Minggu, 30 November 2008

Xbox 360 Jasper mobo out in wild

With 256mb of built-in flash


THE NEXT VERSION of the Xbox 360 motherboard has been spotted in the wild, and subsequently poked, prodded and pictured.

Code-named 'Jasper', it comes with a 65nm GPU, which Microsoft hopes will further alleviate some of the infamous Xbox 360 RROD problems.

Xbox-scene's forum members have once again come up with the scoop and low-down.

Multiple Arcade Xbox 360 SKUs have been spotted with the new motherboard.

The new power supply is now rated at 150W (25W less than those used with previous Falcon boards) and the plug format has changed so you can't accidentally poke this PSU into an older Xbox 360.

It's reported the system is quieter than original 360s, but the DVD-drive is the same, meaning you'll have to install your games to a separate HDD if you want to get the most out of your quieter console.

It also seems the new 360 design will come with 256mb of built-in storage, up from 16mb, and replacing the need for the Arcade SKU's 256mb memory unit.

This additional memory also allows the New Xbox Experience (NXE) to be fully installed without any additional memory unit being required - a point of contention for the Arcade SKU owners.

It's thought it's likely that all other SKU's will come with the internal memory, so that motherboard designs are similar through-out the SKU offerings.

True Copper is mother of all CPU coolers


COPPER IS GREAT for cooling, but it has the fundamental flaw of being overweight. A full sized multi-Heatpipe copper CPU cooler will easily exceed 1Kg, like Thermalright’s True Copper, on review at Legion Hardware. Actually the True borders the 2Kg threshold which, we guess, is a record in itself. It’s one of the best ever coolers, says Steven – if you can overlook the ludicrous size, weight and price ($100). Read it here.

MSI’s Eclipse SLI board is on test at Hexus. The board, while a X58 board, doesn’t sport any Nvidia hardware to support it, so all the work is done on the Intel hardware – so it is effectively capable of Tri-SLI at 16x/16x/4x. The numbers are interesting, and you can see QuadFire and Tri-SLI there.

Xbit Labs has been working on some VGA charts and they’ve got some interesting numbers for this Autumn’s main gaming titles. In a fairly long article, it covers Devil May Cry 4, Dead Space, Race Driver Grid, Mass Effect, The Witcher (Enhanced Edition), Stalker and Spore. Find out which CPU+GPU combo gives you best bang for your buck. Right here.

Tom’s Hardware has started this month’s system building marathon with a $625 gaming budget. An Intel Pentium Dual-Core E5200-based system coupled with an HD 4850 and some serious memory kit will get very playable frame-rates in all but a few titles at 1920x1200. Time to spend some money… get it here.

A while back WD launched their Green drives, hoping to capitalise on the eco-conscious, storage-valuing customer (performance is in the Raptors, anyway). Techware Labs is testing their 1GB, and they think it’s awesome: performance, quietness and low power consumption… Read why.

Samsung’s NC10 netbook is on test at Bit-Tech. Tim, whose experience with netbooks has left him wanting, has found the NC10 to be the One. Yes, long battery life, great ergonomics, muck-proof and not too expensive (although £300 borders on expensive), make up what Bit-Tech thinks is a winner. Read the rave, here.

Apple’s month-old launch of the new MacBooks was coupled with the announcement of the companion 24-inch LCD LED-backlit display. Ars Technica is looking at the display right now, and they’ve seen just how hooked it is on the new MacBook. Lots of nice things you can do with it, including powering up your MacBook… should do well with the new IGP *cough* sorry *cough* mGPU. Get it here.

Microsoft graphics-on-CPU is warped


THE NEXT VERSION of Microsoft's core desktop operating system, imaginatively named Windows 7, aka Vista SP2, may contain an interesting feature for devices with low-end graphics chipsets, or even with no GPU acceleration at all.

According to an MSDN document, Windows Advanced Rasterization Platform 10 (WARP10) is due for inclusion in Windows 7.

The document, originally picked up by Custom PC, states that WARP10 will be able to run Direct3D 10 and 10.1 on the CPU, in an attempt to bring improved graphics capabilities to devices with no, or lacklustre, dedicated graphics hardware.

Incredibly, according to Microsoft's own performance numbers, an Intel Penryn-based quad-core processor can run Crysis at 5.69 FPS at 800x600 with the detail at a low level. By contrast, Intel's own DX10-capable IGP only managed 5.17 FPS, making it virtually redundant when coupled with a decent modern processor.

Microsoft's CPU list contains several imaginary, or at least publicly unannounced, processors so the numbers should be taken with a large pinch of salt until results from independent testing are available.

We can't help thinking this is contradictory to one of the main objectives of Vista's (and subsequently Windows 7's) user interface - an attempt to provide a slick, fast, beautified GUI, using all the power a modern GPU delivers.

Devices with such poor performing graphical capabilities, which would be coupled with a low-end CPU and minimal memory, would presumably not be suitable for a size-able Windows 7 deployment, and would be targeted for use with a dedicated Linux OS - or XP.

It's plausible this is an attempt by Microsoft to provide low-end devices with the opportunity to run Windows 7, instead of XP, but surely it would require much more than the ability to run graphics-on-CPU for manufacturers to run the Vista-based behemoth on their less-powerful products.

With Apple's OSX Snow-Leopard purported to provide both GPU acceleration of normally CPU-bound tasks, and an interface that properly utilises the GPU's capabilities, Microsoft's approach seems to be a backwards step compared to the current trend within the industry.

However, it does make sense when you factor-in Intel, upon whom Microsoft seems to bend on one knee at all opportunities.

The recent Vista-capable downgrade fiasco, in which Steve Ballmer is now required to speak about in court, was allegedly due to Microsoft bowing to Intel's demands in an attempt to flog some of it's cheaper mass-market IGP chipsets.

With Intel's Larrabee soon on the scene, which will utilise a many-core x86-derived architecture, Microsoft has seen fit to provide an SDK that may not only help Intel shift its awful IGP alongside powerful CPUs, negating the need for Nvidia and AMD discrete GPUs or chipsets, but possibly provide a thoroughly useful SDK for its emerging unreleased graphics technology.

It must be nice to have powerful friends when you only have a piffling 80 per cent market share.

Kamis, 06 November 2008

New 15.4-inch entry level Notebook from Acer


Acer is get ready to launch the new e-Machine entry level notebook. They will show the new PC-E520 in Japanese market yesterday (okteber 31). The PC-E520 has 15.4″ with LCD monitor and 1280×800 in resolution depth. Because of this entry level, the laptop only equipped with Intel Celeron 575 (2GHz) for the processor. The RAM capacity is 1GB and 160GB in hardisk space. Running under windows Vista Home Premium as the bundled OS, PC-E520 offers DVD super-mukti and Intel GL40 Express.


The dimention is 364.6×273.6×27~38.4mm at 2.8kg, it offers around 3 hours of battery life. Suggested price is 59,800(JPY).

Widescreen Dell LCD Monitor


Dell always has creativity to create new product. They has just released two more wide-screen LCD display with 19:9 ratio.There are the 22″ S2209W and the 23″ S2309W This aspect ratio without compromising any resolution, so just get ready to find strange picture on your monitor. Available feature include:

* Full 1080p resolution
* 16:10 aspect ratio
* 1,000:1 contrast ratio
* 5ms pixel response time
* DVI with HDCP encryption support
* VGA support
You can pick up the Dell S2209W for $239, while the S2309W is slightly more expensive at $299.

NEC Seguente Express5800/51Ma Mini PC


NEC Seguente Express5800 Mini PC Images

Weighs at just 2.5kg, the Seguente Express5800/51Ma is a compact mini PC from NEC. Measures 195 x 181 x 93mm, it comes with an Intel Celeron 550 processor, a 512MB of main memory, a 160GB of hard drive, and a pre-installed Windows Vista Business operating system. Not sure why the company decided to put Vista on such a low-level configuration, but if I were you, I’ll take the second set of specs instead — Intel Core 2 Duo T9300 CPU, 1GB of RAM, a 160GB of HDD, Windows Vista Business OS, and a DVD SuperMulti burner. Note that this tiny desktop is not just small, it is also quite as well with a noise level of just 22dB.