Digital Storm Announces The Aura 34” All-in-One Featuring A 10-Core i7-6950X and GTX 1080 GPU

Without missing a beat with the launch of the latest Broadwell-E processors from Intel, and the highest performing graphics card ever with the NVIDIA GTX 1080, Digital Storm has shoehorned both into their 34-inch all-in-one display.



There were several manufacturers showing off the 34-inch all-in-one gaming system at CES, and the curved display makes for a commanding view. The widescreen display features a 3440×1440 21:9 panel with a slight radius to it. As mentioned, this is a common design from several manufacturers, with Digital Storm being the first to market (or at least the first to my inbox) with the latest and greatest Broadwell-E and GTX 1080 cards.


If you don’t want to go quite that crazy, Digital Storm offers a lot of customization on the device with processors from the Core i5-6500 through Core i7-6700K Skylake parts, or if you need more cores, substitute in some E Series for up to 10 cores plus HyperThreading. On the graphics side, you can opt to just use integrated graphics, or anything from a GTX 950 to the GTX 1080. The all-in-one can be configured with up to 32 GB of DDR4, and there are plenty of storage options including spinning disk and M.2 PCI-E storage.



Since the parts are standard, the end device is able to be upgraded down the line by the owner, which isn’t always the case in all-in-one systems.



Cooling is always going to be an issue with you pack this much power into a small space, so Aura features liquid cooling for the CPU, and the graphics card blower exhausts hot air out of the display bezel, which should be ideal for expelling the waste heat from the GPU.


The Aura is available now starting at $1999.


Source: Digital Storm




Source: AnandTech – Digital Storm Announces The Aura 34” All-in-One Featuring A 10-Core i7-6950X and GTX 1080 GPU

The Intel Broadwell-E Review: Core i7-6950X, i7-6900K, i7-6850K and i7-6800K Tested

What would you do with more CPU cores? This is a question I see posted from an Intel employee on a yearly basis, and it actually is a difficult question to answer depending on your computing background. A gamer might not need more than four or six, and a number of workstation use cases are now GPU accelerated. Anyone never in a pure compute situation might not need more than four or six cores. So what: virtual machines, complex encoding, or non-linear functional compute? How many cores are too many? Intel has recently released the Broadwell-based Xeon E5-2600 v4 processors, running up to 22 cores, and the smaller silicon die used for the 10-core parts has today filtered down to the prosumer and high-end desktop (HEDT) markets in four different parts. We managed to source all four for this review.



Source: AnandTech – The Intel Broadwell-E Review: Core i7-6950X, i7-6900K, i7-6850K and i7-6800K Tested

Intel Announces Xeon E3-1500 v5: Iris Pro and eDRAM for Streaming Video

The rise of video stream services, especially live services, has accelerated the need for dynamic and on-the-fly conversion of video content and the infrastructure to do so. Moving from HD to FHD and 4K as well as 360-degree video requires a lot of immediate compute power in order to keep up with the event being filmed, as well as keeping enough quality in tow to maintain the user experience. Traditionally there are three ways to do this: raw CPU horsepower, FPGAs, custom fixed-function ASICs, or GPUs. In line with this, Intel is releasing their new E3-1500 v5 series of processors with a primary focus on Intel Quick Sync. These are Skylake based CPUs, using four cores with hyperthreading, but are backed with Iris Pro graphics with the 72 execution units available and a redesigned embedded DRAM to accelerate computation over the previous generation.


These fit between Intel’s E3-1200 v5 Xeon processors, which are standard Skylake based Xeons up to four cores, and Intel’s E5-1600/2600 v4 Broadwell-based Xeons with up to 22 cores in a single socket:














Intel Xeon Families
  E3-1200 v5 E3-1500 v5 E5-1600 v4

E5-2600 v4
E7-4600 v3 E7-8800 v3
Core Family Skylake Skylake Broadwell Haswell Haswell
Core Count 2 to 4 2 to 4 4 to 22 4 to 18 4 to 18
Integrated Graphics Few, HD 520 Yes, Iris Pro No No No
DRAM Channels 2 2 4 4 4
Max DRAM Support (per CPU) 64 GB 64 GB 768 GB 512 GB 512 GB
DMI/QPI DMI 3.0 DMI 3.0 2600: 1xQPI 3 QPI 3 QPI
Multi-Socket Support No No 2600: 1S or 2S 1S, 2S or 4S Up to 8S
PCIe Lanes 16 16 40 40 40
Cost $213 to

$612
Unknown $294 to

$4115
$1223 to

$7007
$4061 to

$7174
Suited For Entry Workstations QuickSync,

Memory Compute
High-End Workstation Many-Core Server World Domination

Five processors are set to be released under the E3-1500 v5 name, one at 65W, three at 45W, and one at 35W. The main performance differentiator between them all is the frequency of the processor, with the E3-1558L v5 will also have a slightly cut down version of Iris Pro graphics. All CPUs will be soldered down ‘BGA’ models to be directly embedded into the motherboard. We were told by Intel that there are no plans to release socketable versions of these processors at this time, meaning that the mock up design of the processor on the Intel slide below is just for show, and not a real representation of these parts.



All the processors have Iris Pro Graphics P580, which affords the largest implementation of Intel’s Gen 9 integrated graphics at 72 execution units (72 EUs), along with the largest application of embedded DRAM at 128 MB – this is colloquially known as GT4e, giving a 4+4e silicon die (four cores plus GT4e). The E3-1558L v5, using Iris Pro Graphics P555, is an extreme oddball of the bunch. The P555 arrangement uses only 48 EUs, or Intel’s GT3, with 128 MB of embedded DRAM, making it GT3e. With four cores, this is 4+3e. At the launch of Intel’s Skylake platform, and more recently at events, Intel’s silicon roadmap only afforded two variants of Iris Pro: 2+4e with 64 MB of eDRAM, or 4+4e with 128 MB of eDRAM. This means that the 4+3e is most likely a cut-down version of a 4+4e chip, with part of the graphics disabled.














Intel E3-1500 v5 Xeon Family
  E3-1585 v5 E3-1585L v5 E3-1578L v5 E3-1565L v5 E3-1558L v5
TDP 65W 45W 45W 45W 35W
Cores 4 4 4 4 4
Base Frequency 3.5 GHz 3.0 GHz 2.0 GHz 2.5 GHz 1.9 GHz
Turbo Frequency 3.9 GHz 3.7 GHz 3.4 GHz 3.5 GHz 3.3 GHz
Integrated Graphics Iris Pro P580 Iris Pro P580 Iris Pro P580 Iris Pro P580 Iris Pro P555
Execution Units 72 72 72 72 48
eDRAM 128 MB 128 MB 128 MB 128 MB 128 MB
GPU Frequency 350 MHz 350 MHz 700 MHz 350 MHz 650 MHz
GPU Turbo Frequency 1150 MHz 1150 MHz 1000 MHz 1050 MHz 1000 MHz
Form Factor BGA BGA BGA BGA BGA

While we’re unlikely to get these units in hand anytime soon, Intel’s listed the performance of the top 45W part as up to 26% faster in a synthetic benchmark over the previous generation Broadwell edition at 65W: most of this will be down to the increase in execution units between the two. For HEVC, the top 45W part is reported as supporting, in real-time, two streams doing HEVC to HEVC 4K30 transcodes (essentially splitting a scene in two directions). Alternatively, Intel lists the performance for AVC-to-HEVC 1080p30 capture and encode for 15 simultaneous streams, suitable for a multi-camera live event.



Intel’s focus on video conversion and delivery systems is not small. After introducing processors with embedded DRAM (code named Crystal Well) combined with the Broadwell CPU architecture last generation in a variety of solutions, Intel are now expanding their lines depending on the quality, cost or speed required by the customer.



Intel likes to promote that their solution line covers both cloud and communications with a range of applicable products. The performance-per-watt element of the stack is the Altera Arria family of FPGAs, now that Altera is formally merged with Intel. While we are under the impression that Intel will start to integrate FPGA functionality in their main product lines over the next decade, but at this point an FPGA is the peak perf/watt solution.


For users who want compute density, in a limited space, Intel offers its Visual Compute Accelerator through partners, and these cards put three Iris Pro enabled processors from the last generation on a single 225W PCIe card. These can be added into any system similar to GPUs or MICs, making it platform agnostic. The focus of these cards is typically for the E5/E7 servers.


Also aimed at high density, but also for the lowest total cost of ownership, are the new E3-1500 v5 CPUs using second generation eDRAM and Iris Pro graphics with Skylake cores. With Intel Quick Sync integrated into the processor, Intel aims this as an HEVC streaming solution with new features.


At the top of the stack are the E5 and E7 processor lines, using multiple CPUs in a single system and extracting parallelism, focusing on high-quality video but at the highest cost. These can be bundled with the Visual Compute Accelerators to allow for high density when a mix of quality and HEVC-accelerated Quick Sync is needed.


The other half of today’s announcement revolves around virtualization. When a virtualized server uses the same hardware across multiple clients/users, typically a time-share slicing methodology is used to give each user a suitable amount of processor time. Depending on the capability of the hypervisor and the underlying hardware, there are limits to how much software can be used by all users at once, or who has access to specific hardware features. With the new generation of Skylake plus Iris Pro based Xeon E3-1500 v5 processors, Intel is supporting new Graphics Virtualization Technology (GVT) modes under Citrix XenServer 7.0 to start.



Previously, Intel’s Xeons with Iris Pro could support two GVT modes.


The first, GVT-s, allowed API virtualization such that multiple users could take advantage of the same software package on the same hardware. This could be applied in design studios all using the same application or web servers where multiple clients tap into the same API.


Second is GVT-d, giving direct control of all the resources to one user. This would adjust the time slicing effect such that one user would essentially own 100% of the CPU time, as if there were no virtualization in play. Typically this is something that might occur anyway when the other users are idle, however with assigned resources it allows certain VMs to elevate their hypervisor priority in the event of immediate processing power requests and makes the other VMs doing time insensitive work use less resources and extends their compute wall time.


The new element with Skylake Xeons with Iris Pro is GVT-g, or a shared platform between seven users on a single processor. This extends the first mode, GVT-s, to allow any user to use any application sufficient for the hardware. This is achieved through both driver and API virtualization, and comes with the Intel drivers at no extra cost. The first product to support the GVT-g mode will be Citrix XenServer 7.0, and we are told that others will follow.


There are some other features of the new processors not mentioned in Intel’s slide deck that we probed the company about. First is Skylake’s new Speed Shift feature, which allows an OS level driver to return the dynamic frequency/voltage scaling to the CPU which affords a faster frequency change (1-3 ms rather than 30-100 ms) for quicker immediate response and power saving. When used as a normal CPU without virtualization, these CPUs will support Quick Sync under Windows 10. However, in a virtualized environment, Speed Shift is not supported even if the OS in each VM does support it. Intel did not go into detail as to why this is the case, but it would seem that Speed Shift requires some extra hardware or software work for this instance.


Next up is the HEVC encoding requirements. We asked for Intel to clarify support for various HEVC modes, and we received the following:


  • HW HEVC Main 8b 4:2:0 (E3-1500 v5 only. This requires Intel MSS 2017)
  • GPU accelerated HEVC 10b 4:2:0 (Supported on E3-1200 v3, E3-1200 v4, and E3-1500 v5. Enabled with Intel MSS professional 2016+)
  • SW HEVC 10b 4:2:2 (Recommended for Intel® Xeon® processor E5 and E7 families. Enabled with Intel MSS professional 2016+)
  • You may use Media Server Studio 2016 R6 – Professional Edition that includes HEVC SW as well as GPU-accelerated. Check https://software.intel.com/en-us/intel-media-server-studio/details#professional for details.
  • HEVC full hardware on Linux requires Intel MSS 2017, which is in Engineering Release for ISVs and OEMs.

Alongside the E3-1500 v5 announcement, Intel is also announcing Media Studio Server 2016.



The press slide says it all: the package aims to be an optimized set of libraries for Iris Pro enabled CPUs with various OS support. OEMs and ISVs can obtain pre-release software, and it will have general availability in Q3 2016.


Back to the processors, and Intel has several partners who have developed or are developing systems around the new Skylake Xeons with Iris Pro graphics, including Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Supermicro, Kontron, ASRock Rack, Adlink and Artesyn. We expect these companies (and others) to make announcements over Q2 and Q3.


Analysis and Future Conjecture


A further note to add into the mix. It would seem that Intel is (at least in part of the product stack) dedicated to the Iris Pro strategy of bundling embedded DRAM with their CPU cores. We remember that a number of review websites and analysts were particularly praising about the commercial release of the Broadwell editions for consumers, and requested that Intel expand this program. Based on what we heard in this announcement, I feel (personal injection) that Intel will most likely keep eDRAM enabled parts in the embedded space, and particularly for Xeons, for the foreseeable future.


From a revenue and profit perspective, Intel’s goal is to sell high-end, high margin E5/E7 parts which can do similar things but cost up to 10x. By offering server level eDRAM parts at consumer prices when there is no competition in that space could drive potential customers for cheaper options, lowering Intel’s potential, and why we only see Iris Pro on quad core ECC-enabled processors at this time. There are a few Iris Pro enabled SKUs at the consumer space, but as mobile parts or for mini/all-in-one machines, rather than full blown gaming systems or workstations.


The Xeon E3-1500 line seems set to stay as the eDRAM and Iris Pro enabled parts, and it makes me wonder if that is how it will stay, or if Intel will migrate the eDRAM up to E5-2500 type parts in the extended future when it feels there is competition (either from other CPUs, FPGAs or GPUs). There’s also the angle of Intel’s acquisition of Altera, the FPGA company, which should mean that an FPGA-like structure should be an obvious feature in a future commercial core at some point, but at the minute Intel is keeping its cards close to its chest.


But for now, we are told that the embedded/BGA method for Iris Pro is the line we will see.





Source: AnandTech – Intel Announces Xeon E3-1500 v5: Iris Pro and eDRAM for Streaming Video

Is there a hidden quantum code that rules the Stock Market?

Recently, quantum gates and quantum circuits have been found when portfolios of stocks were simulated in quantum computation processes. This astonishing discover might be pointing out to the existence of a bizarre quantum code that rules the stock market transactions.



Source: TG Daily – Is there a hidden quantum code that rules the Stock Market?

MSI X99A Gaming Pro Carbon Broadwell-E Motherboard

MSI’s X99 refresh is here in time for Intel’s new Broadwell-E processors! We put the new processor through its paces and our MSI X99A Gaming Pro Carbon was the lucky winner that we chose to torture in order to determine it’s “Broadwell-E readiness.” Our time with the X99A Gaming Pro Carbon was filled with many surprises.

Source: [H]ardOCP – MSI X99A Gaming Pro Carbon Broadwell-E Motherboard

Qualcomm Launches New GigaDSL, 802.11ac Wave 2 Chipsets

At Computex today, Qualcomm Atheros announced a few new chipsets, and it seems that as a part of their Ikanos acquisition they’ve entered the wireline business in the hopes of solving capacity issues in the last mile. While fiber should be deployed where possible, in many cases it can be expensive and impractical to run fiber optic cable, such as older apartment complexes. As a result, a 10 Gbps connection can turn into a 100 Mbps connection when using POTS lines for the last few hundred meters depending upon channel conditions and run length.


G.fast or GigaDSL attempts to bridge the gap here by using techniques like self far-end crosstalk cancellation and significantly increased transmission bandwidth to significantly improve channel utilization of existing POTS lines, and the QCO5700 and QCM5720 use these technologies to try and improve bandwidth at the last hundred meters. Unlike previously launched chipsets, these are really designed to enable drop-in replacement for existing VDSL equipment, and are squarely targeted at Asian ISPs that generally have an all-fiber network but may only have POTS in a building. The QCO5700 is designed for multiple dwelling deployments like apartment buildings, while QCM5720 is designed for customer premises equipment and both chipsets can support up to 1Gbps while coexisting with existing services that may also be using the POTS line.


The other notable announcement here is on Atheros’ traditional wireless business, and as a part of trying to get better connectivity for the last few feet in the home. While MU-MIMO is nothing new at this point, QCA is releasing a new tri-radio platform for routers the QCA9886 2×2 802.11ac radio. With three radios, a single router with an IPQ40x9 SoC will be able to support simultaneous 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and a third 5 GHz radio for range extender use.


The new GigaDSL chipsets should begin sampling in June, and companies like Sumitomo Electronics, NEC, and Wave Electronics are designing or building products that will utilize the QCO5700 and QCM5720. The new QCA9886 is already sampling to vendors, and should be in routers in the near future.




Source: AnandTech – Qualcomm Launches New GigaDSL, 802.11ac Wave 2 Chipsets

ZOTAC MAGNUS EN980 Detailed – A SFF VR-Ready PC with GeForce GTX 980

Several months ago, ZOTAC introduced its ZBOX MAGNUS EN980 PC featuring NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 980 Notebook GPU. It was positioned as one of the world’s smallest VR-Ready systems. This week, the company disclosed the final specifications of the machine, and also gave some insight into the internal layout. The dimensions of the MAGNUS EN980 are larger compared to its predecessors. However, its performance should indeed be enough for modern VR games.


The ZOTAC ZBOX MAGNUS EN980 is equipped with an Intel Core i5-6400 processor (4C/4T, 2.7 GHz/3.3 GHz, 6 MB LLC cache, 65 W TDP) as well as a custom LGA1151 motherboard with two slots for DDR3L-1600 memory. NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 980 4 GB Notebook module, one M.2-2280 slot for a SATA SSD, a SATA connector, two Gigabit Ethernet controllers, a 802.11ac Wi-Fi / BT 4.0 module and a USB 3.1 controller make up the other important features. Zotac plans to launch three different versions – a barebones with just the CPU and GPU installed, a PLUS version with 8GB of DDR3-L and a 120GB M.2 SSD / 1TB 2.5″ HDD without OS, and a WINDOWS edition similar to the PLUS, but, with Windows 10 Home pre-installed.


















ZOTAC ZBOX MAGNUS EN980 Specifications
    ZBOX MAGNUS EN980 ZBOX MAGNUS EN980

PLUS
ZBOX MAGNUS EN980

WINDOWS
CPU Intel Core i5-6400 (4 cores, 2.7 GHz/3.30 GHz, 6 MB LLC)
PCH unknown
Graphics NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980 Notebook:

2048 stream processors

128 texture units

64 ROP

256-bit memory interface

4 GB of GDDR5 memory
Memory Two SO-DIMM slots, up to 16 GB of DDR3L-1600 8 GB of DDR3L
Storage One M.2 slot for SSDs

One SATA connector for 2.5″ SSD or HDD
120 GB M.2 SSD

1 TB 2.5″ HDD
Wi-Fi 802.11ac + BT 4.0
Ethernet Two Gigabit Ethernet with RJ45 connector
Display Outputs 2 HDMI (2.0?),

2 DisplayPort 1.2
Audio 3.5 mm audio in and audio out
USB 4 USB 3.0 Type-A (5 Gbps)

1 USB 3.1 Type-A (10 Gbps)

1 USB 3.1 Type-C (10 Gbps)
Other I/O 3-in-1 card reader (SD/SDHC/SDXC UHS II)
Dimensions 225 mm × 203 mm × 128 mm
PSU External, 2 × 180 W
OS Windows 10 Home

From a performance perspective, the MAGNUS EN980 should meet the minimum requirements that Oculus VR has set for games compatible with the Oculus Rift VR headset: it has a quad-core CPU along with NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 980 graphics card, which outperforms the AMD Radeon R9 290 and NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970 – the minimum graphics cards recommended by Oculus VR. In addition, the PC can support at least 3 TB of storage (1 TB SSD + 2 TB HDD) and officially supports 16 GB of DDR3L memory. Besides, the socketed nature of the CPU means that users can potentially upgrade it, if desired.



The MAGNUS EN980 system has a fine set of external ports, including two HDMI (2.0?), two DisplayPort 1.2, two GbE, four USB 3.0, one USB 3.1 Gen 2 Type-A and one USB 3.1 Gen 2 Type-C. In addition, the PC has a 3-in-1 card reader (SD/SDHC/SDXC UHS II). The GeForce GTX 980 Notebook should support HDMI 2.0, so it is likely that the ‘HDMI 1.4’ specified in the product brochure is a typo. The user manual (PDF) also mentions HDMI 2.0 support. In any case, the system does support four simultaneous display outputs.


Oculus Rift users will utilize three USB 3.0 receptacles as well as one HDMI port to connect their VR gear. Moreover, while the EN980 system is equipped with 3.5 mm audio in/out jacks, it does not have multi-channel analog audio outputs, which means that those, who would like to use 5.1/7.1 speaker systems will have to add a USB audio solution. As a result, some consumers might run out of USB ports, and might wanto to make use of a USB hub.



In terms of size, the MAGNUS EN980 (225 mm × 203 mm × 128 mm) seems to be comparable to typical mini-ITX systems and is clearly larger than any Intel NUC-like PCs, or ZOTAC’s own ZBOX computers. To cool down the GPU (145 W TDP) and the CPU (65 W), ZOTAC has invented a special liquid cooling system (which slightly resembles Corsair’s low-profile H5 SF, but is clearly a different device) with a huge radiator and massive (likely 140 mm) fan. This cooling system as well as the GeForce GTX 980 module are the two primary reasons why the EN980 is a relatively large computer. To feed the PC, two external 180 W power supplies are required, which is something new in the world of SFF PCs.



The new ZBOX MAGNUS EN980 PCs is being demonstrated at Computex 2016 and will hit the market in the coming weeks. Pricing is still unknown, but, given the high performance and usage of sophisticated components, the EN980 is going to cost more than its predecessors.





Source: AnandTech – ZOTAC MAGNUS EN980 Detailed – A SFF VR-Ready PC with GeForce GTX 980

GIGABYTE Aero 14: Thin Gaming Laptop with NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970M and 10-Hour Battery Life

GIGABYTE has introduced its new Aero 14 gaming laptop, which weds a relatively thin form-factor with high-performance components such as an Intel Skylake-H CPU, and a NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970M GPU, along with a high-resolution display and a  claim of a 10-hour battery life. The new notebooks are designed for those who would like to have decent performance in games, but who are not ready to sacrifice mobility for gaming.


The GIGABYTE Aero 14 is based on the Intel Core i7 H-series processor (four cores with Hyper-Threading technology, 6 MB LLC cache, 45 W TDP, dual-channel DDR4 memory controller, integrated Intel Gen9 graphics core) and is equipped with a 14” IPS display panel with a 2560×1440 resolution. The system can be equipped with the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 965M (1024 stream processors, 64 texture units, 32 raster operations pipelines) or the 970M (1280 SPs, 80 TUs, 48 ROPs) graphics adapters, up to 32 GB of DDR4 memory (using two 16 GB SO-DIMMs) as well as two SSDs in M.2 form-factor (with PCIe 3.0 x2 interface). For some reason, GIGABYTE decided not to reveal exact details regarding things like Wi-Fi as well as the amount of VRAM, but it is natural to expect the PC of this class to feature 802.11ac.



In a bid to make the system even friendlier to gamers, GIGABYTE included a keyboard featuring five programmable keys to simplify input of complex key combinations. Other I/O capabilities of GIGABYTE’s Aero 14 include one USB 3.1 Type-C receptacle, three USB 3.0 ports, a TRRS audio connector, a SD card reader, an HD webcam, built-in speakers and microphones as well as an HDMI 2.0 and an mDP display output.



The Aero 14 comes in a full aluminum chassis, though, we are not dealing with a unibody design here. GIGABYTE offers three color options for the display lid, with black, green and orange to emphasize gaming nature of the device.


Despite of rather powerful hardware inside, the Aero 14 boasts with a 10-hour battery life (obviously, when the integrated graphics core is used), which is in-line with that of modern business notebooks. To make such long battery life possible, GIGABYTE integrated a 94.24 WHr lithium-ion polymer accumulator into its gaming laptop. The Aero 14 is 19.9 mm thick and weighs 1.89 kilograms, making it one of the lightest and thinnest notebooks with gaming-grade hardware inside.



The Aero 14 from GIGABYTE will, among other products, compete against Razer’s Blade, which is also relatively thin (17.9 mm) and sports a 14” display. When compared to the Aero, the Razer Blade has a higher resolution 3200×1800 display, slimmer chassis, as well as Thunderbolt 3 support. However, GIGABYTE’s machine has larger battery, potentially more DDR4 memory (because the Blade uses soldered down DRAM and cannot be upgraded), potentially higher amount of storage (thanks to two M.2 slots) as well programmable keys.


Exact pricing of GIGABYTE’s Aero 14 will depend on actual configuration, but typically, gaming machines from the company are not overpriced.





Source: AnandTech – GIGABYTE Aero 14: Thin Gaming Laptop with NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970M and 10-Hour Battery Life

ASUS Announces Transformer 3 Pro: 2-in-1 with Core i5/i7

Not to be outdone on the subject of 2-in-1s today, ASUS has announced a second 2-in-1 to complement the newly announced Transformer 3. Dubbed the Transformer 3 Pro, this portable is a more direct competitor to Microsoft’s popular Surface Pro lineup.











ASUS Transformer 3 Series
  Transformer 3 Transformer 3 Pro
Processor Core M? (Kaby Lake) Core i5/Core i7 (Skylake)
Memory Up To 8GB LPDDR3 Up To 16GB LPDDR3
Display 12.6″ 2880×1920
Storage Up To 512GB Up To 1TB, PCIe x4
Connectivity USB Type-C, 3.1 Gen 2

w/Thunderbolt 3

3.5mm Audio Jack
USB Type-C, 3.1 Gen 2

w/Thunderbolt 3

HDMI

USB Typa-A, 3.0

MicroSD

3.5mm Audio Jack
Dimensions ? x ? x 6.9mm 299 x 210 x 8.35 mm
Pricing Starting At $799 Starting At $999

Although the standard Transformer 3 is not necessary a budget option, of the two Transformers it is the cheaper one, utilizing what’s likely a Core M processor and having all-around weaker specifications. However for users that need more processing power (Core i5/i7), more storage (Up to 1TB, PCIe), more RAM (up to 16GB), and more connectivity (HDMI, USB Type-A, MicroSD) the Pro offers all of this in a slightly thicker form factor. The Transformer 3 Pro also brings over the rest of the feature set offered by the base Transformer 3, including a USB Type-C port with Thunderbolt 3 connectivity, and a 12.6″ 2880×1920 screen.



The higher specifications – particularly the use of an Intel Core i5 or i7 processor – puts it in direct competition with Microsoft’s Surface Pro. And at 8.35mm thick, I’m curious how the cooling system on the Pro compares to what Microsoft has done, as putting a 15W CPU in such a thin form factor is by no means an easy feat.


Finally, like its Core M based sibling, ASUS has not yet announced a shipping date for the Transformer 3 Pro. But a starting price has been announced, with the Pro starting at $999.





Source: AnandTech – ASUS Announces Transformer 3 Pro: 2-in-1 with Core i5/i7

Acer Unveils Switch V10 and Switch One 10: 2-in-1s for $199 – $249

Acer has introduced two new affordable 2-in-1 hybrid PCs ahead of Computex trade show. Both systems are based on Intel’s quad-core Atom processors, feature 10” multi-touch IPS displays and run Microsoft Windows 10. The new Switch V10 and Switch One computers from Acer will be available next quarter and will cost $199 – $249 in North America.


Sales of hybrid 2-in-1 hybrid computers are growing rapidly these days, particularly in well-developed countries. Last year Intel said that shipments of 2-in-1 PCs (which it calls convertibles) were up 1.5 times year-over-year in North America and this year Intel expects this growth to continue, making the product category an interesting target for system builders. Since many people these days would like to have convenience of a tablet (e.g., compact sizes, touchscreen, etc.), but would like to retain physical keyboard, 2-in-1s are a way to go for PC makers, particularly in the entry-level segment as there are only a few convertibles on the market today. The new Acer Switch V10 and Switch One PCs will be among the first low-cost 2-in-1s, when they hit the market in Q3.


Both Switch V10 and Switch One systems are based on quad-core Intel Atom processors (four Airmont cores, 2 MB cache, 1.44 GHz and higher clock-rates, built-in Gen8 Intel HD Graphics core with 12 or 16 execution units, 2 W TDP, etc.) and will feature 10” multi-touch displays with IPS panels and unknown resolution (given the prices, it is likely 1366×768). The two convertibles use Acer’s Snap latch-less magnetic hinge design and can be used in various modes, including notebook, tablet and tent. It is unclear whether the two PCs actually share the same common platform, but it certainly seems so.



The Acer Switch V10 (SW3-017) is a more advanced of the two convertibles introduced by the company as it seems to be a little slimmer, it comes with five colorful metal covers of white, black, aquamarine, red, and dark blue, and has a fingerprint reader on the back. The display of this 2-in-1 hybrid notebook is covered by Antimicrobial Corning Gorilla Glass, which protects the panel and has a special antimicrobial agent, which promises to protect against a variety microorganisms. The device comes with 32 or 64 GB of solid-state storage, front- and back-facing cameras as well as dual-band MIMO 802.11ac Wi-Fi. Besides, the convertible also features a USB Type-C port, which is used for data transfer at likely USB 3.0 speeds, video output and charging.



Out-of-the-box, the Acer Switch V10 comes with a slim keyboard, but those, who need additional 500 GB of storage and two USB Type-A ports will be able to buy an appropriate accessory from Acer. The price of this accessory is unknown.


The Acer Switch V10 will be available in North America in Q3 starting at $249 and will reach EMEA and China (starting at ¥2,599) in September and August, respectively.


Gallery: Acer Switch V10


Next up is the Acer Switch One 10 (SW1-011), which is basic solution that features a dark grey brushed-metal cover and a little thicker design compared to the Switch V10. The device naturally integrates everything one would expect from a convertible, including flash storage, Wi-Fi, front- and back-facing cameras, a micro-SD card reader, USB ports, an HDMI output and so on.



Being aimed at kids and price-conscious buyers, the Acer Switch One 10 is set to cost $199 in North America and €249 in EMEA, when it is available in these regions in July. In China, the product will cost ¥2,299, starting from September.



Back in April, Intel introduced its new Apollo Lake platform for low-cost PC, which supports a number of tablet-oriented features (e.g., solder down Wi-Fi, eMMC, MIPI interface for camera) and could be used to build a variety of products, including convertibles, notebooks and tablets. Therefore, expect other PC makers to follow Acer with low-cost 2-in-1 designs later this year.





Source: AnandTech – Acer Unveils Switch V10 and Switch One 10: 2-in-1s for 9 – 9

ARM Unveils Next Generation Bifrost GPU Architecture & Mali-G71: The New High-End Mali

Amidst the backdrop of Computex 2016 and alongside their new Cortex-A73 CPU, ARM is announcing their next generation GPU architecture, Bifrost. A significant update to ARM’s GPU architecture, Bifrost will first be deployed in ARM’s Mali-G71 GPU.

Today we’re taking a look at the Bifrost architecture and Mali-G71 to better understand the changes ARM has made. With a shift over from an ILP-centric design to a TLP-centric design, Bifrost marks a major change in ARM’s GPU architecture, and will help ARM prepare its GPUs for future graphics and compute workloads.



Source: AnandTech – ARM Unveils Next Generation Bifrost GPU Architecture & Mali-G71: The New High-End Mali

NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070 Founders Edition Preview

The second video card in the NVIDIA next generation Pascal GPU architecture is finally here, we will explore the GeForce GTX 1070 Founders Edition video card. In this limited preview today we will look at performance in comparison to GeForce GTX 980 Ti and Radeon R9 Fury X as well as some preview overclocking.

Source: [H]ardOCP – NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070 Founders Edition Preview