Pixel 2 Pre-Orders Doubled Year-Over-Year According To Google CEO Sundar Pinchai

Pixel 2 Pre-Orders Doubled Year-Over-Year According To Google CEO Sundar Pinchai
There is something to be said from ordering an Android device with Google’s own branding. For one, you do not have to worry about a bunch of third-party junk being pre-installed and custom overlays—Google phones deliver an unadulterated Android experience. You also get immediate access to new Android builds. Those perks help to drive sales

Source: Hot Hardware – Pixel 2 Pre-Orders Doubled Year-Over-Year According To Google CEO Sundar Pinchai

Intel Delivers Blowout Q3 Earnings Despite AMD Ryzen Insurgency, Shows Strong Data Center Growth

Intel Delivers Blowout Q3 Earnings Despite AMD Ryzen Insurgency, Shows Strong Data Center Growth
Intel’s semi-pivot from a PC-centric operation to one that is focused on the data center is paying off, and in a big way. The Santa Clara chipmaker announced record earnings per share of $0.94 during the third quarter, a 36 percent jump versus the same quarter a year ago. It also collected $16.1 billion in revenue en route to a $4.5 million

Source: Hot Hardware – Intel Delivers Blowout Q3 Earnings Despite AMD Ryzen Insurgency, Shows Strong Data Center Growth

Apple iPhone X Preorder Deliveries Slip To 6 Weeks, Best Buy Tacks On Bogus $100 Upcharge

Apple iPhone X Preorder Deliveries Slip To 6 Weeks, Best Buy Tacks On Bogus $100 Upcharge
Earlier this morning at 12:01 AM PST, Apple opened up pre-orders for the highly anticipated iPhone X. But as is often the case with a new Apple flagship, actually securing one for delivery on launch day was difficult for some customers. The online Apple Store and the Apple Store app were inaccessible for some fans for extended periods of time,

Source: Hot Hardware – Apple iPhone X Preorder Deliveries Slip To 6 Weeks, Best Buy Tacks On Bogus 0 Upcharge

American Women and Their Dogs Rescued After Being Stranded at Sea for Five Months in Shark-Infested Waters

Two American women and their dogs have been rescued after spending nearly 5 months stranded on the Pacific Ocean surrounded by sharks. Jennifer Appel and Tasha Fuiava set off for Tahiti on May 3rd, but suffered engine failure and even a broken mast. To make matters worse, their phone fell overboard on the first day.

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – American Women and Their Dogs Rescued After Being Stranded at Sea for Five Months in Shark-Infested Waters

ADATA Launches XPG SX6000 SSDs: 3D TLC, M.2, 512GB for $145

ADATA has launched its new 3D TLC-based SSD, the XPG SX6000. The new drive is among the first in the industry to use Realtek’s RTS5760 controller. The manufacturer positions the XPG SX6000 SSD as an entry-level enthusiast-class PCIe x2 solution that will be affordable but will offer higher performance than the drives featuring the SATA interface.


The market of SSD controllers (unlike the market of the drives) is not very crowded, but it is still very hard to enter. Many SSD suppliers these days either use proven solutions from well-known controller designs or simply tweak turnkey designs (from Phison, Silicon Motion, etc.). Realtek announced its first generation of SSD controllers in mid-2016, but so far, no one has adopted these ICs. SSD vendors need to test how well they work with the memory they have, and since the industry is in transition to 3D NAND, sometimes they just prefer to go with proven controllers. Being one of the largest independent makers of drives, ADATA is usually among the first to adopt the latest types of memory as well as experiment with new controllers. Earlier this year the company released a lineup of SSDs featuring controllers from Maxiotek and this month it is releasing the first drives based on Realtek’s RTS5760.


ADATA has released three families of 3D NAND-based XPG-branded M.2 drives over the past several quarters: the SX7000, the SX8000 and the SX9000. The XPG SX6000 lineup complements the existing families and is aimed at the entry level of the market: it features the PCIe 3.0 x2 interface and is meant to replace SATA-based drives inside PCs for gamers with budget constraints. The interface is the limitation of the Realtek RTS5760 controller (four NAND channels, 8 CEs, PCIe 3.0 x2, NVMe 1.2, SLC caching, DRAM cache buffer support, etc.), but its performance should be enough for the particular storage devices.


ADATA’s XPG SX6000 family of drives includes 128 GB, 256 GB, 512 GB and 1 TB models. The manufacturer claims that the drives featuring 256 GB and higher capacities offer up to 1000 MB/s sequential read speed as well as up to 800 MB/s sequential write speed. As for random performance, we are dealing with SSDs capable of 100K/110K random read/write IOPS. For those who would like to ensure high performance under high loads, ADATA will ship a heatsink in the box with the drives. When it comes to endurance and reliability, ADATA rates the 1 TB version of the XPG SX6000 for 600 TBW, two million hours MTBF and covers them with a five-year warranty.



















ADATA XPG SX6000 Specifications
Capacity 128 GB 256 GB 512 GB 1 TB
Model Number ASX6000NP-

128GT-C
ASX6000NP-

256GT-C
ASX6000NP-

512GT-C
ASX6000NP-

1TT-C
Controller Realtek RTS5760
NAND Flash 3D TLC NAND
Form-Factor, Interface M.2-2280, PCIe 3.0 x2, NVMe 1.2
Sequential Read 730 MB/s 1000 MB/s
Sequential Write 660 MB/s 800 MB/s
Random Read IOPS 65K IOPS 100K IOPS
Random Write IOPS 110K IOPS 110K IOPS
Pseudo-SLC Caching Supported
DRAM Buffer Yes, capacity unknown
TCG Opal Encryption No
Power Management Unknown
Warranty 5 years
MTBF 2,000,000 hours
MSRP $50 $85 $145 Unknown

ADATA does not disclose what kind of 3D TLC NAND it uses for the XPG SX6000, but given the fact that the company is using a new controller, it would probably opt for familiar memory. That said, it is highly likely that ADATA uses Micron’s 32-layer 3D TLC NAND, but that is something the company has not confirmed yet.



ADATA plans to start sales of the new XPG SX6000 drives with 128 GB, 256 GB and 512 GB capacity in the coming weeks at Amazon and Newegg. Other regions and the 1 TB model will follow. As for pricing, the entry-level model costs $50, whereas the 512 GB version is priced at $145.



Related Reading




Source: AnandTech – ADATA Launches XPG SX6000 SSDs: 3D TLC, M.2, 512GB for 5

PCI Express 4.0 Specs Released Doubling Bi-Directional Bandwidth To 64GB/s

PCI Express 4.0 Specs Released Doubling Bi-Directional Bandwidth To 64GB/s
The PCI standards group PCI-SIG (Special Interest Group) comprised of AMD, Intel, NVIDIA, and other technology bigwigs announced it has finalized the specifications for the PCI Express 4.0 standard. It has previously announced in June at the group’s DevCon event that the spec was feature complete and undergoing review. Now several months later

Source: Hot Hardware – PCI Express 4.0 Specs Released Doubling Bi-Directional Bandwidth To 64GB/s

LG V30 Review: Setting The Record Straight For A Great Smartphone

LG V30 Review: Setting The Record Straight For A Great Smartphone
If there’s a sleeper phone that’s been on our radar for a while here, it’s the LG V30. LG has been teasing this phone for what seems like an eternity. We actually got our first hands-on time with it a couple of months ago in August. However, LG has been conservative with its last couple of handset roll-outs, taking the same preview tease approach…

Source: Hot Hardware – LG V30 Review: Setting The Record Straight For A Great Smartphone

Ethereum + OpenCL Benchmarks With The Latest AMDGPU-PRO Mining & NVIDIA Linux Drivers

Last week AMD released a new AMDGPU-PRO driver aimed for cryptocurrency mining that is their first release in the new v17.40 series. This new driver also allows adjusting the fragment size for increased performance and at least for mining yields a big performance boost. Here are some fresh benchmarks on multiple Radeon graphics cards using 17.40 with the amdgpu vm_fragment_size set for 2MB compared to the latest NVIDIA 387 Linux graphics driver on various GeForce GPUs.

Source: Phoronix – Ethereum + OpenCL Benchmarks With The Latest AMDGPU-PRO Mining & NVIDIA Linux Drivers

Intel Optane SSD 900P Series Leverages 3D XPoint Memory For Blazing Fast Performance

Intel Optane SSD 900P Series Leverages 3D XPoint Memory For Blazing Fast Performance
We have been hearing a lot about 3D XPoint memory (now called Optane) over the past couple of years, and more recently we have seen some related products emerge, including a PCIe-based solid state drive for enterprise clients, the Intel Optane SSD DC P4800X. Intel today is following that up with the Optane SSD 900P Series, a new SSD line that

Source: Hot Hardware – Intel Optane SSD 900P Series Leverages 3D XPoint Memory For Blazing Fast Performance

AI Inspired By Human Visual Cortex Demolishes Annoying CAPTCHA Prompts

AI Inspired By Human Visual Cortex Demolishes Annoying CAPTCHA Prompts
If you spend any amount of time on the Internet, you have certainly run across CAPTCHA on a few occasions. CAPTCHA is the security device that forces you to read squiggly words and type them into the box to prove you are a person and not a spamming robot sent from the future to troll forums and steal all of our memes. The schtick for CAPTCHA

Source: Hot Hardware – AI Inspired By Human Visual Cortex Demolishes Annoying CAPTCHA Prompts

First Extrasolar Object Observed Racing Through Our Solar System

Enigma2175 writes: For the first time, scientists have observed an object they believe came from outside our solar system. The object is in a hyperbolic orbit that will send it back into interstellar space. From Space.com: “The object, known as A/2017 U1, was detected last week by researchers using the Pan-STARRS 1 telescope in Hawaii. ‘It’s long been theorized that such objects exist — asteroids or comets moving around between the stars and occasionally passing through our solar system — but this is the first such detection,’ Chodas added. ‘So far, everything indicates this is likely an interstellar object, but more data would help to confirm it.’ It’s unclear what exactly this thing is. When A/2017 U1 was first spotted, it was thought to be a comet (and was therefore given the moniker C/2017 U1). But further observations have revealed no evidence of a coma — the fuzzy cloud of gas and dust surrounding a comet’s core — so the object’s name was amended to its current asteroidal designation.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – First Extrasolar Object Observed Racing Through Our Solar System