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Mega Build!
28/08/2019

Mega Build!

Vikas MOre   Cooler MasterSamsung Dev Computers Ameetraje Nimbalkar THE MEGA BUILD .......! Fueled!
02/05/2019

Vikas MOre Cooler Master
Samsung Dev Computers Ameetraje Nimbalkar THE MEGA BUILD .......! Fueled!

Vikas MOre Ameetraje Nimbalkar Sangli News NetworkSBN marathiCooler Master G.SKILL AMD Gaming Samsung Global ASUS ASUS T...
14/04/2019

Vikas MOre Ameetraje Nimbalkar Sangli News NetworkSBN marathi
Cooler Master G.SKILL AMD Gaming Samsung Global ASUS ASUS Technology Pvt Ltd- India
A Mega Build......
Unboxing ! Assembling ! and Lots More
Coming Soon!

Be Tuned!

What does a hard drive do?Storage is the hard drive’s responsibility.Everything you keep on your computer is on ahard dr...
09/07/2014

What does a hard drive do?
Storage is the hard drive’s responsibility.
Everything you keep on your computer is on a
hard drive. Not just documents, pictures, music,
and videos. Your programs, your preferences,
even your operating system—they’re all stored
on your computer’s hard drive.
If your hard drive is damaged, you can lose it all.
That’s the sad truth. Which is why most people
have a backup system. They get another hard
drive and copy all their important files onto that.
How big of a hard drive do you need?
Everything that can be saved on a hard drive is
measured in terms of its size. Text is very small,
pictures are larger, music is even bigger, and
video is the biggest of the bunch.
A hard drive is like a scale. It doesn’t know the
difference between things that are on it; it only
knows their size. But instead of pounds, a hard
drive measures things in terms of megabytes
(MB), gigabytes (GB), and terabytes (TB.)
Roughly speaking, a megabyte is 1 million bytes,
a gigabyte is 1 billion bytes, and a terabyte is 1
trillion bytes.
So what does that mean for you?
If you need to transfer files between computers
or a drive to back up just some of your files, you
can get by with a smaller drive (such as a
500GB Expansion Drive ).
If you want to back up your entire computer, or
even several computers, or if you store a lot of
video and audio files, you’ll want a larger drive
(like a 1TB or larger Backup Plus Desktop Drive ).
Will your drive work with a PC or a
Mac?
Any Seagate drive works with either a PC or a
Mac. Some drives are already formatted to work
with one or the other. But any drive can be
reformatted to work with either type of computer.
IMPORTANT: If you reformat a drive, every single
file on that drive is erased. So make sure you
copy your files somewhere safe before you
reformat.
It’s more difficult to use the same drive on both a
PC and a Mac. The short answer is, they’re not
really compatible. The more detailed answer is
that, in a few specific circumstances, you can do
a few specific things. You can read about those
here.
What are the different types of hard drive
connections?
There are four basic ways to connect your hard
drive to your computer:
1. 1. USB
This is the most common connection type.
There’s no setup at all. Just plug it in. The
computer recognizes the drive, and you’re
able to read and save files almost instantly.
2. 2. Firewire
Plug-and-play like USB, Firewire 800 is
significantly faster, making it popular with
those transferring video files.
3. 3. SATA
This is the standard connection for internal
hard drives. Offers the highest file transfer
speeds of any format.
4. 4. eSATA
A less-common, high-performance
connection most commonly found in PCs.
An eSATA connection performs at speeds
that most closely resemble an internal
drive.
How important is hard drive speed?
When you start your computer, open a file, listen
to a song, or do just about anything else, you use
your hard drive. The discs inside the drive spin.
The faster they spin, the more quickly your
computer can find the file you want.
So a drive that’s 7200 rpm will be faster than
one that’s 5400 rpm. What that means for your
day-to-day use will vary. With external drives,
you’ll hardly notice a difference. With internal
drives, the difference will be slight with smaller
files and applications, but will be obvious with
larger files and applications.
Should you choose internal or external?
An internal drive provides built-in storage at top
speeds. An external drive gives you greater
flexibility and expanded storage whenever you
need it.
Each choice has its benefits and drawbacks.
Internal drives, like the Momentus XT , have to be
physically installed by opening up your computer
—something some people are hesitant to do. But
your files and programs are stored directly on
your computer; they’re always there whenever
you need them.
External drives are connected to your computer
via plug-in cables, like Backup Plus Portable , or
accessed over Wi-Fi, like Wireless Plus . This lets
you take files with you, transfer them to other
computers, or instantly add storage to your
computer or network without any technical
hurdles.
How much can I store?
Here are some averages to give an idea of what
you can store on which size drive.
Digital Music (MP3)
Digital Photos*
Digital Video
DVD-Quality Movies †
500 GB ††
8,330 hours
160,000
500 hours
125
1 TB
16,660 hours
320,000
1,000 hours
250
1.5 TB
24,990 hours
480,000
1,500 hours
375
2 TB
33,320 hours
640,000
2,000 hours
500
* Average file size using camera’s highest
resolution JPEG mode. The actual number of
images per HDD will vary and depends on the
camera model and compatibility of the scene
being photographed.
† 2-hour DVD-quality movies.
†† One gigabyte, or GB, equals one billion bytes
when referring to hard drive capacity. Accessible
capacity may vary depending on operating
environment and formatting. Quantitative usage
examples for various applications are for
illustrative purposes. Actual quantities will vary
based on various factors, including file size, file
format, features, and application software.

Cooler Master Announces Elite 130 Mini-ITX CaseSuccessor to last year’s Elite 120 features a full mesh front panelPC per...
31/08/2013

Cooler Master Announces Elite 130 Mini-ITX Case

Successor to last year’s Elite 120 features a full mesh front panel

PC peripheral maker Cooler Master on Tuesday announced the launch of a new case that it says improves upon last year’s Elite 120 Advanced mini-ITX chassis with a bunch of value added features. It is clear from its spec sheet that the Elite 130, as the just launched mini ITX case is called, is definitely a little more compact and slightly lighter than the Elite 120.

But the biggest difference seems to be the fact that the Elite 130 has a full mesh front panel, which allows for greater airflow. Staying on the topic of cooling, it ships with one 120mmx25mm front fan, which can be removed to make way for a 120mm water cooling radiator, and one 80x15mm side fan.

The Elite 130 supports graphics cards up to 343mm/13.5 inch in length, up to 5 x HDDs and/or SSDs and a full-sized power supply. The complete specs are thus:

Material: Polymer front mesh panel and steel alloy body
Dimension: 240 x 205 x 377.5 mm / 9.4 x 8.1 x 14.9 inch
Weight : 3.1 kg / 6.8 lbs
M/B Type: Mini-ITX
5.25" Drive Bay: 1
3.5" Drive Bay: 3 (1 from 5.25” drive bay)
SSD Bays: 4 (3 from 5.25" drive bays, 1 from the side bracket)
I/O Panel: USB 3.0 x 2, USB 2.0 x 1, Audio In & Out
Expansion Slots: 2
Cooling System: Front: 120mm fan x 1 (installed)
Side: 80x15mm fan x 1 (installed)
Power Supply: Standard ATX PS2 (optional)
VGA Card: 343mm / 13.5 inch CPU and 65mm / 2.5 inch cooler height:
PSU length: 180mm/ 7.1 inch (w/ less cable management) 142mm / 5.6 inch (w/ full cable management)
Warranty: 2 years

Although Amazon has it listed for $43.26, the listing states that those who order the case may have to wait anywhere from 1 to 3 months for the product to arrive.

Courtesy_ internet

Happy shri krushna janmashtami......
28/08/2013

Happy shri krushna janmashtami......

18/08/2013

New bundle will let gamers choose which
games they want
AMD has announced the Never Settle Forever
gaming bundle, which adds the one thing we’ve
always wanted to the program — choice. In
the past gamers bought a Radeon card and got
a bundle of free games regardless of whether
or not they already owned them, so this time
around buying a Radeon card will let you
redeem the game of your choice from
predetermined pools, and you can even hold
onto the tickets and redeem them for future,
unannounced titles as well.
The three tiers included are bronze (which is if
you purchase a 7700-series cards), silver (for
7800-series cards), and gold( for 7900-series
cards). Bronze tier gets you one game of your
choosing, while silver snags you two, and gold
gets you three.
Titles included in AMD’s Bronze tier include
Sleeping Dogs, Far Cry 3, Far Cry 3: Blood
Dragon, and Deus Ex: Human Revolution, Dirt
3, and Dirt Showdown. Silver Tier has the
aforementioned titles, but also includes DMC:
Devil May Cry, and Hitman Absolution. The last
tier, gold, has every game mentioned, plus
Saints Row IV which they recently announced
today via Twitter and Tomb Raider.
The new system works by giving gamers a
redemption portal from which they can use
their AMD-provided reward codes. The
redemption codes will be good until December
31st, 2013.
Interestingly enough, looking at a photo from
AMD’s Never Settle Forever press packet, we
saw a page that showed Dishonored, Syndicate,
and Crysis 3. Could these games also be added
to AMD's giveaway lineup in the future?

You’ve got SSD questions, we’ve got SSDanswers. It’s time for a crash course insolid-state drive technologySolid-state d...
18/08/2013

You’ve got SSD questions, we’ve got SSD
answers. It’s time for a crash course in
solid-state drive technology
Solid-state drives ( SSD) are taking the PC world
by storm with their silent operation, blazing
speeds, and ever-sinking prices, and yet you're
hesitant to buy one. Maybe you're afraid of
SSDs, or you don't think you know enough to
make an educated purchase, or maybe a bad
SSD controller took all your data down to
Chinatown. Regardless of the reason for your
trepidation, every horsepower ju**ie should be
getting in on the SSD action, and to do that
you need a little bit of cash and a whole lot of
knowledge. In this article, we will attempt to
answer all of your SSD-related questions. We'll
walk you through all the reasons why you need
an SSD first, then break down the terminology
so you can talk like an SSD badass at the next
LAN party, then show you the parts of an SSD
so you know how it all fits together, and we'll
wrap it up with a discussion of the software
you'll need to monitor and optimize your
drive. Though SSDs might seem complicated
with their 24nm synchronous MLC Toggle
NAND flash and their AHCI-enabled SATA 6Gb/
s IOPS gobbledygook, you're about to find out
they are not as scary as you thought they
were.
What Is an SSD and Why Should You Care?
Demonic speed and immunity to tumbles
are part of the story
Let's start with the basics. An SSD is a solid-
state drive, meaning it has no moving parts.
It's basically a thin slice of NAND flash
memory that’s similar to what you find in a
USB thumb drive, though instead of being
jammed into a finger-size stick it’s stuffed
inside a 2.5-inch enclosure with a SATA
interface. As you have probably heard, SSDs
are several orders of magnitude faster than
mechanical hard drives for one simple reason:
Instead of waiting for the hard drive platters
to spin under the read/write heads, you are
pulling data from NAND flash memory, so
access times are nearly instant. SSDs are so
fast that some of them are currently able to
completely saturate today’s SATA spec,
pumping roughly 550MB/s of data through the
SATA 6Gb/s interface, whereas the fastest
7,200rpm hard drive would be lucky to hit
150MB/s across the platter. Other benefits of
SSDs are that they generate no noise since
there are no moving parts, which also lets
them produce much less heat. They can still
get a little warm, but don't require active
cooling like a hard drive does. And since they
have no moving parts, you're free to wedge
one into your laptop and toss it around like
the bouquet at a wedding, though we don't
recommend doing that. To summarize, SSDs
offer tremendous speed, emit no noise, give
off very little heat, and fit in the space the size
of a few credit cards. What's not to love?
What’s Not to Love
Here's the downside: SSDs are expensive, and
there's also the chance that whatever drive you
select might die on you one day. Now, we
know that doesn't sound good, but there are
some silver linings here. The first is that prices
are dropping rapidly, so much so that right
now 128GB drives are hovering around $100,
so that's less than the magical $1-per-gigabyte
price bar we’ve set for an OK deal. Drives with
capacities of 256GB are even less expensive,
averaging around $160. Sadly, 512GB drives
are still a smidge spendy, and 1TB drives, well,
they don't even really exist for mere mortals.
SSD prices will continue to fall, though, as
adoption rates increase, so any financial
barrier to entry you might fear will soon be
nonexistent.
The second point is much more concerning to
you, as nobody enjoys seeing their data go
bye-bye. Let's just get this out of the way:
Many people have had their SSDs fail. We've
had our own personal SSDs fail in our home
machines, and seen units here die an untimely
death in the Lab, in seemingly random fashion.
What needs to be made clear, though, is the
fact that in all of these cases it was the
controller that gave out, not the NAND flash
itself. Anyone who tells you they have reached
the end of the life cycle for NAND flash is
either high, lying, or from the Internet, so
don't believe them. It's not the flash that
typically dies, but the controllers, and here's
the good news: Things are improving massively
on this front. In fact, we've yet to see a late-
model SSD die, and chalk up the earlier
failures to the fact that it was simply new
technology, not yet battle-tested on the front
lines. You might recall several high-profile SSD
recalls, as well, which didn't help their status
as a fledgling technology. The simple truth is
that those days are mostly behind us, and as
controller and firmware technology has
matured, reliability has improved greatly, so
we have zero problems recommending any
late-model SSD but, as always, you should back
up your data regardless of the storage medium
you have in place.
The Evolution of SSD Form Factors
When SSDs
first burst
onto the
scene, they
came in
unwieldy
3.5-inch
enclosures
the size of hard drives. These SSDs were
blazing-fast at the time, and ungodly
expensive. We're talking $1,000 for 64GB, but
back then it was all that we had, so we paid it.
SSDs eventually migrated to the 2.5-inch
enclosures that we use now, and are also
offered in the teeny, tiny mSATA form factor
for notebooks, as well. If this downsizing trend
continues, we expect future SSDs to be
microscipic.
Anatomy of an SSD
1. Outer Shell
This shell could be plastic or metal, and helps
absorb some of the heat from the flash
memory inside. A 7mm shell allows an SSD to
be used in an Ultrabook, though some employ
the thicker 9mm form factor. Unlike with a
mechanical hard drive, you could remove this
cover and run an SSD commando and it would
not make much difference to the drive, though
we don't recommend it.
2. NAND Flash
These are the memory chips that hold your
data. They are typically clustered in groups of
chips covering both sides of the PCB. Most
SSDs you will see use either MLC or TLC NAND,
though if this was an enterprise-level model it
might use SLC NAND flash. MLC flash wears
down twice as fast as SLC flash, and TLC wears
down quicker than MLC, but you will still get
many years of usage from MLC or TLC.
3. DRAM Buffer
Every SSD also includes a bit of DRAM used for
buffering purposes. Like cache on a hard drive,
data is stored here temporarily before it's
written to the device. Wear-leveling data is
also placed into the cache while the drive is
running. SandForce SSDs are the only models
that do not use external DRAM.
4. Power and DATA Interface
Modern SSDs ship with SATA 6Gb/s interfaces
that allow for roughly 550MB/s read and write
speeds, though this will change soon since
today's drives are saturating the bus. The next-
gen interface, called SATA Express, will utilize
PCI Express lanes instead, allowing us to
eventually hit up to 16Gb/s of throughput. Yes,
we are salivating.
5. Controller
The controller runs the show, usually with a
multicore processor. This is what separates
one SSD from another, for the most part,
though custom firmware designed by the drive
manufacturer is also a factor. Controllers
communicate with NAND over parallel
channels, compress and uncompress data, and
keep the drive optimized with garbage
collection.

Solid-State Terminology
Or how to look like you know what you’re
talking about
NAND Flash
NAND flash is a type of nonvolatile flash
memory that stands for "Not And," which is a
reference to the type of logic gate it uses. This
is different from NOR flash, which is used in
environments where the same program is run
over and over again. NAND memory is popular
due to its speed, durability, and relatively low
cost compared to DRAM, and is commonly
found in storage devices such as USB keys,
tablets, cell phones, and of course, SSDs.
Though there are various types of NAND flash,
all SSDs on the market currently use this type
of memory.
Controller
This is the brains of the SSD and what truly
separates one drive from another, as they
mostly use very similar NAND flash. Typical
controllers today use multiple cores for
running the drive, performing data
compression, and executing drive
optimizations. Before you make any purchasing
decisions about an SSD, find out which
controller it uses, as some controllers have a
checkered history. Currently only Samsung and
OCZ have controllers that were designed and
manufactured in-house, which theoretically
gives them an advantage, while Intel uses
SandForce, Corsair uses Link A Media, and
Crucial uses a Marvell controller.
MLC NAND
This is the most common type of NAND flash
used in SSDs today, and it stands for “multi-
level cell” memory. Its much more expensive
counterpart is SLC, or “single-level cell”
memory. In SLC, only one state can be
maintained per cell, making it good for one bit
of data. In MLC, however, up to four states can
be stored per cell, allowing it to hold two bits
of data. The proximity of the two states creates
the possibility for more errors, though, which
is why SLC is so expensive, and rare. Flash
memory can only sustain a finite number of
read/write operations but modern day SSDs
perform wear-leveling in order to allow them
to survive for a decade or longer depending on
drive activity levels.
SLC NAND
This is the good stuff. SLC NAND is very
expensive and is only found in enterprise-level
storage products due to its cost. It stores one
data state per cell, and since there are no
other data states nearby, it is extremely
accurate and long-lasting. At press time a
256GB SLC SSD costs $2,600, so you won't be
seeing them in your home machine any time
soon.
Trim
Trim is something you'll hear about a lot with
SSDs, because it performs the crucial function
of helping the SSD optimize itself when it is
idle, so not having Trim support is bad, and it
needs to be in both the drive and your OS.
Essentially, the Trim command is sent from
the OS to the drive's controller to tell it which
bits of data can be safely deleted, so without
Trim the drive could theoretically just fill up
and degrade. Since NAND cells cannot be
overwritten, they must be erased before new
data is written to them. The command also lets
the controller reorganize data, similar to
defragmenting a hard drive. Trim is supported
in Windows 7 and 8, and in all modern SSDs.
Asynchronous vs. Synchronous Flash
You'll see this in an SSD's specs, and the
bottom line is that asynchronous flash is not
as fast or expensive as synchronous flash, so
it's not uncommon to see it in value drives,
while synchronous flash is used in high-
performance drives. Synchronous flash
processes data roughly twice as fast as
asynchronous, on both ends of the clock cycle,
so you get two outputs per cycle, while
asynchronous is not synced to the clock speed
of the processor, so you can expect lower
performance.
IOPS
This spec shows how many operations per
second the drive is capable of performing. This
differs from read/write speeds in that it's not
measuring the speed of the writes or reads,
but the number of them. This is typically used
in situations where heavy random workloads
are needed, simply because, in our opinion, it
sounds better to say 85,000 IOPS than 30MB/
s.
Sequential Read/Write Speed
This is how fast a drive can read and write
contiguous data, sort of like an elephant
inhaling a row of peanuts. This is often used as
a metric for benchmarks because it measures
"straight-line speeds" but is not indicative of
real-world performance, as data is rarely
written or read in this fashion.
Secure Erase
Old blocks of data on an SSD have to be erased
before new blocks can be written to it, which
takes time, so the fastest an SSD will ever be is
the moment it comes out of the box and is
totally empty. Unfortunately, even if you
deleted everything on the drive, the data is
still there, so it will still need to be erased if
you want to write over it (Trim does this to
some extent but not completely). The only way
to totally wipe a drive of all its contents is a
Secure Erase, which completely deletes all data
on a drive. This is the most common way to
get an SSD back to its fastest possible state,
and is accomplished via software included with
your drive.

The Downside of Using Trim
The Trim command has been made into
something of a living legend in Windows 7 and
8, because it is so crucial to keeping an SSD
optimized via garbage collection and the
deletion of data that is no longer needed. Since
SSDs require a data block to be erased before
it can be written to, it’s important to have that
deletion occur before the data needs to be
written, otherwise the whole process gets
bogged down with multiple operations instead
of just a simple write command.
There’s a big downside to keeping your drive
optimized, though, which HDD users don’t have
to contend with: If you accidentally delete a
file and then try to undelete it via recovery
software such as File Scavenger you may be
out of luck. That’s because Trim, or even the
drive’s own firmware, may have already
deleted the data forever. More disturbing is
that Trim can be executed at any time—its
schedule isn’t transparent to the user—so 10
minutes after you’ve deleted the file, it might
already have been purged.
If you are a serial file-bungler and find
yourself in constant need of file recovery,
consider disabling Trim to buy you a little
more time to recover inadvertently deleted
data (at the cost of overall performance).
Windows 7 users should also consider leaving
system protection on, which will, on occasion,
make copies of files. Windows 8 users should
enable the File History feature that makes real-
time backups of files on a secondary drive for
you.
The Software Side
SSD utilities can make all the difference to
your drive’s overall functionality
Though most people install an SSD and never
give it a second thought, free software makes
it possible to monitor, optimize, and tweak a
drive’s performance. Samsung, Intel, and OCZ
SSDs come bundled with free utilities, and you
can use the free CrystalDiskInfo (http://bit.ly/
UKzt0 ) with any SSD on the market. Here’s a
quick peek at what each one offers.
Samsung SSD Magician 4.0
It’s hard to believe, but not only does Samsung
make arguably the best SSDs available right
now, but it also makes the best SSD software,
as well. Right on the home screen you can see
how much data has been written to the NAND,
its status, your interface speed, and more. If
your OS doesn’t support Trim, you can click
“performance optimization” to Trim the drive
manually. You can also update the firmware,
adjust over-provisioning space, and more.
Samsung regularly updates its software, too,
making the choice to invest in a Samsung SSD
that much easier.
Intel SSD Toolbox
Intel’s toolbox software is easy to use, full of
information, and tells you right on the home
screen what the drive’s health status is at the
moment. Diving deeper into the menus will let
you update the drive’s firmware, perform a
secure erase, run diagnostic scans on the
drive, run the Trim command, and it will show
you how to fully optimize the drive with your
OS. If you’re super-nerdy you can also choose
to examine the drive’s SMART data and details,
but the whole point of the simple interface is
to show you all that data in an easy-to-digest
fashion. Still, it’s all there if you really want to
see it.
OCZ Toolbox v4.3
OCZ’s free Toolbox software is basically the
equivalent of a three-blade Swiss Army knife,
in that it only lets you do a few things with
your SSD. It’s actually strange that OCZ would
spend time and money to develop a software
tool, then populate it with so few options, but
since it’s free software we’re not complaining
too much. The tool gives you the ability to
check for firmware updates and apply them,
and perform a secure erase of the drive; it will
also spit out the drive’s SMART data in the
most unfriendly manner we’ve ever seen, so
have fun translating it. This utility is helpful
for updating your drive’s firmware but not
much else.
CrystalDiskInfo 5.4.2
This is a free utility that should be able to read
the SMART data from any SSD and give you an
indication as to the drive’s health, information
about its activity, and more. One field to pay
attention to is Total NAND Writes, as that will
give you an indication of how much has been
written to the drive if you like to keep tabs on
those things. It also displays the current
firmware version, SATA transfer mode, which
features are enabled, and all the SMART data,
as well.

17/08/2013

(PR) AMD Winner in Q2, Intel
Up, NVIDIA Down, According
to Jon Peddie Research
Jon Peddie Research (JPR), the industry's
research and consulting firm for graphics and
multimedia, announced estimated graphics
chip shipments and suppliers' market share
for 2013 2Q. While the news was
disappointing year-to-year, the news was
encouraging quarter-to-quarter. AMD overall
unit shipments increased 10.9%, quarter-to-
quarter, Intel increased 6.2%, and Nvidia
decreased by 8%. The overall PC market
declined 2.5% quarter-to-quarter while the
graphics market increased 4.6%. Overall this
net 7.1% increase reflects an interest on the
part of consumers for double-attach-the
adding of a discrete GPU to a system with
integrated processor graphics, and to a lesser
extent dual AIBs in performance desktop
machines.
On a year-to-year basis we found that total
graphics shipments during Q2'13 dropped
6.8% while PC shipments which declined by
at a faster rate of 11.2% overall. GPUs are
traditionally a leading indicator of the market,
since a GPU goes into every system before it
is shipped and most of the PC vendors are
guiding down to flat for Q3'13. The
popularity of tablets and the persistent
economic slowness are the most often
mentioned reasons for the decline in the PC
market and the CAGR for PC graphics from
2012 to 2016 is -1.4%; we expect the total
shipments of graphics chips in 2016 to be
319 million units.
The ten-year average change for graphics
shipments for quarter-to-quarter is a growth
of 7.2%. This quarter is below the average
with a 4.6% increase.
Our findings include discrete and integrated
graphics (CPU and chipset) for Desktops,
Notebooks (and Netbooks), and PC-based
commercial (i.e., POS) and industrial/
scientific and embedded. This report does not
include handhelds (i.e., mobile phones), x86
Servers or ARM-based Tablets (i.e. iPad and
Android-based Tablets), Smartbooks, or ARM-
based Servers. It does include x86-based
tablets.
The quarter in general
AMD's shipments of desktop
heterogeneous GPU/CPUs, i.e., APUs
declined 9.6% from Q1 and increased an
astounding 47.1% in notebooks. The
company's overall PC graphics shipments
increased 10.9%.
Intel's desktop processor-graphics EPG
shipments decreased from last quarter by
1.4%, and Notebooks increased by 12.13% The company's overall PC graphics
shipments increased 6.2%.
Nvidia's desktop discrete shipments
were down 8.9% from last quarter; and,
the company's mobile discrete shipments
decreased 7.1%. The company's overall PC
graphics shipments declined 8.0%.
Year-to-year this quarter AMD overall
PC shipments declined 15.8%, Intel
dropped 12.9%, Nvidia declined 5.1%,
and VIA fell 12.4% from last year.
Total discrete GPUs (desktop and
notebook) were down 5.5% from the last
quarter and were down 5.2% from last
year for the same quarter due to the same
problems plaguing the overall PC industry.
Overall the trend for discrete GPUs is up
with a CAGR to 2016 of -2.2%.
Ninety nine percent of Intel's non-
server processors have graphics, and over
67% of AMD's non-server processors
contain integrated graphics; AMD still
ships IGPs.

courtesy. Internet

16/08/2013

Microsoft officially announces Windows 8.1 launch date--Oct. 17-18

t appears that yesterday's report from Mary Jo Foley about Microsoft releasing Windows 8.1 in October was correct. Today, the company confirmed that Windows 8.1 will be arriving in digital download format at 12:00AM on October 18 in New Zealand, which means it will launch in the US at 12:00AM on October 17.

microsoft_officially_announces_windows_8_1_launch_date_oct_17_18

While digital downloads go on sell on the 17, retail copies of the operating system will not be available for in-store purchase until October 18. Microsoft says that Windows 8.1 "continues the vision we began with Windows 8 and is an example of our commitment to continuous innovation and improvement for our customers. And Windows 8.1 brings many improvements in areas like personalization, Internet Explorer 11, search which is powered by Bing, built-in apps including a few new ones, an improved Windows Store experience, and cloud connectivity with SkyDrive (and much more) that people will enjoy."

Source:internet.

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