopefully in concert with one another. This has been a bee in AMD's bonnet lately, and when we sat down for the briefing on this card in particular AMD mentioned it, and acknowledged it. They called it "micro stutter," which is fitting, as it's an almost imperceptible stutter/lag that you can feel but barely see when playing certain games on specific configurations of GPUs and CPUs. 

As far as the HD 7990 goes, here is the situation. Yes this card and the latest drivers we used (13.5 beta 2) suffered from micro stutter, but it was imperceptible in most games with one major exception — Far Cry 3. We're not sure what it is about Far Cry 3, but it runs like crap on this setup at 2560x1600 with 4xAA. We mean it feels like you are running through molasses the whole time, and when examining the frame time output from FRAPS it is easy to see why, as the latency between frames fluctutates wildly. When examining the frame time charts from other games the delivery times look pretty consistent, with only Crysis 3 showing some anomalies. AMD has told us it is working on a fix for this situation, but the remedy will most likely be a software implementation rather than a hardware fix. We have yet to receive and test a final software fix for this issue, and will sure to update you when we have tested it. 

Final Thoughts

On the one hand, we're pretty pumped to see the HD 7990 finally arrive, as it's more than a year late to market, and its absence made a lot of people question AMD's commitment to the uber high-end PC gaming market. Since AMD has sort of abandoned the high-end CPU market, having them leave the same GPU market would mean nothing but bad things for a lot of consumers, so we're stoked to see them join the fight. The card itself presents a very strong option for buyers looking to drop a large bill on a GPU given the fact that it includes over $500 of Kick Ass games. If the bundle wasn't included, we'd say you could flip a coin over whether or not to get this card or the GTX 690, but the gaming bundle clearly gives AMD a significant advantage against its competitors.

Now that the HD 7990 has launched, we have to wonder whether or not Nvidia will counter AMD's launch with the rumored GTX Titan Ultra, but it sure seems likely the way the two have been going at it lately. This effectively means the GPU cold war that has existed throughout 2012 is now largely over, with the two companies fired up and ready to wage war this summer. All we can say to that is "bring it on!" 

Total Pageviews

statcounter

View My Stats