Sunday, 20 March 2011
Nintendo 3DS Ready Launched
After a few weeks ago Japan hit by huge damage, due to the earthquake followed by tsunami. But Nintendo's intention to soon launch their newest product the Nintendo 3DS, on March 27, 2011.
"Although some parts of Japan were severely damaged by the tsunami, but we will launch the Nintendo 3DS and send to the world. Because of all this, our business and our product shipments are not affected significantly by far," a spokesman who declined to write his name by the editors of the New York Times.
Nintendo 3DS itself is the first portable games released by Nintendo in September. The advantages of this product itself, is a game you can play games in 3D format of the screen is very small and without using 3D glasses.
The plan, Nintendo will cost portable games that have a more simple design than the previous DS series, costing U.S. $ 249.99.
Tuesday, 15 March 2011
AMD Fight i7 Sandy Bridge with Bulldozer
A leaked document from AMD seen by us here claims that AMD FX-series central processing unit (CPUs) powered by the Bulldozer micro-architecture will be fully able to rival Core i7 2600-series chips.
AMD plans to introduce AMD 900-series chipsets compatible with Zambezi processors in Q2 2011. The Bulldozer processors, Radeon HD 6000 "Northern Islands" discrete graphics cards and AMD 900-series core-logic sets will power AMD's next-generation enthusiast-class platform code-named Scorpius.
The initial family of AMD's FX-series microprocessors based on Bulldozer micro-architecture will include four models with eight, six or four cores and 95W or 125W thermal design power (TDP).
The first breed of AMD FX8000, FX6000 and FX4000 currently known under Zambezi code-name will completely support all the advantages that the Bulldozer micro-architecture is supposed to bring, including new Flex FP floating point processing unit. The new chips in maximum eight-core configurations are projected - by AMD's internal documents - to offer roughly 50% performance improvement over Phenom II-series microprocessors in multimedia applications.
The primary family of AMD FX-series central processing units (CPUs) will feature two eight-core models, one six-core flavour as well as a quad-core version. The chips will support dual-channel DDR3 1866MHz memory, will support Turbo Core dynamic acceleration technology and will come in AM3+ form-factor and will have 125W and 95W TDP.
The initial family of AMD's FX-series microprocessors based on Bulldozer micro-architecture will include four models with eight, six or four cores and 95W or 125W thermal design power (TDP).
The first breed of AMD FX8000, FX6000 and FX4000 currently known under Zambezi code-name will completely support all the advantages that the Bulldozer micro-architecture is supposed to bring, including new Flex FP floating point processing unit. The new chips in maximum eight-core configurations are projected - by AMD's internal documents - to offer roughly 50% performance improvement over Phenom II-series microprocessors in multimedia applications.
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