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We discuss upcoming Nvidia GPU Architectures, Zen 5 Clock Speeds, and PlayStation 5 Pro! [SPON: Get 10% off Tasty Vite Ramen with code BROKENSILICON: https://bit.ly/3wKx6v1 ] [SPON: Use "brokensilicon“ at CDKeyOffer to get Win 11 Pro for $23: https://www.cdkeyoffer.com/cko/Moore11 ] 0:00 Weather, Dolly Parton, and Episode 250! (Intro Banter) 6:05 Nvidia Blackwell Announced at GTC 16:54 AI Power Consumption vs Crypto Mining 21:30 Nvidia Vera Rubin Launches quickly after Blackwell! 31:08 PS5 Pro Confirmed, PlayStation Spectral Super Resolution Leaked 44:09 AMD Announces FSR 3.1 53:27 Intel i9-14900KS Reviewed & Released 1:01:13 24 Core Arrow Lake Pictured, Launching End of 2024 1:12:52 Tiny Corp. AMD Drama, 7900 GRE Unlocked, MSI Claw (Wrap-Up) 1:19:04 Zen 5 Clock Speeds & Strix Confirmed 1:21:07 Strix Halo, Intel ARC vs Ivy Bridge, Live Service Games (Final RM) https://www.anandtech.com/show/21310/nvidia-blackwell-architecture-and-b200b100-accelerators-announced-going-bigger-with-smaller-data https://nvidianews.nvidia.com/news/nvidia-blackwell-platform-arrives-to-power-a-new-era-of-computing https://www.guru3d.com/story/nvidia-b200-and-gb200-ai-gpus-technical-overview-unveiled-at-gtc-2024/ https://www.guru3d.com/story/nvidia-2025-ai-accelerator-card-to-feature-r-prefix-in-honor-of-vera-rubin/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dJbUB6Pfc90&ab_channel=Moore%27sLawIsDead https://www.tweaktown.com/news/97009/playstation-5-pros-new-pssr-to-radically-improve-image-quality-has-1-2gb-more-ram-for-games/index.html https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U5h4bvudvX8&ab_channel=DigitalFoundry https://insider-gaming.com/playstation-5-pro-more-specs/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mF_rlgyvuBg&ab_channel=HardwareUnboxed https://www.techpowerup.com/320638/amd-announces-fsr-3-1-improves-super-resolution-quality-allows-frame-generation-to-work-with-other-upscaling-tech https://www.techpowerup.com/review/intel-core-i9-14900ks/ https://www.anandtech.com/show/21298/intel-announces-core-i9-14900ks-raptor-lake-r-hits-up-to-6-2-ghz https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PEvszQIRIU4&ab_channel=der8auerEN https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/intel-core-i9-14900ks-cpu-review https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dJbUB6Pfc90&ab_channel=Moore%27sLawIsDead https://www.techpowerup.com/320617/tiny-corp-pauses-development-of-amd-radeon-gpu-based-tinybox-ai-cluster https://www.techpowerup.com/320598/intel-and-biden-admin-announce-up-to-usd-8-5-billion-in-direct-funding-under-the-chips-act https://www.hardwareluxx.de/index.php/news/hardware/grafikkarten/63216-grafikspeicher-der-n%C3%A4chsten-generation-gddr7-soll-mit-28-und-32-gbit-s-starten.html https://videocardz.com/newz/amd-enables-memory-overclocking-on-radeon-rx-7900-gre https://twitter.com/yuuki_ans/status/1771516361329750298/photo/1 https://videocardz.com/newz/amd-reaffirms-strix-point-zen5-rdna-is-launching-in-2024 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3r3wnRu-Fo4&ab_channel=ETAPRIME https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XnsLPyhm5Q&ab_channel=ETAPRIME https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Otcge1cn8Os&ab_channel=TECHtalk
FreeBSD and DragonflyBSD benchmarks on AMD’s Threadripper, NetBSD 7.2 has been released, optimized out DTrace kernel symbols, stuck UEFI bootloaders, why ed is not a good editor today, tell your BSD story, and more. ##Headlines FreeBSD & DragonFlyBSD Put Up A Strong Fight On AMD’s Threadripper 2990WX, Benchmarks Against Linux The past two weeks I have been delivering a great deal of AMD Threadripper 2990WX benchmarks on Linux as well as some against Windows and Windows Server. But recently I got around to trying out some of the BSD operating systems on this 32-core / 64-thread processor to see how they would run and to see whether they would have similar scaling issues or not like we’ve seen on the Windows side against Linux. In this article are FreeBSD and DragonFlyBSD benchmarks with the X399 + 2990WX compared to a few Linux distributions. The BSDs I focused my testing on were FreeBSD 11.2-STABLE and 12.0-CURRENT/ALPHA1 (the version in development) as well as iX System’s TrueOS that is tracking FreeBSD 12.0-CURRENT. Also included were DragonFlyBSD, with FreeBSD and DragonFlyBSD being tied as my favorite operating systems when it comes to the BSDs. When it came to FreeBSD 11.2-STABLE and 12.0-ALPHA1 on the Threadripper 2990WX, it worked out surprisingly well. I encountered no real issues during my two days of benchmarking on FreeBSD (and TrueOS). It was a great experience and FreeBSD was happy to exploit the 64 threads on the system. DragonFlyBSD was a bit of a different story… Last week when I started this BSD testing I tried DragonFly 5.2.2 as the latest stable release as well as a DragonFlyBSD 5.3 development snapshot from last week: both failed to boot in either BIOS or UEFI modes. But then a few days ago DragonFlyBSD lead developer Matthew Dillon bought himself a 2990WX platform. He made the necessary changes to get DragonFlyBSD 5.3 working and he ended up finding really great performance and potential out of the platform. So I tried the latest DragonFlyBSD 5.3 daily ISO on 22 August and indeed it now booted successfully and we were off to the races. Thus there are some DragonFlyBSD 5.3 benchmarks included in this article too. Just hours ago, Matthew Dillon landed some 2990WX topology and scheduler enhancements but that fell out of the scope of when DragonFly was installed on this system. But over the weekend or so I plan to re-test DragonFlyBSD 5.3 and see how those optimizations affect the overall 2990WX performance now on that BSD. DragonFlyBSD 5.4 stable should certainly be an interesting release on several fronts! With FreeBSD 11.2-STABLE and 12.0-ALPHA1 I ran benchmarks when using their stock compiler (LLVM Clang 6.0) as well as GCC 7.3 obtained via GCC 7.3. That was done to rule out compiler differences in benchmarking against the GCC-based Linux distributions. On DragonFlyBSD 5.3 it defaults to the GCC 5.4.1 but via pkg I also did a secondary run when upgraded to GCC 7.3. The hardware and BIOS/UEFI settings were maintained the same throughout the entire benchmarking process. The system was made up of the AMD Ryzen Threadripper 2990WX at stock speeds, the ASUS ROG ZENITH EXTREME motherboard, 4 x 8GB DDR4-3200MHz memory, Samsung 970 EVO 500GB NVMe SSD, and Radeon RX Vega 56 graphics card. All of these Linux vs. BSD benchmarks were carried out in a fully-automated and reproducible manner using the open-source Phoronix Test Suite benchmarking framework. While for the last of today’s BSD vs. Linux benchmarking on the Threadripper 2990WX, the Linux distributions came out slightly ahead of FreeBSD and DragonFlyBSD with GCC (another test having issues with Clang 6.0 on the BSDs). Overall, I was quite taken away by the BSD performance on the Threadripper 2990WX – particularly FreeBSD. In a surprising number of benchmarks, the BSDs were outperforming the tested Linux distributions though often by incredibly thin margins. Still, quite an accomplishment for these BSD operating systems and considering how much better Linux is already doing than Windows 10 / Windows Server on this 32-core / 64-thread processor. Then again, the BSDs like Linux have a long history of running on high core/thread-count systems, super computers, and other HPC environments. It will be interesting to see how much faster DragonFlyBSD can run given today’s commit to its kernel with scheduler and topology improvements for the 2990WX. Those additional DragonFlyBSD benchmarks will be published in the coming days once they are completed. ###NetBSD 7.2 released The NetBSD Project is pleased to announce NetBSD 7.2, the second feature update of the NetBSD 7 release branch. It represents a selected subset of fixes deemed important for security or stability reasons, as well as new features and enhancements. General Security Note The NetBSD 7.2 release is a maintenance release of the netbsd-7 branch, which had it's first major release, NetBSD 7.0 in September 2015. A lot of security features have been added to later NetBSD versions, and for new installations we highly recommend using our latest release, NetBSD 8.0 instead. Some highlights of the 7.2 release are: Support for USB 3.0. Enhancements to the Linux emulation subsystem. Fixes in binary compatibility for ancient NetBSD executables. iwm(4) driver for Intel Wireless 726x, 316x, 826x and 416x series added. Support for Raspberry Pi 3 added. Fix interrupt setup on Hyper-V VMs with Legacy Network Adapter. SVR4 and IBCS2 compatibility subsystems have been disabled by default (besides IBCS2 on VAX). These subsystems also do not auto-load their modules any more. Various USB stability enhancements. Numerous bug fixes and stability improvements. Complete source and binaries for NetBSD 7.2 are available for download at many sites around the world. A list of download sites providing FTP, AnonCVS, SUP, and other services may be found at https://www.NetBSD.org/mirrors/. We encourage users who wish to install via ISO or USB disk images to download via BitTorrent by using the torrent files supplied in the images area. A list of hashes for the NetBSD 7.2 distribution has been signed with the well-connected PGP key for the NetBSD Security Officer: https://cdn.NetBSD.org/pub/NetBSD/security/hashes/NetBSD-7.2_hashes.asc NetBSD is free. All of the code is under non-restrictive licenses, and may be used without paying royalties to anyone. Free support services are available via our mailing lists and website. Commercial support is available from a variety of sources. More extensive information on NetBSD is available from our website: ##News Roundup Including optimized-out kernel symbols in dtrace on FreeBSD Have you ever had dtrace(1) on FreeBSD fail to list a probe that should exist in the kernel? This is because Clang will optimize-out some functions. The result is ctfconvert(1) will not generate debugging symbols that dtrace(1) uses to identify probes. I have a quick solution to getting those probes visible to dtrace(1). In my case, I was trying to instrument on ieee80211_ioctl_get80211, whose sister function ieee80211_ioctl_set80211 has a dtrace(1) probe in the generic FreeBSD 11 and 12 kernels. Both functions are located in /usr/src/sys/net80211/ieee80211_ioctl.c. My first attempt was to add to /etc/make.conf as follows and recompile the kernel. CFLAGS+=-O0 and -fno-inline-functions This failed to produce the dtrace(1) probe. Several other attempts failed and I was getting inconsistent compilation results (Is it me or is ieee80211_ioctl.c compiled with different flags if NO_CLEAN=1 is set?). When I manually compiled the object file by copying the compilation line for the object file and adding -O0 -fno-inline-functions, nm(1) on both the object file and kernel demonstrated that the symbol was present. I installed the kernel, rebooted and it was listed as a dtrace probe. Great! But as I continued to debug my WiFi driver (oh yeah, I’m very slowly extending rtwn(4)), I found myself rebuilding the kernel several times and frequently rebooting. Why not do this across the entire kernel? After hacking around, my solution was to modify the build scripts. My solution was to edit /usr/src/sys/conf/kern.pre.mk and modify all optimization level 2 to optimization level 0. The following is my diff(1) on FreeBSD 12.0-CURRENT. A few thoughts: This seems like a hack rather than a long-term solution. Either the problem is with the hard-coded optimization flags, or the inability to overwrite them in all places in make.conf. Removing optimizations is only something I would do in a non-production kernel, so its as if I have to choose between optimizations for a production kernel or having dtrace probes. But dtrace explicitly markets itself as not impactful on production. Using the dtrace pony as your featured image on WordPress does not render properly and must be rotated and modified. Blame Bryan Cantrill. If you have a better solution, please let me know and I will update the article, but this works for me! ###FreeBSD: UEFI Bootloader stuck on BootCurrent/BootOrder/BootInfo on Asus Motherboards (and fix!) Starting with FreeBSD CURRENT from about a few weeks of posting date, but including FreeBSD 12 alpha releases (not related to DEC Alpha), I noticed one thing: When I boot FreeBSD from UEFI on a homebuilt desktop with a Asus H87M-E motherboard, and have Root on ZFS, the bootloader gets stuck on lines like BootCurrent, BootOrder, and BootInfo. This issue occurs when I try to boot directly to efibootbootx64.efi. One person had a similar issue on a Asus H87I-PLUS motherboard. This issue may or may not exist on other Asus motherboards, desktops, or laptops. This may be specific to Asus motherboards for Intel’s Haswell, but may also exist on newer systems (e.g. Skylake) or older (e.g. Ivy Bridge) with Asus motherboards, as well as Asus desktops or laptops. There are two solutions to this problem: Use Legacy BIOS mode instead of UEFI mode Install a FreeBSD UEFI Boot entry Keep in mind that I am not going to talk about this issue and third-party UEFI boot managers such as rEFInd here. The first option is rather straightforward: you need to make sure your computer has “Secure Boot” disabled and “Legacy Boot” or “CSM” enabled. Then, you need to make sure FreeBSD is installed in BIOS mode. However, this solution is (in my opinion) suboptimal. Why? Because: You won’t be able to use hard drives bigger than 2TB You are limited to MBR Partitioning on Asus motherboards with UEFI as Asus motherboards refuse to boot GPT partitioned disks in BIOS mode Legacy BIOS mode may not exist on future computers or motherboards (although those systems may not have this issue, and this issue may get fixed by then) The second option, however, is less straightforward, but will let you keep UEFI. Many UEFI systems, including affected Asus motherboards described here, include a boot manager built into the UEFI. FreeBSD includes a tool called efibootmgr to manage this, similar to the similarly-named tool in Linux, but with a different syntax. ###Why ed(1) is not a good editor today I’ll start with my tweet: Heretical Unix opinion time: ed(1) may be the 'standard Unix editor', but it is not a particularly good editor outside of a limited environment that almost never applies today. There is a certain portion of Unixdom that really likes ed(1), the ‘standard Unix editor’. Having actually used ed for a not insignificant amount of time (although it was the friendlier ‘UofT ed’ variant), I have some reactions to what I feel is sometimes overzealous praise of it. One of these is what I tweeted. The fundamental limitation of ed is that it is what I call an indirect manipulation interface, in contrast to the explicit manipulation interfaces of screen editors like vi and graphical editors like sam (which are generally lumped together as ‘visual’ editors, so called because they actually show you the text you’re editing). When you edit text in ed, you have some problems that you don’t have in visual editors; you have to maintain in your head the context of what the text looks like (and where you are in it), you have to figure out how to address portions of that text in order to modify them, and finally you have to think about how your edit commands will change the context. Copious use of ed’s p command can help with the first problem, but nothing really deals with the other two. In order to use ed, you basically have to simulate parts of ed in your head. Ed is a great editor in situations where the editor explicitly presenting this context is a very expensive or outright impossible operation. Ed works great on real teletypes, for example, or over extremely slow links where you want to send and receive as little data as possible (and on real teletypes you have some amount of context in the form of an actual printout that you can look back at). Back in the old days of Unix, this described a fairly large number of situations; you had actual teletypes, you had slow dialup links (and later slow, high latency network links), and you had slow and heavily overloaded systems. However, that’s no longer the situation today (at least almost all of the time). Modern systems and links can easily support visual editors that continually show you the context of the text and generally let you more or less directly manipulate it (whether that is through cursoring around it or using a mouse). Such editors are easier and faster to use, and they leave you with more brainpower free to think about things like the program you’re writing (which is the important thing). If you can use a visual editor, ed is not a particularly good editor to use instead; you will probably spend a lot of effort (and some amount of time) on doing by hand something that the visual editor will do for you. If you are very practiced at ed, maybe this partly goes away, but I maintain that you are still working harder than you need to be. The people who say that ed is a quite powerful editor are correct; ed is quite capable (although sadly limited by only editing a single file). It’s just that it’s also a pain to use. (They’re also correct that ed is the foundation of many other things in Unix, including sed and vi. But that doesn’t mean that the best way to learn or understand those things is to learn and use ed.) This doesn’t make ed a useless, vestigial thing on modern Unix, though. There are uses for ed in non-interactive editing, for example. But on modern Unix, ed is a specialized tool, much like dc. It’s worth knowing that ed is there and roughly what it can do, but it’s probably not worth learning how to use it before you need it. And you’re unlikely to ever be in a situation where it’s the best choice for interactive editing (and if you are, something has generally gone wrong). (But if you enjoy exploring the obscure corners of Unix, sure, go for it. Learn dc too, because it’s interesting in its own way and, like ed, it’s one of those classical old Unix programs.) ##Beastie Bits Is there any interest in a #BSD user group in #Montreal? Tell your BSD story Finishing leftover tasks from Google Summer of Code Fuzzing the OpenBSD Kernel ARM - any Tier-1 *BSD options? ##Feedback/Questions Chris - byhve question Paulo - Topic suggestion Bostjan - How data gets to disk Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv
This week: Even more juicy details leak on iPhone 8, plus a report says the keynote reveal is right around the corner. Leander shares the strange twist in Apple’s autonomous car project Why the 13” MacBook Pro might soon become your favorite Mac Story time with L Kahney - he’s going to share the highlights from his whirlwind tour of Japan and other defenseless Asian lands. Plus Erfon recalls what it’s like in the darkness of a total solar eclipse. This episode supported by CultCloth will keep your iPhone 7, Apple Watch, Mac and iPad sparkling clean, and for a limited time you can use code CULTCAST to score a free CleanCloth with any order at CultCloth.co. The Cult of Mac watch store has the best straps in the biz. Thanks to Kevin MacLeod at incompetech.com for the great music you hear on today's show. On the show this week @erfon / @bst3r / @lkahney This week’s intro (thanks Nick Bracken!) http://www.ngataonga.org.nz/collections/catalogue/catalogue-item?record_id=147476 The shadows take on the sun's new shape https://instagram.com/p/BYEHnqbHU1d/ We might know the iPhone 8 keynote date https://www.cultofmac.com/498836/iphone-8-release-date/ Hot on the heels of Samsung’s grand unveiling of the Galaxy Note 8 today, carrier sources have supposedly informed Mac4Ever that Apple plans to unleash its device in just a few weeks. Apple’s keynote is allegedly slated for September 12 where the company will reveal three new iPhones. While we haven’t been able to verify the accuracy of the report ourselves, Apple usually hosts its iPhone keynote in the middle of September so the date could make sense. The French Apple blog claims that carriers have been informed by Apple to expect the device announcement on the second Tuesday of next month. Carriers usually receive a heads up so they can start planning marketing and to organize pre-orders to ensure inventory. And get this, the minimum storage capacity for Apple's OLED iPhone is said to be 64GB, with a 256GB option offered as the mid-tier capacity and a 512GB option at the highest tier, while 3GB of RAM is claimed to be included across the board. iPhone 8’s amazing facial recognition is super quick, works in the dark https://www.cultofmac.com/498426/iphone-8s-amazing-facial-recognition-super-quick-works-dark/ The iPhone 8’s facial recognition feature will work in a millionth of a second, and be more secure than the existing Touch ID sensor, and even work in the dark, a pair of new reports claim. In addition to the regular iPhone sensors you’d expect to find, the upcoming handset will reportedly boast a new “structured light” sensor, which uses bounced infrared light to work out the depth of different points on the face. That information is then used to build a 3D mesh of objects, which is compared to the one recorded when setting up the new iPhone. Calculating the timing between when infrared light is sent out and recorded coming back will let the iPhone work out accurate depth measurements. This, in turn, means you won’t be able to trick the handset using a 2D photo. The facial recognition is reportedly powered by tech Apple acquired when it bought Kinect motion sensor maker PrimeSense several years ago. The speed that the iPhone 8 facial recognition sensor will reportedly work is particularly impressive. The new handset will allegedly be able to do all of this within “a few hundred milliseconds,” which would make it a faster means of unlocking your iPhone than the current-generation Touch ID, Apple has been using Touch ID since 2013’s iPhone 5s. Apple’s 3D sensing tech is two years ahead of the competition https://www.cultofmac.com/498524/apples-3d-sensing-technology-two-years-ahead-competition/ According to a new report from KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, Apple competitor Qualcomm is working on its own 3D sensing tech, but it’s at least two years behind. And handset-makers aren’t in a rush to embrace it quite yet. "While Qualcomm is the most engaged company in the R&D of 3D sensing for the Android camp, a number of issues plague Qualcomm that prevent its tech from being ready for mass-market products. Immature algorithms, and thermal problems" Apple autonomous car morphs into self-driving shuttle bus for employees https://www.cultofmac.com/498760/apples-autonomous-car-morphed-self-driving-shuttle-bus-employees/ According to the New York Times, Apple’s secretive “Project Titan” self-driving car project has switched gears, transforming into an effort to build a self-driving shuttle bus. Called Palo Alto Infinite Loop, or PAIL, the shuttle would carry Apple employees between buildings. The project may serve as a test bed for Apple’s autonomous car research. But a customer-focused vehicle built by Apple is for now reportedly out of the question. Instead, Apple’s self-driving technology will likely be used by other carmakers eventually. The newspaper claims a leadership clash hampered project. Steve Zadesky, an Apple executive initially in charge of Titan, wanted to build semiautonomous technology. Meanwhile, Apple design chief Jony Ive “believed that a fully driverless car would allow the company to reimagine the automobile experience.” Apple reportedly investigated several innovative ideas for the project. Those included motorized doors that opened and closed silently, augmented reality displays for the interior of the car, new ways of incorporating the light sensor essential to driverless cars, and a total lack of steering wheel and gas pedals. Apple also researched the possibility of using globelike wheels for the vehicle, “because spherical wheels could allow the car better lateral movement.” Intel Launches First Eighth-Generation Core Processors, Paving Way For Quad-Core 13-Inch MacBook Pro https://www.macrumors.com/2017/08/21/intel-announces-8th-gen-core-kaby-lake-refresh/ The first four eighth-generation processors launching today are U-series chips suitable for the 13-inch MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, and Mac mini. They're all 15W chips with four cores and eight threads, paving the way for a quad-core 13-inch MacBook Pro should Apple choose to release one. The eighth-generation Core i5 and Core i7 chips are up to 40 percent faster than the equivalent seventh-generation Kaby Lake processors First MacBook Pro with Touch Bar uses a 6th gen Skylake processor. Intel also boasted that its eighth-generation Core processors are up to twice as fast as its equivalent five-year-old Ivy Bridge chips. It said users can output a 106-second 4K video in as little as three minutes with a new PC, for example, versus up to 45 minutes on an equivalent five-year-old PC.
本期由 Terry Tai 主持,参与嘉宾有 Daneil Lv, Dingding Ye 和 Kevin Wang。本期由所有Teahour创始人和大家一起聊聊开发中用到的硬件和选购的一些技巧以及如何锻炼和保护程序员的身体。 Macbook Pro Parallel Tests Ivy Bridge 硬件虚拟化 超线程 Crucial M4 Samsung 830 Richard Huang Herman Miller Aeron Herman Miller Embody 锤子手机 QWERTY Dvorak Happy Hacking Keyboard Pro Type-S Razer Blackwidow For Mac Realforce 86U Tactile Pro Apple Extended Keyboard Alps Matias ADB Kinesis Freestyle mini Tactile Pro Shanghai Linux User Group Dell 2412M Jim Weirich Fitbit Zip Fitbit One Fitbit Flex Jawbone Up The Boy Scout Rule 钻石年代 Pocket Casts SuperDuper!
Anand Shimpi, Brian Klug and Dr. Ian Cutress discuss what to buy from smartphone to PC. The trio go over building a PC based on Intel's 3rd generation Core processors (codename: Ivy Bridge), the best Android smartphones on the market as well as set expectations for the next iPhone.
This week's episode is chock full of into about Adobe's new subscription model & copy protection, an update on Bill's new Ivy Bridge hackintosh, the ethics of eBay sniping, and more. SHOW NOTES: Jes Young - "Tab Bennett and the Inbetween" Jbidwatcher - eBay Sniping Tool Beatmaker 2 TonyMacx86.com BlackMagic Speed Test App Sonnett USB 3 PCExpress Card LaCie USB 3 PCExpress Card
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 690, GTX 670 GPU rumors, Alienware updates laptop lineup with Ivy Bridge, and more. Hosts: Patrick Norton and Ryan Shrout Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-computer-hardware. Send your computer hardware questions to twich@twit.tv. We invite you to read, add to, and amend our show notes. Thanks to CacheFly for the bandwidth for this show.
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 690, GTX 670 GPU rumors, Alienware updates laptop lineup with Ivy Bridge, and more. Hosts: Patrick Norton and Ryan Shrout Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-computer-hardware. Send your computer hardware questions to twich@twit.tv. We invite you to read, add to, and amend our show notes. Thanks to CacheFly for the bandwidth for this show.
Tentokrát o: Macbook Pro, Ivy Bridge, Home tlačítko, iPhone, SkyDrive, Cargo-Bot, NOVA 3, Tržba, WWDC 2012, Google Drive, Smart Cover, Time Machine.
Ivy Bridge is shipping, SSD price wars, and more. Hosts: Patrick Norton and Ryan Shrout Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-computer-hardware. Send your computer hardware questions to twich@twit.tv. We invite you to read, add to, and amend our show notes. Thanks to CacheFly for the bandwidth for this show. Sponsor: Netflix
Ivy Bridge is shipping, SSD price wars, and more. Hosts: Patrick Norton and Ryan Shrout Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-computer-hardware. Send your computer hardware questions to twich@twit.tv. We invite you to read, add to, and amend our show notes. Thanks to CacheFly for the bandwidth for this show. Sponsor: Netflix
Matthew Petschl and Ryan Rampersad discuss all the action that Western Digital is getting, early Ivy Bridge benchmarks, a marketing campaign that answers to A Higher Calling, a cheap Sprint Android phone, a couple Dropbox updates, the estimated new iPad costs and more, At The Nexus.
En este episodio hablamos de OS X Mountain Lion 10.8, Cuando sale OS X Mountain Lion, Marzo 7 para el iPad?, iPad Retina display, 5.1 iOS se viene pronto, Ivy Bridge se retrasa
Dan and Marco discuss the Ivy Bridge delay, k56flex, Windows branding, and, oh yeah, the announcement and preview of OS X Mountain Lion.
On this week's episode, Norm is ready for CES, Will is waiting for Ivy Bridge, and Gary has a surprise on the way. All that, plus Matt and Wes stop by to talk Consumer Electronics Show, the latest on the new Roku stick, next-generation Wi-Fi, even more AppleTV rumors, and even more fake outtakes. Enjoy!
On this week's episode, Norm is ready for CES, Will is waiting for Ivy Bridge, and Gary has a surprise on the way. All that, plus Matt and Wes stop by to talk Consumer Electronics Show, the latest on the new Roku stick, next-generation Wi-Fi, even more AppleTV rumors, and even more fake outtakes. Enjoy!
В программе: — Сирия запретила iPhone; — OS X 10.7.3 beta обнаружила новые Mac Pro; — Совершенно новый iPhone в следующем году; — Ivy Bridge будут в новых MacBook; — В новый iMac будет встроен телевизор?; — Apple обновила iBooks; — Apple готовится открыть Siri API; — "Steve Jobs" — бестселлер года на Amazon. Электронный адрес для связи: pr@timeofnewz.ru. Donate: WM — R287676834635 // Z279697361175 ЯД — 41001795061576
В программе: — Сирия запретила iPhone; — OS X 10.7.3 beta обнаружила новые Mac Pro; — Совершенно новый iPhone в следующем году; — Ivy Bridge будут в новых MacBook; — В новый iMac будет встроен телевизор?; — Apple обновила iBooks; — Apple готовится открыть Siri API; — "Steve Jobs" — бестселлер года на Amazon. Электронный адрес для связи: pr@timeofnewz.ru. Donate: WM — R287676834635 // Z279697361175 ЯД — 41001795061576
This week in Nerdblurbs, we talk about the subscriber hit Netflix is taking, Windows 8's improved boot times, and give our thoughts on cloud services. Next up, in Hardware, we talk about Ivy Bridge, Apple's ongoing fight with Samsung, and how AMD is setting overclocking records. Finally, in Videogames, we talk about TGS and all the news that's come out of it.
This week in Nerdblurbs, we talk about the subscriber hit Netflix is taking, Windows 8's improved boot times, and give our thoughts on cloud services. Next up, in Hardware, we talk about Ivy Bridge, Apple's ongoing fight with Samsung, and how AMD is setting overclocking records. Finally, in Videogames, we talk about TGS and all the news that's come out of it.
On this week's show, Will encourages restraint when it comes to Windows 8, Norm gets really excited about IDF, and Gary explains Monster Hunter to us all. All that, plus hands on time with Windows 8, all the next-gen processor news from IDF, golden cartridges, the Nintendo slidepad, the latest on Mango, and another edition of fake outtakes.
On this week's show, Will encourages restraint when it comes to Windows 8, Norm gets really excited about IDF, and Gary explains Monster Hunter to us all. All that, plus hands on time with Windows 8, all the next-gen processor news from IDF, golden cartridges, the Nintendo slidepad, the latest on Mango, and another edition of fake outtakes.