General Gaming Article |
- Best Chromebook
- Google Launches Newsstand, We Give Away the Holiday 2013 Issue of Maximum PC
- Internet Fear Factor
- NEC Launches Eco-Friendly 27-inch QHD Display with IPS Panel
- MSI Posts Teaser Shot of Upcoming Mini ITX Gaming Board and Graphics Card
- No BS Podcast #214: DDR4 RAM, Next-gen Consoles, Microsoft and PC gaming, and AMD's R9 290X
- Cooler Master Expands All-in-One Water Cooling Line with Nepton Series
- For Limited Time, Adobe Offers Photoshop CC, Lightroom, and 20GB Storage to Everyone for $10/month
- Eurocom Builds First 12-Core, 24-Thread Laptop, Weighs 12 pounds
- Newegg Daily Deals: Z87 Extreme6 Motherboard, CM HAF 932 Advanced Blue Edition Case, and More!
Posted: 21 Nov 2013 05:15 PM PST Best Chromebook: Find out which Chromebook offers the best performance and battery lifeChrome OS and Chromebooks are a perhaps the thinnest main-stream consumer client you can get today. Hell, next to Chrome OS, Android, IOS and even Windows RT, look positively fat with their full service OS functionality. No, make no mistake about it, Chrome OS is pretty much a browser in a box. And even though most "real" laptop users will look down their nose at Chromebooks, these low-cost devices have consistently ranked on the top seller lists. In fact, we checked the Amazon top seller list for "laptops" and Chromebooks currently hold the top four spots. Yes, we kid you not. So no matter what we think, it appears that Chromebooks are here to stay. Since I've been a Chromebook user since the original Google CR-48, and have used almost every Chromebook ever made, I decided to see how the modern Chromebooks actually stacked up in performance. Testing Chromebooks isn't exactly easy though. Unlike Windows, Android or iOS, most of your "apps" are confined to the browser environment so stand-alone tests aren't available today. Another problem I've come to realize with Chromebooks is that as Google pushes out newer versions of Chrome, the performance can be quite variable. Fortunately, we have in hand the new HP Chromebook 11, Acer's new C720 as well as Google's gorgeous Pixel, CR-48. We also fortunately still happen to have the Acer C710 to make this performance roundup. This let us update each of the available Chromebooks to their latest browser/webkit/V8 versions before running tests. One thing to note: only the HP Chromebook 11 and Acer C720 are running Chrome browser 30.0.1599.101 here. Google hadn't pushed out the latest stable builds of the Chrome OS to its older Chromebooks at press time. Older Chromebook users shouldn't fret too much though. It's not like an Android handset that is exiled to an old OS. Our experience says Google does eventually update all of the Chromebooks to the latest COS because even the original CR-48 is just one version back now. One issue we have seen though with Google pushing out updates at seemingly random times: They can greatly impact performance by as much as 10 to 15 percent—in both directions depending on the benchmark. That means any meaningful benchmark has to be done basically in one shot and hopefully before Google pushes out a new update. Chromebooks are also fairly unique from the Windows world. Generally with Windows laptops, old models are flushed out to make room for new units so they rarely overlap. With this roundup, we get to see the impact of various microarchitectures from Haswell to Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge as well as ARM since two of the Chromebooks here run Samsung Exynos 5 parts at 1.7GHz. We've noticed that Chromebooks is a sector where OEMs don't seem to mind selling old units alongside newer units too. For a sanity check, we also included the original Microsoft Surface Pro hybrid device. It features a 1.7-2.4GHz Core i5-3317U on the Ivy Bridge microarchitecture. Why no Surface Pro 2? We weren't able to get our hands on one or we would have compared it to these Chromebooks as well. Rather than induce even more variability into it, we used the latest version the Chrome browser on the Surface Pro rather than Internet Explorer. Intel Specs (click image for full specs) We let Intel do our work for us so you could eyeball the major x86 contenders in this Chrome-book-off. The Atom N455 is in the original CR-48, the Celeron 847 powers the Acer C710, the Celeron 2955U is in the Acer C720, and the Core i5-3337U runs the Google Pixel. Oh, the last chip, the Core i5-3317U is inside the Microsoft Surface Pro. Amazingly, the Acer C720 pulls off its performance win with a chip that has no Turbo Boost. Best-sellling Amazon laptops (click the image for the full list) We are not frakking with you—Chromebooks hold four of the top four spots on Amazon's best seller list according to this screen cap we took Oct. 28. Click on to page two for our benchmarks!
Chromebook Specs Chromeoff! It's no joke: 18.5 percent of compiled spec charts on web sites contain 3.1415 mistakes. See if you find out what's wrong here. Chromebook BenchmarksSunSpider 0.9.1 is a popular JavaScript test that's been around for sometime. It's designed to compare browser-to-browser performance and different versions of a browser. Since we're using just about the same browser in all of our tests, the comparison should show off actual hardware differences too in theory. Among the Chromebooks, it's no surprise that the Ivy Bridge Core i5-based Google Pixel comes in on top. It's almost twice as fast as the Acer C710 which uses a Sandy Bridge-based Celeron locked down at 1.1GHz. It's also more than twice as fast as the two ARM-based Chromebooks, the HP Chromebook 11 and the Samsung Chromebook (that's the official name.) If you look at our chart, the respectable performance comes from the Acer C720. It features a Haswell-based Celeron at 1.4GHz. It's damn near as fast as the Google Pixel which is priced from $1,300 to $1,500. That ain't bad. For Wintel folks, the Surface Pro's numbers are pretty impressive. It's faster than the Google Pixel on balanced and performance settings, but once the Surface Pro is set for Power Savings (something you may do to squeeze out more battery life) performance is actually on par with the ARM-based Chromebooks. The ARM-based Chrome have long been criticized as being a little under powered and we agree but it could be worse. The original single-core CR-48 platform shows how slow that old Atom chip was. Google has its own set of bake offs for browser performance. Originally called V8, the test is now refereed as Octane and includes 13 different browser tests that Google deems to be good real-world measurements of JavaScript performance. The test includes everything from Raytrace tests to Cryptography, Mandreel tests and 2D physics test among others. A higher score is better and once again that Tesla S of Chromebooks, the Pixel, comes out way in front. Unlike the SunSpider test which saw the 1.4GHz Hassy-based Celeron damn near as fast as the 1.8GHz-2.7GHz Core i5-3337U Ivy Bridge chip, the Pixel opens up a very nice lead here. Since both parts are dual-cores with Hyper-Threading (and our benchmarking experience of Chromebooks is still pretty limited), we don't think it's a function of the core count. Instead, our guess is the advantage the Pixel has over the Acer C720's Haswell Celeron is in clock speed. There's also the chance that the cache-sizes also play into it as well but with the tools we have, we can't really tell. One thing we didn't talk about with the SunSpider test that we should have is how the Acer C710 doesn't exactly slay the pair of ARM Chromebooks. The same thing happens here with Acer C710 barely pushing out in front. Why? Again, if we had to hazard a guess, it's the low clock speed of the Celeron which at 1.1GHz isn't terribly high. The Celeron in the C710 is also based on the Sandy Bridge microarchitecture which is two generations old at this point. The Surface Pro on Power Savings mode has its clock speed locked to 800MHz. How does the Surface Pro do? That 800MHz Ivy Bridge part still manages to come out in front of the C710 and two ARM competitors. When the Surface Pro's clock speeds are unshackled though, it's easily the fastest here. In FutureMark's browser test we see an interesting result. The result is more graphics intensive as it tests HTML5 performance in graphics, physics and video among other tests. Even though the test seems to be quite different than Google's Octane, the Chromebook performance results are almost identical to what we saw with Octane. The Pixel comes out on top, Surface Pro also represents well except on power savings mode where it's as fast as the baseline Chromebooks. The one real change we see is the Acer C720 which turns in performance almost as fast as the Surface Pro and Pixel. Why? Our guess is the increase efficiency of the Haswell core vs. the older Ivy Bridge core powering both the Pixel and Surface Pro. We also think the graphics core in the Celeron Haswell could be responsible even though the Haswell Celeron's features only "HD" graphics vs. the HD 4000 graphics in the Core i5 parts. We will note that the base clock of the Core i5 Ivy Bridge chips is 350MHz while the Celeron Haswell is 200MHz. One theory we're floating is that the Haswell part may boost its graphics core for longer periods at higher clocks than the Core i5 chips can. The Core i5 chips can hit 1.05GHz and 1.1GHz while the Haswell Celeron can hit 1GHz. The older Sandy Bridge Celeron in the Acer C710 is so old it doesn't even rate an "HD" from Intel. Its dynamic graphics frequency is also rated from 350MHz to 800MHz but we suspect it doesn't run at 800MHz for very long. Rightware's Browsermark 2.0 has five test groups that tests CSS, DOM, how fast the browser will resize and load a page as well as WebGL, Canvas and JavaScript performance. It seems like a very good all-around browser test that doesn't favor the faster hardware as much. At least, that's what we're seeing our results which match the other tests with the Surface Pro, Pixel in front. The Haswell Celeron is also damned close to the Surface Pro and Pixel too showing the test doesn't seem to favor clock speed. The Sandy Bridge-based Celeron and pair of Exynos 5 Chromebooks also turn in a decent performance. Even that old dog, the Atom N455 is only half the speed of the latest and greatest CPUs with all the new bells and whistles. Yay! Everyone's a winner. You may scoff, but in a way, Browsermark 2.0 is probably a pretty accurate representation of how these platforms will perform in light browsing loads. When you're just checking email or reading a site, you'd be hard pressed to tell the difference between the Google Pixel and the HP Chromebook 11. If you push them harder though, you will feel the difference. Since most of the tests here run multiple tests and then calculate an overall score, we wanted to run something that might give us an idea of how well the Chromebooks would handle pure WebGL thrown at them. For that we used SpaceGoo's WebGL Solar System experience which is compute heavy as it computes the hundreds or thousands of planetoids orbiting a larger planet. We start out with 1,000 planetoids and then let it slowly spool down. We report the frame rate when the planetoid count hits 900. We thought this would give us a better feel for compute power but our results have us questioning its value. The Pixel, which had outperformed all others, was barely ahead of the Samsung Chromebook and the Samsung Chromebook which internally is nearly identical to the HP Chromebook 11 was far faster. Surface Pro also easily destroyed all of the Chromebooks here. This makes us wonder if it's a driver issue even as we expected the Surface Pro to be just slightly faster than the Google Pixel as both are built around similar chips. One thing we're not surprised by is the CR-48's performance because we've always known that thing was slow. JavaScript is one of the key benchmarks all browsers strive to optimize for. This is the benchmark developed by Mozilla to be measure of realistic JavaScript use in applications. In our tests, we again see the Core i5 units come in front with the Acer C720 turning in fantastic performance for its price. The low clocked 1.1GHz Acer C710 again doesn't exactly run away from the ARM Chromebooks and the single-core Atom easily setting the benchmark—for low performance. Wirple is a mostly HTML5 that measures browser performance in Canvas3D and WebGL and is heavily focused on 3D performance. There's no surprises here as the Surface Pro and Pixel come out on top with the Acer C720 showing the best bang for the buck with it impressive performance given its $250 price tag. The ARM-based and older Sandy Bridge-based Celeron C710 offer pretty atrocious 3D performance comparatively. RoboHornet has been called the Holy Grail of browser benchmarks by Tom's Hardware. Part of that may be because no less than Google, Facebook, Microsoft and Mozilla are behind the new benchmark as a way to accurately measure browser performance. The test measures CSS, DOM HTML and JavaScript performance. No surprise, the Ivy Bridge-based Core i5-based units place on top but again, the Acer C720 Haswell comes mighty close in overall performance. One thing we want to say about the RoboHornet test is that it purports to be a more realistic measurement of browser performance and we'd agree. While the ARM and older Sandy Bridge Celeron C710 are about half the speed of the Pixel, C720 and Surface Pro, you often don't actually notice it unless you look for it. In other words, they're still very usable. Even the CR-48's scores are pretty decent here and in most light-duty browser tasks, we'd agree. Still, there's no real change here. For the most part, if you want the best performing Chromebook, the Acer C720 and Pixel should be on your list. Multi-tasking Since few people have just one browser tab open, we decided to run the crowd through a multi-tasking environment consistent of an open tab to Google Music, Google Maps (set in satellite mode), Amazon.com as well as SpaceGoo's WebGL planet and playing the 1080P version of the trailer for the movie Gravity on Youtube. With the trailer and WebGl actively running, we then ran the Kraken 1.1 benchmark. The results we saw showed that the slower Chromebooks had a far tougher time running so many tasks. We opted not to run it on the Samsung as its performance was pretty much the same as the Chromebook 11 and we also let the CR-48 go home early, because we know it's already a dog. But to give you an idea how the Exynos 5 Chromebook 5 does, just peak back at the performance spread when it running just the Kraken benchmark along versus the multi-tasking load. One of the contributing factors besides clock speed and microarchitecture may simply be thread counts. The Surface Pro, Pixel and C720 all feature Hyper-Threading. The other Chromebooks were limited to but two threads and with so many workloads running, they were easily bogged down. Battery rundown Our final test was a battery run down test. Rather than loop a video or just leave them sitting there, we decided to use the battery test in Futuremark's Peace Keeper as our run down. This kept the WiFi on the notebooks hot and the screens on. The result? All of that performance on the Google Pixel (in addition to its high-res screen) meant pretty average to mediocre run time. Of the Chromebooks, only the Acer 710 was worse pretty much tying the Pixel at 195 minutes of use. The Chromebook 11 also performed pretty average with 241 minutes of run time. Frankly, we expected more. Its near twin, the Samsung Chromebook turned in a very usable 283 minutes. We're not sure why the HP performed worse but it could be the IPS panel it uses versus the TN panel in the Samsung ARM Chromebook or even a smaller battery—though both publically state they have 30 Wh batteries. The real stunner is the Acer C720. More than performance, Intel has been chasing ARM on battery life. People know x86 kicks ARM ass in performance, but in battery performance ARM has the perception of awesomeness. That's not the case here as the Acer C720 turns in a stellar 360 minutes of run time. That's enough to use it on a cross-continental flight (provided you pay for inflight WiFi). Yay for x86 right? Well, yes and no. First, you can't just compare one Chromebook to another and proclaim it a victory for the microarchitecture at hand. You have to look at all of the hardware around it and, well, the entire platform. This isn't about ARM vs. x86 – it's really about HP Chrome 11 vs. Acer C720. The battery in the C720, for example, is beefier than the C710. The Acer is almost half a pound heavier too—much of which we think comes from the bigger battery. What we can say is if you want stellar Chromebook battery life (something the anemic CR-48 was always known for) buy the C720. One final note on battery life: the Surface Pro really doesn't do too badly. With Windows 8.1 set to power savings mode, the run time is but 38 minutes shy of the Chromebook 11. That's not really as horrible as people think the Surface Pro will run. It's also clear to us that the Surface Pro 2 with its Haswell part, should offer a nice upgrade in battery life over Surface Pro. We do declare the Acer C720 as the current best Chromebook! Summary What's the take away from this? If you're shopping for a Chromebook, our recommendation is Acer's new C720 based on performance and battery life. We do love the Pixel, but unless you're rolling in dough, you probably can't afford it. The price/performance/battery life ratio on the Pixel is also disappointing next to the Acer C720. Our only real beef with the C720 is its screen. It's a pretty mediocre TN panel especially next to the IPS in the Chromebook 11. But screen isn't everything. We did a simple test where we loaded up five major news sites on the C720 and Chromebook 11. As we know, media web sites tend to be loaded down with Flash and enough ads to make you think you were Las Vegas at 2 a.m. and simply scrolling down the web page with the Chromebook 11 would choke its ARM processor. It was enough to choke the C720 on occasion but the scrolling was acceptable. In our opinion, based on its price/performance/battery life ratio that makes the C720 the best Chromebook available today that we've seen. |
Google Launches Newsstand, We Give Away the Holiday 2013 Issue of Maximum PC Posted: 21 Nov 2013 03:43 PM PST Happy Holidays!Google's decided to combine its Currents and Play Magazines apps on Android into Google Play Newsstand. To celebrate, we're giving away the Google Play edition of our latest issue for free—it'll be back to $7.99 on Nov. 27! Get the scoop on 57 fascinating websites you don't know about and the usual magazine goodness in the Holiday 2013 issue. This represents Google's attempt to consolidate its various news and media apps. As the direct replacement to Google Play Magazines, Newsstand combines newspaper subscriptions, magazines, blogs, and news sites. Users of Google's Currents app will receive notifications to ugprade to Newsstand. If you're not already a subscriber to the print or digital editions, go subscribe now! |
Posted: 21 Nov 2013 02:40 PM PST Making the case for two-factor authenticationSecurity on the Internet is terrible. That's always been true, but it's wildly obvious these days. Right and left, people are losing their passwords, ending up in botnets, and some days it seems like you might as well post your bank details on Pastebin, just to get it over with. Embarrassingly, a pro-Syrian government group called the Syrian Electronic Army took over the Twitter accounts of the Associated Press, FIFA, and even The Onion. After this, Twitter finally rolled out something called two-factor authentication to make its users more secure. Website two-factor authentication works with something you know (a password) and something you have (a mobile phone). It's not perfect, especially if you don't have or want to connect a phone to your Twitter account. But if you can use it, you should. If you get tricked out of your password, someone still has to mug you for your phone before they can tweet names for human genitalia repeatedly from your work account. It's available for Google, Dropbox, Yahoo, probably your bank, and many more. The truth is, many companies don't care about securing their customer data because they don't have to care. If they get hacked, they are considered the victims, not you—no matter how badly they secure your information. In fact, until California passed a disclosure law 11 years ago, companies didn't even have to tell you that your data was lost. We have to demand better from software. But the first step is using what we have now—and turning on two-factor authentication for our accounts. |
NEC Launches Eco-Friendly 27-inch QHD Display with IPS Panel Posted: 21 Nov 2013 01:05 PM PST A high quality panel with lower power requirementsNEC today announced the MultiSync EA274WMi, the newest model to fall under its high-end IT desktop portfolio. The EA274WMi sports a 27-inch IPS (In-Plane Switching) panel with LED backlighting and a 2560x1440 resolution (QHD). Thanks in large part to the LED backlight, NEC says the EA274WMi is able to come in a slim and lighter weight profile with increased power savings compared to previous generation monitors. Other bullet points include 350cd/m2 brightness; 8-bit color; wide viewing angles (178 degrees); 20,000:1 dynamic contrast ratio (1,000:1 typical); an ergonomic stand with height adjust, tile, swivel, and pivot; DisplayPort, HDMI, DVI-D, and VGA D-sub inputs; integrated 4-port USB hub (1 up/4 down split between USB 2.0 and USB 3.0); and integrated 1W speakers. Using NEC's ControlSync technology, you can control up to six EA274WMi displays in a multi-monitor configuration, NEC says. You do this by establishing one as a master and then controlling them all in unison through the single monitor. The NEC EA274WMi will be available this month for $799 MSRP. |
MSI Posts Teaser Shot of Upcoming Mini ITX Gaming Board and Graphics Card Posted: 21 Nov 2013 12:38 PM PST A picture is a worth 1,000 wordsMSI is using Facebook correctly. While Facebook feeds have a tendency to be cluttered with pictures of food and political rants, MSI posted a photo of two unreleased mini ITX gaming products. One is a mini ITX motherboard and the other is a pint-sized graphics card. Both sport a red and black color scheme along with MSI's familiar dragon logo, plus some clues to the feature-sets. "We're very close to expanding our gaming family with two new members, a mini-ITX gaming motherboard and mini-ITX gaming graphics card. Can you already recognize some of the features?," MSI Europe asks on its Facebook post. Looking over the pic, we count five SATA ports on the motherboard, along with two DDR3 DIMM slots, built-in Wi-Fi, some high-end looking components, an Audio Boost chip, and probably a generous amount of USB ports on the other side of the I/O panel. As for the graphics card, thre's an 8-pin power connector and a dual-slot cooling solution with a single fan. The general consensus among the Facebook comments so far is that it's a GeForce GTX 760 graphic card in mini ITX trim. |
No BS Podcast #214: DDR4 RAM, Next-gen Consoles, Microsoft and PC gaming, and AMD's R9 290X Posted: 21 Nov 2013 11:51 AM PST DDR4 RAM is incoming, next-gen consoles finally launch, Microsoft tries to woo PC gamers, and we compare a retail R9 290X to the press boardIt's time for episode #214 of the No BS Podcast! On this week's episode we break down the details surrounding the looming release of DDR4 memory, then have a brief discussion about the next gen consoles and what it means for PC gamers. We also discuss Microsoft's recent statements about how it abandonded PC gaming. Next, we talk about the AMD R9 290X retail board we acquired, and compare it to the press board, then we wrap it all up with our editor picks. Gordon ends the proceedings by delivering his usual rant, but this time paints his targets a little closer to home. Also, special thanks to Intern Clark for creating the new intro to Gordon's Rant. Editor's PicksJimmy Thang: Finis Neptune waterproof MP3 player Tom McNamara: KeePassDroid Sam Ward: Kerbal Space Program Gordon Ung: Diet Coke Josh Norem: Liquid Ass, SSD backup boot drive Can't get enough Maximum PC? Check us out on the following sites: Subscribe on iTunes Fan us on Facebook Tweet us on Twitter Subscribe to us on Youtube Check out our Windows 8 app in Microsoft's app store Subscribe to our RSS feed If you have any feedback or questions feel free to: Email us at maximumpcpodcast@gmail.com or Leave us a voicemail at 877-404-1337 x1337 Subscribe to Maximum PC in Print or on Google Play, itunes, Kindle, Nook and Zinio. Thanks for listening! |
Cooler Master Expands All-in-One Water Cooling Line with Nepton Series Posted: 21 Nov 2013 09:55 AM PST Water cooling without all the hassleSelf-contained liquid coolers have become pretty popular these days as system builders look to adequately cool their processors with all-in-one designs that deliver some or most of the benefits of water cooling, minus most of the risk and maintenance. Adding to the growing category of AIO coolers is Cooler Master's new Nepton Series consisting of the Nepton 140XL and Nepton 280L. Both coolers come factory filled and sealed for immediate installation and maintenance free operation "for years," Cooler Master says. The radiator on each unit is aided by premium JetFlo 140 Series fans built specifically for high air pressure and heat dissipation. Cooler Master says the radiators also support its JetFlo 120 Series and other 120mm fans with pre-drilled mounting holes in the correct spots. Perhaps the main selling point here is that both units offer tool-less installation. They each use thumb screw-based mounting kits for the fans and pump, so all you need to install either one are your fingers. The Nepton 280L sports dual JetFlo 140 fans and a 280mm radiator capable of dissipating up to 300W of heat. Meanwhile, the Nepton 140XL sports a 140mm radiator. No word yet on price, though Cooler Master tells us these will be available in December. |
For Limited Time, Adobe Offers Photoshop CC, Lightroom, and 20GB Storage to Everyone for $10/month Posted: 21 Nov 2013 09:09 AM PST You have until December 2 to decideWant to atone for pirating that copy of Photoshop a couple years back? Adobe has come up with a promotional offer that it hopes photographers will find too good to refuse. From now until December 2, 2013, you can join Adobe's Photoshop Photography Program for $9.99 per month, giving you access to Photoshop CC, Lightroom, Behance ProSite, and 20GB of cloud storage. Prior to this promo, that pricing was only available to upgraders who owned a legal copy of Photoshop or Creative Suite CS3 or higher. Adobe is temporarily lifting that restriction in hopes of bringing more photographers into the fold, even those who may have been using an illegally obtained copy. "As before, the intention is not to get you in at $9.99/mo., then crank up the price after a year. $9.99 is the expected ongoing price," Adobe stated in a blog post. "The difference is that you now don't need to own a copy of Photoshop or Creative Suite CS3 or higher. Please do note that this is a limited-time deal, so you'll want to jump in before December 2." Here's the deal. You have to commit to a one-year membership, though you don't have to pay it all upfront. Adobe will collect payment each month at the time of purchase, plus applicable tax. If you decide it's not for you and cancel within the first 30 days, you'll get a full refund. Any time after 30 days, a cancellation will cost you 50 percent of your remaining contract obligation. It's not a bad deal. Normally this subscription runs $20/month and that's without access to Lightroom. All tallied, the bundle is worth $50/month. Follow Paul on Google+, Twitter, and Facebook
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Eurocom Builds First 12-Core, 24-Thread Laptop, Weighs 12 pounds Posted: 21 Nov 2013 08:39 AM PST Panther 5SE is packed with server grade components in a portable form factorYou may want to put your Ultrabook in the other room and turn on SpongeBob before reading any further, we wouldn't want that system suddenly feeling inadequate. With Eurocom's Panther 5S3 Mobile Server, it's not a question of whether it can run Crysis, but can it pull its weight as an entire network server for 20 to 50 users? The answer to that question is "Yes" and you don't even need a server room do it. Eurocom says the Panther 5SE is the world's first laptop to tote a 12-core processor with 24 threads. That is, if you opt to configure it with an Intel Xeon E5-2695 v2 or E5-2697 v2 processor. If that's too rich for your blood, you can go without something a bit more tame -- the system supports Intel's entire line of Xeon E5-2600 v2 CPUs. The Panther 5SE can be as beastly as your budget allows. It supports up to 32GB of RAM and up to 6TB of storage with RAID 0/1/5/10 support, it has quad LAN ports, and can accommodate up to two Nvidia GeForce GTX 780M GPUs in SLI or two AMD Radeon 7970M GPUs in CrossFireX. "The Panther 5SE Mobile Server is perfect for organizations relocating operations that require fast network setup to eliminate staff downtime with overhead associated with traditional server rooms," said Mark Bialic, Eurocom President. "Technically there is no server room required to get your organization or workgroup up and running. Startup companies can have an entire network server, for 20-50 users, running in one box. We have customers who use our mobile servers as backup in case their production server goes down, they can load the virtual machine on to the mobile server for production purposes while the main production server is down. The more professionals we speak with about the Panther 5SE the more creative and beneficial uses we see." The Panther 5SE is available now starting at around $3,000. |
Newegg Daily Deals: Z87 Extreme6 Motherboard, CM HAF 932 Advanced Blue Edition Case, and More! Posted: 21 Nov 2013 06:29 AM PST Top Deal: You have to hand it to ASRock for coming up with some funktastic designs lately, like its Z87 Extreme11/ac with a mind boggling 22 SATA ports and its Bitcoin mining boards with support for half a dozen graphics cards. Those are pretty crazy designs, though not everything ASRock builds is aimed at niche audiences. A solid example of that is today's top deal for an ASRock Z87 Extreme6 Motherboard for $150 with free shipping (normally $190 - use coupon code: [EMCWWWL32]). THis sexy slice of silicon is ready to rock the Haswell party high quality parts, a 12-phase power design, and support for overclocked DDR3 speeds north of 2933MHz, to name just a few features. Other Deals: Seagate NAS HDD ST2000VN000 2TB 64MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s Internal Hard Drive for $95 with free shipping (normally $120 - use coupon code: [EMCWWWL25]) Intel Core i7-3770K Ivy Bridge 3.5GHz (3.9GHz Turbo) LGA 1155 77W Quad-Core Desktop Processor Intel HD Graphics 4000 BX80637I73770K for $310 with free shipping (normally $320 - use coupon code: [EMCWWWL27]) Sapphire 100354OC-2L Radeon HD 7870 GHz Edition 2GB 256-bit GDDR5 PCI Express 3.0 x16 CrossFireX Support Video Card for $175 with free shipping (normally $210 - additional $15 Mail-in rebate) Cooler Master HAF 932 Advanced Blue Edition - High Air Flow Full Tower Computer Case with USB 3.0 and All-Black Interior for $140 with free shipping (normally $180 - additional $30 Mail-in rebate) |
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