Posts Tagged ‘Paragon’s great interface’

What To Expect At Sxsw 2010

SWSW Interactive opened on Friday in Austin, Tex., drawing a crowd of thousands and a collection of speakers that includes director Quentin Tarantino, Twitter founder Evan Williams, and Microsoft Researcher Danah Boyd. What started as a hip music-and-film festival has become one of the most active and innovative technology shows.

The sprawling show differs from conventional conventions in that it largely eschews the show-floor-and-booth model for participatory panels in which the audience often offers as much insight as the speakers. PCMag will have coverage throughout the show. In the meantime, here’s a rundown of some themes thus far.

Pay TV vs. the Internet

As the recent ruckus between Cablevision and Disney on Oscar night illustrated, the Internet is seriously disrupting the television industry. And even on the Internet, there is no well-defined model for profitably distributing online video. Hulu will let you stream a show for free, while iTunes will charge you to download the same program. Internet video maverick and HDNet founder Mark Cuban is scheduled to discuss these trends with Avner Ronan, chief executive of Boxee, a service that lets you watch Internet video streams on your TV.

Geolocation Goes Mainstream

SXSW has always been a hot spot for location services; there will probably be more Foursquare check-ins from Austin this week than any other city in the nation. Even so, aside from real GPS services, location-based services haven’t shown they can move from amusing diversions to profitable businesses. That may change this year. Foursquare has signed up major marketing partners, such as The New York Times and Zagat. And just about every location-based service plans to make news here.

The Professionalization of Twitter

Just as blogging started as an amateur invention and quickly became professionalized, with best practices, a thriving How-To industry, and for a lucky few, profits, now the same thing is happening to Twitter. What used to be a way to tell a few friends what you are having for lunch is now the way CNN breaksand collectsnews. Twitter founder Evan Williams (@ev) will keynote on Monday and discuss the future of the service.

Microsoft BizSpark Accelerator

On Monday, 32 start-up companies will present their business plans to a panel of experts as part of Microsoft’s BizSpark Accelerator program. Three winners will be announced Tuesday, but anyone that can attract venture capital will be a winner.

Source: www.pcmag.com

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Intel’S Core I7-980x Launches With A Bang

Intel today launches its newest processor, the Intel Core i7-980X Extreme Edition, which promises to be the new king of the CPU hill. The Core i7-980X Extreme Edition (codenamed “Gulftown”) is Intel’s first six-core processor for consumers, more specifically gamers and well-heeled multimedia professionals.

The Core i7-980X replaces the Core i7-975 as the top-of-the-line Intel processor. It costs approximately $999 per chip, which is the same price as the i7-975. (It’s therefore no surprise that the Core i7-975 will be going away soon.) The Core i7-980 is truly a “drop-in” replacement, since it shares the same LGA-1366 socket as the i7-975 (and i7-920, i7-960, etc.). You should be able to use the most recent motherboards with an Intel X58 Express chipset; all you’ll have to do is flash the motherboard’s firmware before you install the chip. The usual suspects will have BIOS updates available on their Websites: Intel, ASUS, Gigabyte, MSI, Foxconn, EVGA, Biostar, etc.

The Core i7-980X has six cores and comes with Intel’s Hyper-threading technology. This means it can work on twelve streams at once. This is a boon for people that need multi-processing, like graphics professionals transcoding videos, or people doing 3D rendering in software (think CGI). Like previous Core i7 systems, the i7-980X has TurboBoost, which can turn off some of the cores and give that power to the remaining cores (if, for example, your photo editing program can only address two cores). It also can “boost” all six cores above the usual 3.33-GHz specs, as long as the CPU cooler can keep up with the heat output. Intel can do this because it builds a large amount of overhead into its chip design, so that its new standard cooling fan can handle the occasional spike in thermal energy. Needless to say, this on-demand overclocking won’t be constant, but most of the time a computer is waiting for you, rather than vice versa.

Another boost in performance is the result of the larger 12MB L3 cache on the processor (up from 8MB on the Core i7-975). The L3 cache is a holding cell for the data the CPU is processing, and more L3 cache means that the CPU has to access the relatively slower DDR3 memory less often. The cache will help speed up single-threaded tasks like gaming, though as seen in our testing, the choice of GPU is still more important to the hardcore gamer..

Not surprisingly, the Core i7-980X will show up on gaming PCs first, like the Maingear Shift and Falcon Northwest Mach V (Core i-980X). Well-heeled gamers are exactly the type of consumer who will crave a $6,000+ system with a $1,000 processor and $1,500 worth of graphics cards. Gaming system builders have a lot of experience combining the extra overhead in the CPU’s thermal envelope with liquid cooling to bump the stock 3.33GHz clock speed up to as much as 4.3GHz while running heavy loads. The overclocked processors still cool down while idle, so they’re not running at full speed all the time.

So, is it worth it? Yes and no. Our performance tests with the Falcon Northwest Mach V and Maingear Shift show a significant performance bump in multi-threaded tasks like CineBench R10 (a doubling of performance from the mid-range Core i7-870). There’s also a significant speed bump for the PCMark Vantage test, which is multi-threaded and measures day-to-day tasks. However gaming tests still depend more on the graphics you put into the system, with the credit going to multi-GPU systems rather than multi-core CPUs. The multimedia tests are starting to reach a plateau of diminishing returns: while the scores are still getting faster, having an ultra-fast quad core and SSDs are “enough” for tasks like Windows Media Encoder and PhotoShop CS4. Throwing two more cores at the multimedia tasks won’t help at this time. Maybe they will help when Adobe releases CS5; time will tell.

Related StoryWant even more numbers? Check out ExtremeTech‘s review of the new Core i7-980X Extreme Edition.

The Intel Core i7-980X shows that Intel continues to push the performance envelope, at least incrementally. Six cores processing twelve threads is a monumental achievement, but again software technology needs to catch up so users can properly utilize all the cores they paid for. Sure, buying an i7-980X will get you the fastest possible results now, but think of the processor as a hedge against future technological and software upgrades. Someday you will be able to utilize this processor fully, rather than “you will be able to use the full potential of this processor now.”

Source: www.pcmag.com

Tags: , , ,

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Intel’S Core I7-980x Launches With A Bang

Intel today launches its newest processor, the Intel Core i7-980X Extreme Edition, which promises to be the new king of the CPU hill. The Core i7-980X Extreme Edition (codenamed “Gulftown”) is Intel’s first six-core processor for consumers, more specifically gamers and well-heeled multimedia professionals.

The Core i7-980X replaces the Core i7-975 as the top-of-the-line Intel processor. It costs approximately $999 per chip, which is the same price as the i7-975. (It’s therefore no surprise that the Core i7-975 will be going away soon.) The Core i7-980 is truly a “drop-in” replacement, since it shares the same LGA-1366 socket as the i7-975 (and i7-920, i7-960, etc.). You should be able to use the most recent motherboards with an Intel X58 Express chipset; all you’ll have to do is flash the motherboard’s firmware before you install the chip. The usual suspects will have BIOS updates available on their Websites: Intel, ASUS, Gigabyte, MSI, Foxconn, EVGA, Biostar, etc.

The Core i7-980X has six cores and comes with Intel’s Hyper-threading technology. This means it can work on twelve streams at once. This is a boon for people that need multi-processing, like graphics professionals transcoding videos, or people doing 3D rendering in software (think CGI). Like previous Core i7 systems, the i7-980X has TurboBoost, which can turn off some of the cores and give that power to the remaining cores (if, for example, your photo editing program can only address two cores). It also can “boost” all six cores above the usual 3.33GHz specs, as long as the CPU cooler can keep up with the heat output. Intel can do this because it builds a large amount of overhead into its chip design, so that its new standard cooling fan can handle the occasional spike in thermal energy. Needless to say, this on-demand overclocking won’t be constant, but most of the time a computer is waiting for you, rather than vice versa.

Another boost in performance is the result of the larger 12MB L3 cache on the processor (up from 8MB on the Core i7-975). The L3 cache is a holding cell for the data the CPU is processing, and more L3 cache means that the CPU has to access the relatively slower DDR3 memory less often. The cache will help speed up single-threaded tasks like gaming, though as seen in our testing, the choice of GPU is still more important to the hardcore gamer..

Not surprisingly, the Core i7-980X will show up on gaming PCs first, like the Maingear Shift and Falcon Northwest Mach V (Core i-980X). Well-heeled gamers are exactly the type of consumer who will crave a $6,000+ system with a $1,000 processor and $1,500 worth of graphics cards. Gaming system builders have a lot of experience combining the extra overhead in the CPU’s thermal envelope with liquid cooling to bump the stock 3.33GHz clock speed up to as much as 4.3GHz while running heavy loads. The overclocked processors still cool down while idle, so they’re not running at full speed all the time.

So, is it worth it? Yes and no. Our performance tests with the Falcon Northwest Mach V and Maingear Shift show a significant performance bump in multi-threaded tasks like CineBench R10 (a doubling of performance from the mid-range Core i7-870). There’s also a significant speed bump for the PCMark Vantage test, which is multi-threaded and measures day-to-day tasks. However gaming tests still depend more on the graphics you put into the system, with the credit going to multi-GPU systems rather than multi-core CPUs. The multimedia tests are starting to reach a plateau of diminishing returns: while the scores are still getting faster, having an ultra-fast quad core and SSDs are “enough” for tasks like Windows Media Encoder and PhotoShop CS4. Throwing two more cores at the multimedia tasks won’t help at this time. Maybe they will help when Adobe releases CS5, time will tell.

The Intel Core i7-980X shows that Intel continues to push the performance envelope, at least incrementally. Six cores processing twelve threads is a monumental achievement, but again software technology needs to catch up so users can properly utilize all the cores they paid for. Sure, buying an i7-980X will get you the fastest possible results now, but think of the processor as a hedge against future technological and software upgrades. Someday you will be able to utilize this processor fully, rather than “you will be able to use the full potential of this processor now.”

Source: www.pcmag.com

Tags: , , ,

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