Saturday, December 29, 2012

2012-12-21-130

[Rumour] Intel Sandy Bridge Roadmap Leaked

Computerbase has leaked a table listing upcoming next-gen CPUs fromIntel - Sandy Bridge. The first Sandy Bridge CPUs are quad/dual core,and is expected to release in January 2011. Enthusiast class 6/8 coreSandy Bridge variants will release in H2 2011. For now, however,Computerbase's list is dedicated to the mainstream/performance dual/quadcore Sandy Bridge CPUs.

As previously rumoured,the Core i3/i5/i7 2000 series nomenclature is now widely accepted. Inessence, the general trend will carry over from the current Core 2010series, with a "2" prefix attached to separate Nehalem from SandyBridge.

The top Sandy Bridge CPU in Q1 2011 will be the Core i7 2600K. It will be clocked at 3.4 GHz, with a speedy 3.8 GHz turbo. Compared to the fastest Nehalem quad core, the Core i7 975 XE, the Core i7 2600K will end up faster, with a higher clock speed. Do note that the main objective for Sandy Bridge is not IPC, but efficiency. As we have seen before, and recently, clock-for-clock, Sandy Bridge is only slightly faster than Nehalem. The Core i7 2600K will be the fastest ever quad core CPU, but Intel's Core i7 980X will continue to be the overall performance king. In applications that scale poorly with multiple threads, however, the Core i7 2600K might sneak past the Core i7 980X. However, these CPUs are replacements for Lynnfield, rather than Bloomfield and Gulftown. A near identical Core i7 2600 is planned - the absence of "K" likely signifying a locked multiplier. These CPUs, like Lynnfield, feature 8MB L3 cache and 95W TDP. A Core i7 2600S, 65W version, will be available clocked at 2.8 GHz, with turbo continuing to be at 3.8 GHz.

Amazingly, according to Computerbase's roadmap, the Core i7 2600 CPUs will be the only ones with Hyper Threading enabled. The Core i5 2500 (3.3 GHz) and Core i5 2400 (3.1 GHz) CPUs will follow a similar nomenclature, but with HT disabled, and only 6MB L3 cache enabled. Core i5 2500 will also have a "T" version, operating at 45W, and clocked at 2.3 GHz. However, Core i5 2400 is only available in the 2400 (3.1 GHz) and 65W 2400 S (2.5 GHz), with no "K" or "T" versions in sight. Instead, we have a Core i5 2390T, which is a dual core clocked at 2.7 GHz, with a TDP of 35W. Confused? If true, it seems Intel has made things even more complicated with Sandy Bridge.

The other dual core CPUs are Core i3 2120 and Core i3 2100, clocked at 3.3 GHz and 3.1 GHz, respectively, with a TDP of 65W. They only feature 3 MB L3 cache, 1 MB less than Clarkdale. A Core i3 2100T, clocked at 2.5 GHz, consumes only 35W. These Core i3 CPUs will be separated from the only other dual core - the i5 2390T - by the disabled Turbo. This means, according to this roadmap, there's no full power dual core Sandy Bridge with Turbo!

It is not just the desktop CPU nomenclature that is a mess - the notebook nomenclature is even worse! The top part - Core i7 2920 XM (phew!) clocks in at 2.5 GHz, a major improvement from current flagship Core i7 940 XM, which is clocked at 2.13 GHz. This is no surprise, considering efficiency being one of the key objectives of Sandy Bridge. However, the saucy TDP of 55W stays.

Computerbase's leaked table remains confusing, at best, perhaps even more that we have come to expect from Intel. Software disables on features like HyperThreading or Turbo is some thing no one likes, and there seems to be even more branding divisions caused by these disables. With hard disables (cache) added to this, it makes things unnecessary complicated, creating five or six divisions between two chips over three families.

We certainly hope Intel can clarify their nomenclature before release. If it stays the way Computerbase is reporting, it is likely to cause customers a headache or two. If two chips are so confusing, then how about four? To think we will have further six core and eight core Sandy Bridge CPUs to name under the same family later in 2011...

Complete tables available at Computerbase.


Friday, December 28, 2012

2012-12-21-26

(Updated) X58 SLI Test On Crysis Warhead & Far Cry 2

Next, we checked out the performance of GeForce GTX 280 SLI on the Core i7 965XE/ ASUS P6T Deluxe X58 board setup. We can observe that at "Enthusiast Mode", Crysis Warhead is mostly GPU limited and isalmost unplayable at 2560x1600 resolution. For Far Cry 2 with settings at "Ultra High", 1600x1200 and 1920x1200resolutions are becoming CPU limited while at 2560x1600 resolution, it is balanced between the CPU and GPU. Let us know what benchmarks you would like to see.

Updated : We have updated with some single card scores and we can observe that thebenchmarks scale nicely between single and dual cards except for Crysis Warhead @ 2560x1600resolution where SLI GTX280 succumb to stress.

SingleBenchmarks

1600x1200

1920x1200

2560x1600

Far Cry 2

54.74

51.11

39.3

Crysis Warhead

24.6

21.38

12.61

SLI Benchmarks

1600x1200

1920x1200

2560x1600

Far Cry 2

98.71

91.27

69.33

Crysis Warhead

46.01

40.12

16.15

Single GTX280 - Crysis Warhead @ 1600x1200

Single GTX280 - Crysis Warhead @ 1920x1200

Single GTX280 - Crysis Warhead @ 2560x1600

SLIGTX280 - Crysis Warhead @ 1600x1200

SLIGTX280 - Crysis Warhead @ 1920x1200

SLIGTX280 - Crysis Warhead @ 2560x1600

SingleGTX280 - Far Cry 2 @ 1600x1200

SingleGTX280 - Far Cry 2 @ 1920x1200

SingleGTX280 - Far Cry 2 @ 2560x1600

SLIGTX280 - Far Cry 2 @ 1600x1200

SLIGTX280 - Far Cry 2 @ 1920x1200

SLIGTX280 - Far Cry 2 @ 2560x1600



Thursday, December 27, 2012

2012-12-21-400

Acer Ferrari 4000 Black Series Notebooks

Acer unveiled its Ferrari 4000 carbon-fiber black Ferrari-series notebookwith the notebook expected to be available worldwide in June. Acer will alsointroduce its Ferrari design into its line of n50 PDAs in the third quarter of2005. The new 15.4" Ferrari 4000 is based on the AMD Turion 64 processor andfeatures ATI Mobility Radeon X700 graphics with 128MB DDR memory, as well as aDVD Super Multi double-layer drive and a 5-in-1 card-reader. In addition, Acerrecently reached an agreement with the Scuderia Ferrari team for marketing a newFerrari PDA model.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

2012-12-21-5

"Excuse me sir, but you have to remove your cheeseburger from the public PC."

There is always a twisted sense of satisfaction to be had when one manages to successfully break the rules and walk out of such situations with no adverse effects or consequences. Unfortunately, attempting to do so usually requires a great deal of luck; a key statistic which many are not necessarily blessed with.

That being said, the best alternative solution will be to pretend to break the rules and fool someone into thinking that such an act was done when it never happened. And if that sounds like the kind of thing you do regularly in schools or libraries, Brando's gadget ought to be rather self-explanatory with regards to the mischief one could come up with.


According to Brando, the USB Chicken Burger 4-Port USB Hub is fully compliant with both USB 2.0 and USB 1.1 specifications, so users are unlikely to experience any performance issues with the 'burger' as most USB devices are still making use of version 2 of the USB specifications.

That being said, the USB Chicken Burger 4-Port USB Hub mimics an actual burger extremely well, and it shows. Just like how some people would flip off the top bun of an actual burger to add in the sauces of their choice to the meat patty beneath it, this polyresin imitation of a burger requires that users remove the top 'bun' to reveal the lettuece, where the four USB ports are carefully hidden

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Of course, it being a generic USB gadget means that the 'chicken burger' will work on any PC running off any operating system, be it Windows, OS X or Linux. And the fact that it sports pocket-able dimensions (88 x 88 x 60mm) means that users can easily carry their 'chicken burger' with them and use it for some mischief making on public PCs.

If that sounds like fun, do take note that there is a price to pay for such mischief-making, and in this case, the price happens to be US$19 for the 'burger'. Now that might come across as a little expensive for a novelty gadget, but the fact that it looks realistic enough to be eaten should probably guarantee at least a week's worth of pranks before the trick starts to get old.

Source: Brando



Tuesday, December 25, 2012

2012-12-21-49

Radeon HD 4890 (RV790) & HD 4770 (RV740) Launch On Apr 6th

April 6th is gonna be a big day for AMD as they are going to launch a slew of new cards.As we have told you back in February, Radeon HD 4890 (RV790)is slated for April release and the confirmed dateis now 6th of April. Interestingly, we also heardRV740 is pulled in from May to early Aprilreleaseso AMD will probably launchthe new cardson the same day.

Radeon HD 4890 (RV790) is still 55nm based and is basically a higher clocked version of RV770. The RV790 cardcomes with 10 layers PCB and is 9.5" long witha new dual slot cooler. We told you previously, there are 2 versions; standard and OC edition. The OC edition will come later in April. The price for standard 512MB edition isUS$199 while the price for 1GB OC edition is US$299.

Radeon HD 4750 and 4770 is 40nm based and we already have seen a preview of it. Price of HD 4750 is expected to be around US$99 while HD 4770 is priced at around US$119. Apparently, the yield is so good that AMD decided to pull in from May to early April release to give GeForce GTS 240 and 9600 GTa run for its money.



Monday, December 24, 2012

2012-12-21-351

ABIT Fatal1ty AN8 SLI Board

ABIT is going to release their Fatal1ty A8N SLI motherboard verysoon which is able to support the upcoming dual-core AMD processors. It is basedon the NVIDIA nForce 4 SLI chipset that has integrated NV Gigabit Ethernet andNV Firewall capabilities. This board sports several ABIT Engineered technologysuch as µGuru, OTES, AudioMAX and CPU ThermalGuard. This board still make use ofthe SLI-mode slot to switch between SLI and non-SLI mode where ASUS and Albatronhave came up with their SLI boards without the need for slot.

ABIT is also planning to release their 955X and C19 boards nextmonth where are currently under sampling stage. On the graphics card segment,ABIT's Product Manager, Mr Jesse Chen revealed that ABIT will be concentratingmore on higher end ATI segment instead of the lower end segment where price waris imminent. Therefore we can expect ABIT to come out with more high-end ATIcards in the near future to target at enthusiasts and gamers.