Alienware Announces AW3418DW and AW3418HW Ultra-Wide Curved Displays

Among their many IFA announcements this week, Dell’s Alienware group has introduced two ultra-large displays aimed at gamers. The monitors measure 34” in diagonal and feature refresh rates of over 100 Hz. In accordance with the recent industrial trends, the monitors feature NVIDIA’s G-Sync dynamic refresh rate technology, AlienFX RGB lighting, and thin bezels.


The Alienware AW3418DW will be the company’s new flagship IPS-based display boasting with a 3440×1440 resolution, a 120 Hz refresh rate (when overclocked), a 4 ms GtG response time, a 1900R curvature, 178°/178° vertical/horizontal viewing angles and NVIDIA’s G-Sync technology. When it comes to brightness, contrast and color accuracy, we are dealing with rather typical specifications for this class of monitors — 300 nits brightness, a 1000:1 contrast ratio and 99% of the sRGB coverage. As for connectivity, the display has one DisplayPort 1.2 and one HDMI 1.4 input, a quad-port USB 3.0 hub (with one upstream port) as well as 3.5-mm audio connectors. The Alienware AW3418DW is available immediately and carries a $1,499 price tag.



From outer design point of view, the Alienware AW3418HW haa a lot of similarities with the more advanced AW3418DW: it has the same diagonal size, AlienFX RGB lighting, cable management, a die cast metal stand and so on. Under the hood however, the lower cost 34” curved display is completely different from its more advanced brother. The AW3418HW has a 2560×1080 resolution, a 160 Hz refresh rate (when overclocked) with G-Sync treatment, a 4 ms response time and a 3800R curvature. Given a lower resolution, the AW3418HW will be significantly cheaper than the AW3418DW — it is going to cost $1,199 when it becomes available later this holiday season.























Alienware’s 34″ Curved Displays
  AW3418DW AW3418HW
Panel 34″ IPS 34″
Native Resolution 3440 × 1440 2560 × 1080
Maximum Refresh Rate 120 Hz overclocked 160 Hz overclocked
Response Time 4 ms
Brightness 300 cd/m² unknown
Contrast 1000:1
Viewing Angles 178°/178° horizontal/vertical unknown
Curvature 1900R 3800R
Pixel Pitch 0.233 mm 0.31 mm
Pixel Density 109 ppi 81.72 PPI
Anti-Glare Coating Yes
Color Gamut 99% sRGB unknown
Dynamic Refresh Rate NVIDIA G-Sync
Inputs 1 × DP 1.2

1× HDMI 1.4
unknown
USB Hub 4-port USB 3.0 hub,

one USB Type-B upstream port
Audio audio in/out ports
Power Consumption Idle: 0.5 W

Typical: 60 W
unknown
RGB Lighting AlienFX programmable RGB LED lighting
Launch Price $1499.99 $1199.99

The new ultra-wide 34” monitors from Alienware will complement the company’s 25” display it announced earlier this year. As it appears, the company sees demand for screens designed specifically for gaming, which is why it is expanding the lineup. It is evident that when designing its displays Alienware focuses primarily on features important for gamers: maximum refresh rate with dynamic refresh support, curvature, but not high resolution per se. Such approach makes a great sense because not every gamer has a graphics card that has enough processing horsepower to run the latest games in a 4K resolution (or similar) at 120 – 160 Hz, which is why the monitors like AW3418DW and AW3418HW have all chances to become popular among those who spend a lot of time playing games.



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Source: AnandTech – Alienware Announces AW3418DW and AW3418HW Ultra-Wide Curved Displays

China Plans 600 MPH Train To Rival Elon Musk's Hyperloop

In addition to relaunching the world’s fastest bullet train, China is working on developing technology similar to Elon Musk’s Hyperloop, which will allow passengers to travel at speeds up to 4,000 km/h (~2,500 mph). The first stage of the company’s plan, however, will be to create a network of these “flying trains” operating at 1,000 km/h (~600 mph). Shanghaiist reports: Earlier today, the China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation (CASIC), one of the nation’s major space contractors, announced that it had begun research and development into a new, futuristic type of transport which would operate via supersonic “near ground flight.” The system would presumably be similar to that of the Hyperloop, proposed earlier this decade by Elon Musk, in which capsules would fly at ultrafast speeds down reduced-pressure tubes, dramatically reducing travel times. Of course, the CASIC isn’t looking to reach speeds of 4,000 km/h right away. The first stage of the company’s plan will be to create an intercity network of these “flying trains” operating at 1,000 km/h. In the second phase, this network would be extended and the max speed of the pods increased to 2,000 km/h. Finally, in the third stage, the speed would be boosted all the way up to 4,000 km/h — five times the speed of civil aviation aircraft today.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – China Plans 600 MPH Train To Rival Elon Musk’s Hyperloop

Oh Wow: Game Of Thrones Sculptures Carved Into The Tip Of Pencil Leads

game-of-thrones-pencil-lead-art.jpg

This is a series of teensy tiny Game Of Thrones sculptures meticulously carved from the tips of pencil leads by artist Salavat Fidai using “an ordinary craft knife, a magnifying glass, and a microscope to add tiny details.” Very impressive. Unless of course this is all just computer graphics or the pencils are actually the size of the pen you would use to sign one of those giant checks if you won the lottery. Man, I’ve always wanted one of those checks so bad. You’ve never seen a sad person holding one of those big checks before, have you? Well I’ll be the first.

Keep going for a whole bunch more.

Source: Geekologie – Oh Wow: Game Of Thrones Sculptures Carved Into The Tip Of Pencil Leads

Robots are now better at targeting individual neurons than people are

The brain is a delicate thing, and scientists keep looking for high tech ways to make it easier and safer to to learn more about it. In the area of brain surgery, there have been smart scalpels that know the difference between tumors and healthy tiss…

Source: Engadget – Robots are now better at targeting individual neurons than people are

That Ballistic Missile North Korea Fired Over Japan Was The First, But Probably Won't Be The Last

On Tuesday morning (local time), North Korea fired a missile that flew over Japan, an intermediate range ballistic missile known as a Hwasong-12, the same type the country threatened to fire at Guam earlier this month. Air raid sirens and emergency broadcasts blared from speakers across Japanese cities warning that a…

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Source: Gizmodo – That Ballistic Missile North Korea Fired Over Japan Was The First, But Probably Won’t Be The Last

If Grandma Has a Pacemaker, Please Take Her in For a Firmware Update

The Food and Drug Administration announced today that 465,000 pacemakers installed in the US have a security vulnerability that could be exploited to make the device operate too quickly or deplete its batteries, and these devices need firmware updates to keep them from getting hacked.

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Source: Gizmodo – If Grandma Has a Pacemaker, Please Take Her in For a Firmware Update

Bykski Threadripper Waterblock Arrives

I finally got a package today that has been on a slow boat from China. The Bykski waterblock for our Threadripper CPU is stunning to look at. This is the model A-Ryzen-TH-X.


To give you an idea on dimensions, that is an SSD sitting on top of it.


It is a bit different in design than our XSPC RayStorm we have been using. I hope to be getting into some comparisons on temp and overclocking this week now that I have gotten my test bench all put back together with the new XSPC RX480 cooling kit.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Bykski Threadripper Waterblock Arrives

Astronomers use AI to reduce analysis time from months to seconds

Gravitational lensing is when the image of a distant object in space — like a galaxy, for example — is distorted and multiplied by the gravity of a massive object, such as a galaxy cluster, lying in front of the smaller, faraway object. It’s a usef…

Source: Engadget – Astronomers use AI to reduce analysis time from months to seconds

Killer Ants Snap Their Spring-Loaded Jaws 700 Times Faster Than You Can Blink

Below the tangle of vines and branches of the East Malaysian rainforest, a small contingent of ants scuttles frenetically along the shaded leaf litter. But these are no mere picnic pests—these are Myrmoteras trap-jaw ants, fearsome predators armed with long, spiky, widely-agape mandibles—and they are on the hunt.…

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Source: Gizmodo – Killer Ants Snap Their Spring-Loaded Jaws 700 Times Faster Than You Can Blink

Kansas City Was First To Embrace Google Fiber, Now Its Broadband Future Is 'TBD'

Five years after the opportunity arose in 2011 for Kansas City to become the first community to pilot Google Fiber, expansion of the gigabit per second service has come to a screeching halt. Kaleigh Rogers from Motherboard writes about how Kansas City’s broadband future is “to be determined.” From the report: Thousands of customers in KC who had pre-registered for guaranteed service when Fiber made it to their neighborhood were given their money back earlier this year, and told they may never get hooked up. Fiber cycled through two CEOs in the last 10 months, lost multiple executives, and has started laying off employees. Plans to expand Fiber to eight other American cities halted late last year, leaving the fate of the project up in the air. I recently asked Rachel Hack Merlo, the Community Manager for Google Fiber in Kansas City, about the future of the expanding the project service there, and she told me it was “TBD.” Kansas City expected to become Google’s glittering example of a futuristic gig-city: Half a decade later, there are examples of how Fiber benefitted KC, and stories about how it fell short. Thousands of customers will likely never get the chance to access the infrastructure they rallied behind, and many communities are still without any broadband access at all. Many are now left wondering: is that it?

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Kansas City Was First To Embrace Google Fiber, Now Its Broadband Future Is ‘TBD’

Uber’s Embattled Ex-CEO Finally Passes The Torch

Uber held an all-hands meeting on Wednesday to welcome its new CEO, Dara Khosrowshahi. The new hire was joined by board member Arianna Huffington and former CEO Travis Kalanick in what was mostly a drama-free induction of the new leader to the company—a company that Khosrowshahi claims he will take public in as few as…

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Source: Gizmodo – Uber’s Embattled Ex-CEO Finally Passes The Torch

The Concourse I’m So Glad Jared And Ivanka Are Miserable In Washington D.C. | The Muse Oh Cute, the

The Concourse I’m So Glad Jared And Ivanka Are Miserable In Washington D.C. | The Muse Oh Cute, the New York Times Is Endorsing Cultural Appropriation | Splinter Joel Osteen Says He Didn’t Open His Church for Shelter From Harvey Because Nobody Asked Him To | The Root Disturbing Video Shows Wash. State Sheriff’s…

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Source: LifeHacker – The Concourse I’m So Glad Jared And Ivanka Are Miserable In Washington D.C. | The Muse Oh Cute, the

Samsung’s New Water-Resistant Wearables Will Get You Laughed Out of the Pool

Not content just to let the Galaxy Note 8 make waves, Samsung is pushing out three new fitness minded wearables this holiday season: the Gear Icon X 2018 wireless earbuds, the Gear Sport smartwatch and the Gear Fit 2 Pro fitness band.

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Source: Gizmodo – Samsung’s New Water-Resistant Wearables Will Get You Laughed Out of the Pool

AT&T absurdly claims that most “legitimate” net neutrality comments favor repeal

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | ljhimages)

Despite a study showing that 98.5 percent of individually-written net neutrality comments support the US’s current net neutrality rules, AT&T is claiming that the vast majority of “legitimate” comments favor repealing the rules.

The Federal Communication Commission’s net neutrality docket is a real mess, with nearly 22 million comments, mostly from form letters and many from spam bots using identities stolen from data breaches. AT&T is part of an industry group called Broadband for America that just funded a study that tries to find trends within the chaos.

As we wrote earlier today, that study (conducted by consulting firm Emprata) found fewer than 1.6 million filings appear to have “originated from individuals that took the time to type a personalized comment.” Of those, 1.52 million were against FCC Chairman Ajit Pai’s plan to repeal the current Title II net neutrality rules, while just 23,000 were in favor of repeal.

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Source: Ars Technica – AT&T absurdly claims that most “legitimate” net neutrality comments favor repeal

Lightning Strikes, Destroys Tree In Front Of Guys Filming, They Go Nuts

Note: Colorful language, like a beautiful rainbow.

This is a video of Oliver filming a storm from a screened porch when lightning strikes and destroys a large pine right outside, dropping its whole top half on the building below. Oliver and his friend go absolutely nuts. Also, I’m pretty sure that building is going to need some roof repair. Call me, I know a guy. “Are you that guy?” Yes, I am that guy. “And you’re licensed and insured to repair roofs?” Whoa whoa whoa — licensed and insured? I’m fixing a roof, not driving a car. “So that’s a no?” That’s an absolute no, that shit costs money and I’m totally cool packing my bags and skipping town.

Keep going for the video, but there’s no need to watch the entire 9 minutes after the strike unless you’re really, really bored. The two guys going nuts was a treat though.

Source: Geekologie – Lightning Strikes, Destroys Tree In Front Of Guys Filming, They Go Nuts

Biggest X-Ray Laser Gun on Earth Opens in September

Even if you haven’t seen any James Bond films, you’re probably aware that the space laser battle depicted in Moonraker ranks among the stupidest scenes in the franchise’s history. But there’s a new laser gun in town that’s actually good and opening up for business. It is not a weapon.

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Source: Gizmodo – Biggest X-Ray Laser Gun on Earth Opens in September