Monday, 31 December 2012

2012-12-21-221

256-bit G92 To Launch On Nov 12th

We first told you thatG92 is 65nm based with 256-bit memory interface back in June and seems thatHKEPC agrees with us now. Lots ofconfusion on the discussion forums that G92 has 512-bit memory interface and isthe highest end GPU from NVIDIA which, in fact is not. HKEPC revealed that G92will be launched on November 12th and will replace the current GeForce 8800 GTSseries. It is meant to compete against the RV670 while the low end G98 willcompete against the RV620. However, launch date for G98 has not firmed up yet.G92 supports PCI Express 2.0, 50GT/s texture fill rate, Pure Video Gen 3, HDMIand uses display port. G92 will still be named under GeForce 8 family.



Saturday, 29 December 2012

2012-12-21-390

Acer announces the Iconia Tab A200 Tegra 2 tablet

Just in time for the holidays, Acer has announced its Iconia Tab A200 tablet powered by Nvidias Tegra 2 processors. The 10.1-inch tablet is a more affordable sibling to the A500, although the specifications are in fact quite similar.

The Iconia Tab A200 will ship with Android 3.2 initially, although Acer is expecting to start shipping Android 4.0 in January as well as providing an update for those that got the tablet with Android 3.2. The Tegra 2 processor is a standard 1GHz dual core model and it has been paired up with 1GB of RAM and eight or 16GB of eMMC memory for storage.

Other features include 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR, GPS, a 2Megapixel front camera, a micro SD card slot, a micro USB port and a USB port for USB OTG, a headphone jack, a G-sensor and a gyrometer. The battery is said to be good for about 8h of usage, the same as the A500. The A200 measures 260x175x12.4mm and weighs in at 720g. Were not entirely sure how much more affordable itll be compared to the A500, as Acer didnt provide any pricing.



Friday, 28 December 2012

2012-12-21-91

[Rumour] ATI Radeon HD 6000 Series Release Schedule, first iteration in October

Popular Turkish website Donanimhaber has released an expected schedulefor the release of ATI's Radeon HD 6000 series. The first HD 6000 GPU tobe released will be the Radeon HD 6700 series, codenamed Barts. The HD6700 is scheduled for a release as early as October. As suggested by thenomenclature, the HD 6700 will directly replace the HD 5700 series.

The HD 6700 release will be followed up by Cayman in November, expectedto be branded as the ATI Radeon HD 6800 series, replacing the current HD5800 series.

The flagship will be Antilles, and branded as the ATI Radeon HD 6970. Antilles, as expected, will be a dual-GPU Cayman. While the HD 5970 lowers clock speeds from the HD 5870, HD 6970 is expected to feature the same clock speeds as the HD 6870 - basically a HD 6870 in CF. This will be much like the HD 4870 X2. The Radeon HD 6970 is scheduled for December.

The Catalyst 10.8 Codename leaks supports much of Donanimhaber's schedule. Cayman and Antilles come under the same sub-family, and it is likely that Cayman is HD 6800 and Antilles is dual-Cayman - HD 6900. Barts could very well be HD 6700 series as well. Interestingly, all three, Cayman, Antilles and Barts are West Indian Islands. The other two from the codenames list being Turks and Caicos. If the HD 6000 series follows the pattern of the HD 5000 series, we could very well have two further chips to replace Redwood and Cedar. These could very well be Turks and Caicos, releasing in Q1 2011. However, this leaves us with several unused codenames from the Catalyst10.8 list. It could be that the list covers more than the HD 6000series.

Traditionally, the x8xx product has always been the first to release. Releasing with the HD 6700 series can be a novelty. However, AMD have experimented with a x7xx card before. The first 40nm GPU was the HD 4770 - part of the otherwise 55nm HD 4000 generation.

An Antilles PRO is listed in the codenames - and we could have a Radeon HD 6950 GPU. However, this depends largely on the requirements. A Radeon HD 5950 - Hemlock Pro - was rumoured as well, but was never released due to a lack of competition. The suggestion that the HD 6970 will feature the same clock speeds as the HD 6870 has two implications. First, a larger performance gap between the HD 6870 and HD 6970 for the HD 6950 to fit in. More importantly, the HD 6800 series could have a lower TDP than the HD 5800 series, in which case Efficiency could be one of the key objectives of the HD 6000 family.

It has been a long, long time since AMD released a GPU (not counting minor upgrades such as the HD 5500 GDDR5 versions). It is fair to assume that they have been hard at work, and the lull is about to be broken by a storm of HD 6000 releases in Q4 2010 and Q1 2011.

Reference: Donanimhaber





Wednesday, 26 December 2012

2012-12-21-70

[Rumour] AMD to release Zosma quad core CPUs in Q2 2010

Fudzilla reports that AMD is preparing a refreshed Phenom II quad coreas part of the Leo platform headlined by Thuban six core CPUs. Thecodename is Zosma, and the brand names being thrown around is AMD PhenomII X4 960T.

Zosma is rumoured to be Thuban with two cores disabled, and this makessense, to some extent. The clock speeds aren't known yet, but accordingto current nomenclature, we can expect the X4 960T to be clocked ateither 3.3 or 3.4 GHz. The good news, however, is that the TDP is 95Wcompared to the current 965BE's 125W for C3 stepping.

In essence, Zosma seems to be a minor refresh of the current Phenom II X4 line to go with the upcoming Leo platform, which releases in May 2010.

If Zosma is indeed Thuban with two cores disabled, we can expect the current Deneb line of Phenom II X4 CPUs to continue simultaneously. However, if Zosma is a native quad core implementing the efficiency tweaks in Thuban, we can expect a revised Phenom II line - including X3 and X2 CPUs.

Reference: Fudzilla


Tuesday, 25 December 2012

2012-12-21-482

Addonics Presents 5-Drive Compact RAID

Press Release



Addonics Technologies, announced a very small storage appliance which, despite being the size of a four inch cube, packs the power and features of RAID storage devices that are much larger and up to three times as expensive. Called the Compact RAID, the unit accommodates up to five 2.5”, 9.5 mm height hard drives or SSDs to form high performance storage configurable to various RAID levels up to RAID 5. Drives can easily be removed or added to the Compact RAID, much like a tape cartridge without special tools.



In addition to the powerful RAID engine, the Compact RAID comes built-in with a high speed eSATA connection and can deliver a screaming throughput up to 300 Mbytes/sec. The Compact RAID weighs just over a pound without drive. It also features a silent operation and the ability to be used as a boot drive or as additional storage. The power and the small size of the Compact RAID make it an ideal RAID storage solution in a variety of applications, particularly in mobile environments or where there is a limitation of space or power.



The Compact RAID is fully OS independent and can be connected to any computer running Windows, Linux or Mac OS. The eSATA port can also beconverted to USB 3.0/2.0 connection with the addition of the optional Addonics USB 3.0 - eSATA adapter.

List price is $149. For more information, visit http://www.addonics.com/products/raid_tower/cpr5sa.asp





“a night to dismember” needs must when doris wishman drives

What would you do if you had a completed film “in the can,” so to speak, but a disgruntled lab worker at the processing facility where it was being developed set fire to the place and destroyed 40% of your movie, leaving you with just over an hour of usable footage, all from various unrelated segments of your flick?

And what if, by an even more cruel twist of fate, it turned out that the destroyed 40% was some of the most crucial material, and what you had left made little to no sense without its inclusion?

Imagine, for instance, you had a ten-minute short film about a couple who have an argument in the park that results in their breakup. You had six minutes of footage left relatively unscathed, but it was the six minutes showing them going to the park and leaving, with the crucial four minutes of argument and breakup material gone, leaving you with a “story” that looks, for all intents and purposes, like two people just walking to the park and then leaving under much the same circumstances as they arrived.

Would you just shoot the thing over? I guess that would make the most sense. But what if you were broke, since all your money was used up on the production of your little indie opus, the print itself was uninsured, so you couldn’t recoup any of your losses,? and it was due to play at a local short festival in a week or so?

Well, that’s what happened to B-movie auteur Doris Wishman in 1982, only on an even larger scale.

Despite being a key player in the exploitation movie business for nearly three decades at the time, Wishman had never actually made a proper horror flick before, with most of her efforts being sexploitationers like Nude on the Moon, Deadly Weapons, Double Agent 73, and Blaze Starr Goes Nudist — but in the early 80s, spurred on by the success of films like Halloween and Friday the 13th, slashers were all the rage, and Wishman, ever the savvy low-rent businesswoman, wasn’t about to let that gravy train pass her by.

And can you blame her? A genre that requires no big-name actors, no expensive sets, and has a guaranteed built-in audience at grindhouses and drive-ins all across the country was something no B-movie maker could really afford to pass on. As long as people were getting killed, audiences were happy, and if you made movies literally to pay your rent or make your mortgage payment, this was just too good a deal not to get in on. A license to print money!

Wishman began her first and only voyage into slasherdom the way she began all her productions — with a title, in this case the rather catchy A Night To Dismember. Then she filmed a roughly five-minute trailer, another staple ingredient in her filmmaking stew. With no completed script, no actual cast in place, and no idea where or when the movie itself would be shot, she then would shop these trailers around to potential investors in a bid to secure what she billed as “completion funds.” The movie’s budget would be whatever she was able to raise using this rather unconventional, but usually marginally successful, sales “technique.”

With these “completion funds” in place, she would then finish a script, get a cast in place, secure some filming locations (as often as not utilizing her own house as the primary scene of the action), and shoot a movie that often bore little to no resemblance to the trailer she’d shot earlier.

That’s putting it all on the line for you art, my friends, which is why I’ll always say, despite all physical evidence to the contrary, that Wishman had more balls than most of her male contemporaries.

Anyway, it’s 1982 and our lady Doris has just followed the MO outlined above to make this cheap little slasher flick, A Night To Dismember. She shot it over the course of a couple of weeks, mostly in and around her own house (in, I believe, New Jersey), the only “star” of note whose services she could secure on her budget was late-70s/early-80s second-tier porn actress Samantha Fox (not to be confused with the British topless “Page 3 Girl”/wannabe-pop starlet of the same name who would come along a few years later) who was looking to break into the “legitimate” film business, and the script was a fairly bog-standard little extra-gory murder mystery about a seriously dysfunctional family.

In short, a girl gets sent to an insane asylum as a teenager, gets out in her (supposedly) late 20s, and upon her release her brother and sister enact a devious little scheme to send her back to the bughouse because they don’t want her cutting in on daddy’s affections and, more importantly, his money. They figure they’ll subject her to all kinds of taunting and nightmare visions to make her question her own sanity, and hey, if that doesn’t work, they’ll maybe even kill some people and try to make it look like crazy sis must have done it. That ought to get her out of the picture.

Wishman, as ever, recorded the film without sound and shot it from a safe enough distance in most sequences so that audiences wouldn’t notice the shitty quality of the dubbed-in audio track later. When close-ups were required, she focused on eyes, foreheads, necks, nearby inanimate objects — literally anything but the actors’ mouths, just in case the sound and the images didn’t quite synch up — which they usually didn’t.

So, the movie’s done. And what’s more, it’s been sold. It’s set to play the bottom half of double-bills in various regional markets in early 1983, and as the prints make their rounds up and down 42nd street and around to various rural drive-ins, Wishman is sure to make enough to recoup her investors’ costs as well as line her pockets with at least a little bit of the change left over. After all, she’d done this? dozens of times in the past. What could possibly go wrong?

Well, if you’re an astute reader — hell, even just a reader with an attention span lasting longer than oh, say, five minutes — you’ll already know what went wrong. Wishman sent her print to a company called Movielab to be developed. Movielab was having some financial troubles. The paychecks for many of their workers bounced. And one particularly enterprising employee decided he wasn’t going to take this lying down — so he literally set fire to the place.

Wishman had never insured a print in her life, and didn’t do so in this case, either. So what she had left after the Movielab fire was 60% of her footage, for which no sound had yet been added, and no money to go back and try to do things over. And her movie was due to open in a couple of months.? This is when true B-movie makers bring their “A” game.

Doris went to work. First up, she edited what she had left into as close to a sensible order as humanly possible, even though, as mentioned before, a lot of the most crucial stuff was gone. Then she spliced in some footage from her promotional trailer, even though the “story” depicted there didn’t much resemble the movie she’d made (if you’ve read rather than skimmed this review, I’m assuming you’ll understand why that statement makes sense). She added in some outtake footage from other movies she’d made to pad out the run time. And she wrote and then laid out a feature-length narration track over the whole thing so that this discombobulated series of scenes, where one sequence would have absolutely nothing to do with what was on the screen right before it, would maybe, sort of, almost make something resembling, you know, sense.

Was it a successful effort? Hell no, how could it be? When you’ve got someone walking outside followed by people sitting in a room talking followed by someone getting an axe through their head, there’s only so much you can do. But the voice-over, provided by a supposed “private investigator” named Tim O’Malley, does at least put the completely unrelated events in some kind of plausible sequential order. He relates the events of “Bloody October” in 1986 (yes, the film was released in ’83, but I think Wishman was giving herself a little extra time in case the whole thing didn’t come together for a few more years — she may not have had any actual physical insurance, but narrative insurance is free) in the only way possible given what we see unfolding/haphazardly landing on the screen, the film clocks in at 68 minutes — the bare minimum to get feature distribution — and hey, Wishman got it out in enough time to ride the slasher gravy train before it petered out.

I’m not going to claim that Wishman accidentally found greatness with the end product here,? that dire circumstances proved to be an act of serendipity that resulted in an unheralded horror masterpiece. There’s a reason A Night to Dismember isn’t regarded as a slasher classic — it’s just not very good. But it certainly should be seen by any true B-movie aficionado. The fact that it even exists is a testament to Doris Wishman’s sheer determination and/or desperation — probably both. It exists because it has to, and in that sense it’s probably just about the most honest movie you’ll ever see.

A Night To Dismember is available on DVD from Elite Entertainment. It’s a heck of a little package, considering the source, and features not only, surprisingly, a 16×9 widescreen transfer of the film, but also the promotional trailer footage (again, shot before the movie itself was actually made) and a feature-length commentary from Doris Wishman herself, recorded shortly before her death in 2002, and her longtime cinematographer Chuck Smith. This commentary is, as you might imagine, absolutely invaluable in terms of trying to actually understand the flick itself, and furthermore it’s a lot of fun with Wishman and Smith engaged in some fun bickering banter throughout (well, to be honest, Wishman bickers, Smith just sort of takes it all in good humor — but you can picture his eyes rolling almost non-stop throughout). To be honest, the movie’s a lot better with the commentary track on than it is on its own — but it definitely helps to watch it without it first, then to put it on in order to understand just what the fuck it is you’ve witnessed.

A Night To Dismember is an exercise in pure cinematic necessity. It resembles, most closely, a piece of “outsider art” or surrealism, although it certainly wasn’t intended to. It just is the way it is because it literally can’t be any other way. But here’s the irony — if somebody like David Lynch or Alejandro Jodorowsky (n0 offense intended to either of those two truly outstanding filmmakers, I invoke their names merely because it makes sense for reasons of comparison)? set out to make a movie like this on purpose, it would be heralded as an artistic triumph. Doris Wishman makes a movie like this because it’s the only thing she can do with what she’s got and everyone says it’s a piece of crap.

Go figure.

Monday, 24 December 2012

2012-12-21-476

A-DATA SSD Enclosure Turns Two SSDs Into One

A-DATAhas launched A-DATA XPG 3.5” SSD Enclosure,turning up to two 2.5” SATA SSDs into a 3.5” SATA drive. This enclosure fits exactly into a common 3.5”desktop bay or floppy disk bay without having to purchase any attachments to mount 2.5” drives into the enclosure. This product is available as a total solution including two 2.5” SATA II SSDs with capacities from 32GBx2 up to 384GBx2.


Press Release :

A-DATA Technology Co., Ltd., a worldwide leader in high performance memory products, announced today that it has launched A-DATA XPG 3.5” SSD Enclosure to expand its portfolio of SSD solutions. This device is an ingenious hard drive converter, turning up to two 2.5” SATA SSDs into a 3.5” SATA drive.

With this converter, installing a 2.5” drive into a regular PC will be easier than ever, allowing more convenience to recover data from notebooks onto a desktop computer and vise versa. It’s very valuable and functional for users who expect SSD speed on their home or office desktop; a perfect product with the speed of SATA II for any average or advanced computer user. Also, the hard drive converter features a safety lock mechanism that allow users to lock up the storage drives, making them unattainable to keep the drives fully secured and safe when they are in operation.

Revolutionizing the general usage of 2.5” SSDs, this enclosure fits exactly into a common 3.5”desktop bay or floppy disk bay without having to purchase any attachments to mount 2.5” drives into the enclosure. Designed for both internal & external purposes, A-DATA XPG 3.5” SSD Enclosure is the best choice for storage expansion and backup solution.

This product is available as a total solution including two 2.5” SATA II SSDs with capacities from 32GBx2 up to 384GBx2.

Features:

Heavy-duty, heat-resistant aluminum case for internal & external purposesTwo slots for multi-drive exchangeability and maintenance capabilitiesMatch exactly a standard 3.5" drive bay and a floppy disk baySupport two 2.5" SATA SSDs/HDDs (up to 1TBx2)Convert up to two 2.5" SSDs/HDDs into a 3.5" oneLED for power & accessFanless drive Cooling through Aluminum body heat dispersion and slots for heat exudation

Specification:

Host Interface: 2xSATA I/II - SATA-II (up to 3.0 Gbps) and SATA-I (1.5 Gbps)Power: SATA 15pin ConnectorDimension: 146 x 101.7 x 25.8 mm (LxWxH)Weight: 0.23kg