|
Toshiba to start producing second-gen 19-nm NAND this month Later this month, Toshiba will begin mass-producing NAND using a second-generation 19-nm process. According to the press release, the 64Gb (8GB) chips will... Type: News story Tags: Memory Software |
0 |
|
Coffee Talk with Timmy Cook It's true. I recently won the Charitybuzz auction for "coffee with... |
22 |
|
Adobe lets you pay now and later and later again The time was January 1995. The smooth, Philly soul and pleated pants of... |
71 |
|
Nine months after our first brush with Thin Mini-ITX, we're taking another look at the platform, this time with a state-of-the-art all-in-one PC that... Type: Feature article Tags: Systems |
15 |
|
Release roundup: Power supplies and speedy DDR3 Each week, our release roundups gather some of the announcements and press releases that hit our inbox but didn't make it into our daily coverage.... Type: News story Tags: Power Memory |
15 |
|
Zbox mini PCs get Ivy Bridge Core i3, i5 upgrades Zotac has beefed up its Zbox lineup with two new models based on Ivy Bridge processors. Until now, the company's most powerful mini PC... Type: News story Tags: CPUs Systems |
34 |
|
AMD intros 2133MHz memory kit, faster RAM disk software Yes, AMD still makes system memory. Not only that, but it's just introduced its quickest memory kit ever: the Radeon RG2133 Gamer Series, which packs... Type: News story Tags: Memory |
33 |
|
Angering hippies and financing evil Seeing as how nobody else has released a Steve Jobs mockumentary ("These mold lines go to eleven!") and nothing on my Hackintosh has flipped me... |
16 |
|
AMD sheds light on Kaveri's uniform memory architecture At the Fusion Developer Summit last June, AMD CTO Mark Papermaster teased Kaveri, AMD's next-generation APU due later this year. Among other things, Papermaster... Type: News story Tags: CPUs Memory |
106 |
|
The 463rd review of the first Steve Jobs movie As promised, I have watched FunnyOrDie.com's fictionalized account of Steve Jobs's life entitled iSteve. As threatened, here is the review. (By the way,... |
10 |
|
Apple posts record revenue, lower profits Folks on Wall Street were awaiting Apple's latest quarterly results with bated breath. By the looks of it, they were pleasantly surprised when Apple Type: News story Tags: Mac Personal tech |
53 |
|
Haswell to have Intel-built embedded DRAM for graphics We've known for some time—through unofficial sources—that some of Intel's next-generation Haswell processors will have dedicated graphics memory on the CPU package. What we... Type: News story Tags: CPUs Graphics Memory |
52 |
|
Report: Intel wants batteries in all-in-one PCs With the demand for traditional towers dwindling, a lot of the action in the desktop PC industry seems to be focused on all-in-one systems similar... Type: News story Tags: Systems Mobile computing |
30 |
|
Cupertino funk, part II: No joy in iVille Last week, I prattled on about how Apple's dearth of a single, visionary leader was starting to make them feel like just another tech company.... |
52 |
|
The PC is booming—just not the PC we know So, you heard the news: PC sales are tanking. Apparently, nobody wants to buy Dells or HPs anymore; nobody cares about clunky laptops and bulky... Type: Blog post Tags: Systems Mobile computing Personal tech |
81 |
|
We've updated our famous system guide to account for the latest graphics cards (and their accompanying game bundles) as well as recent introductions in... Type: Feature article Tags: Systems |
97 |
|
Gigabyte intros Brix mini barebones PC As PC platforms consolidate more features in fewer chips, small-form-factor systems are becoming a lot more appealing—and a lot smaller. Gigabyte appears to be... Type: News story Tags: Motherboards Systems |
10 |
|
Cupertino funk, part I: O Captain, where art thou? On October 5, 2011, the vultures returned to One Infinite Loop. Having once taken up what seemed like permanent residence in Cupertino during the Sculley... |
41 |
| Toshiba to start producing second-gen 19-nm NAND this month | 0 |
| I'm sorry but if there's enough market demand for 13.3" 3200x1800 screens, there's MORE than enough demand for 24" 2560x1600 screens. | +42 |