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Monday, March 30, 2015

MSI GT72 2QE Dominator Pro (HD)

                   

The graphics card used in the MSI GT72 DOMINATOR Pro is fast enough to satisfy all the needs of gamers. With the high-end graphics card, the major benchmarks run at very high framerates, smoothly, and without any lagging. With the high performance of CPU and graphics that enable the super high storage transferring speed, users will never have to worry about the bottle neck limitation ever again. There are also plenty of bundles such as gaming mouse and headset will make you feel worth of it.

Here is the snap shot of the video.

Sunday, March 29, 2015

NEW PC MOTHERBOARDS COMING IN 2015


Everything in our PC is changing fast and that includes our motherboards, and with the list that we have provided here I do have the urge to upgrade my PC.
I am just hoping by doing so, the upgrade will not cost me too much as powerful as some of the listed can be!



Here are the new pc motherboards that are due out this year:

BIOSTAR’s TA970 Plus AMD Mainboard

Just recently, BIOSTAR released an AMD socket AM3+ motherboard that is the TA970 Plus. While you might know that AMD sockets usually have an AMD OverDrive Technology on their mainboard, the TA970 Plus is also said to have the ACC (Advanced Clock Calibration) feature for overclock enthusiasts out there to precisely calibrate clock timings between processor and RAM chips.
BIOSTAR’s TA970 Plus AMD Mainboard
The board supports AMD multi-Core AM3 processors and fortunately, it includes AMD FX/AMD Phenom II   and AMD Athlon II ;versions to its support. It is a full sized ATX board with 4 slots of DDR3 DIMM up to 64 GB and is crossfire capable. This new motherboard also supports USB 3.0 and is said to have a SATA connection with a speed of 6 GB/s. While the price is yet unknown, it has been rumoured to probably go up to $79.00.
ASRock’s X99E-ITX

ASRock’s X99E-ITX/ac

If you experienced the power of an X99 motherboard, you probably already know that it is a powerful motherboard. And just a few days ago, this powerful board is now coming in a Mini-ITX. Ridiculous it may be but yes, it was made possible by sacrificing some of its specs.
While the previous model was capable of holding eight DDR4 memory, this one has less. Same goes with our PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slot. It also said that there will be six SATA3 connectors and two of them can be made into a single SATA-Express connector. You might also want to know that this board is now USB3.1 capable and has a wireless AC connectivity.
While the price is yet to be determined after this week’s CeBIT, we also hope to gain the exact specifications of this announced motherboard.
MSI X99A SLI Krait Edition

MSI’s New And Updated Motherboards

If you are not a fan of BIOSTAR or ASRock, then MSI just announced twelve upcoming motherboards, all featuring USB 3.1 and is rated to be at full 10GBps in speed. Ten out of the twelve motherboards are said to support Intel, while two are for AMD. Also, while most use the traditional USB Type-A connector, a single exception features the new reversible Type-C connector on the rear I/O panel, the MSI Z9&A Gaming 6.
Here are the said chipsets that are coming out:
  • SLI Krait Edition
  • 990FXA Gaming
  • Z97A Gaming 9 ACK
  • Z97A Gaming 7
  • Z97A Gaming 6
  • X99A Gaming 9 ACK
  • X99A Gaming 7
  • X99A Xpower AC
  • X99A Mpower
  • X99A SLI Krait Edition
  • X99A SLI Plus
  • X99A Raider
ORIGINAL ARTICLE WAS PUBLISHED IN PPSU

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Samsung Gear S review

The dream of a fully standalone wrist gadget that can make phone calls, stay connected and even help you be sounds good, at least on paper. To own a smartwatch usually means having it be perma-paired to a phone in your pocket: it ends up being, largely, a phone accessory. That's starting to change. A few bold watches are trying to break away and be their own devices, with their own phone service to boot.
The Samsung Gear S is one of those. This is Samsung's sixth smartwatch in a little over a year, but it has one big difference: it gets its own cell service and data. It even has its own SIM-card slot. It's a watch that's also a phone.

Someday soon, smartwatches might be devices that work totally on their own, no phone necessary: as a connected Web browser, a music player, a fitness device. But the Samsung Gear S is not exactly that magic watch. Yes, it can do a surprising number of things. But it still needs a Samsung phone to make most features work. It runs Samsung's limited Tizen software and dedicated Gear apps, closing it off from the richer ecosystem of Google's Android Wear. And it requires a connected data plan to even use it as a cellular device.
SAMSUNG GEAR S
For some of my time with the Gear S, I paired it with a Samsung phone. But for most of the time, I tried using it on its own, as a true independent smartwatch. Well, I should say "independent," because if you're going to use a Gear S, you're still best off bringing a phone along.
The Gear S has its own speakers and microphone. It vibrates when you get messages or an alarm goes off. It's studded with sensors: accelerometer, gyroscope and compass, optical heart rate, ambient light for screen brightness, UV and barometer. It has Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.1 and 3G cellular. It's got 4GB of storage, 512MB of RAM and a dual-core processor. And it weighs 66 grams (2.3 ounces). But its display is the most impressive part...and, to some degree, the most alienating.The rubbery-plastic sport-type band it comes with can pop out around the Gear S central unit and be replaced with another band accessory. It snaps on like previous Gear watches: an adjustable watch band with a clip, it sizes and fits easily.The watch is IP67-rated water-resistant, which means you can get it wet, but you're not meant to shower or swim with it. It's about the same story as Samsung's previous Gear watches.





The Gear S has a 2-inch 480x360-pixel AMOLED display, a bigger screen and a larger pixel count than other Android Wear smartwatches and previous Samsung Gears. It's longer, almost feeling like a mini-phone in portrait mode.
You need to pay for a phone/data package to use the Gear S standalone features, but they are fun to play with. The Gear S packs Bluetooth 4.0, 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi and multiband cellular: 3G, but not 4G LTE. You can keep the Gear S perpetually paired with your Samsung phone and use it as a connected accessory, like Android Wear, or you can completely decouple and use the Gear S with nothing else at all.

Monday, September 22, 2014

Sony Xperia Z2

The Sony Xperia Z2 is the latest flagship super-phone from Sony, replacing the Xperia Z1 released last year. The new phone keeps the same aluminium-edged design, sexy glass front and back, Full HD display, quad-core processor and impressive 20.7-megapixel camera. Like its predecessor, it's completely waterproof.
You might wonder, then, exactly what is new on the Z2?





Well, it has a slightly larger 5.2-inch display, a slimmer bezel around the edge, a marginally faster 2.3GHz Qualcomm processor, the latest Android 4.4.2 KitKat software and a camera capable of capturing 4K video. Although those are only marginal upgrades, the Z1 was already a smashing piece of kit, and it might be slightly too soon for a full overhaul, given that it was only released in September last year.
It's available to preorder in the UK and wider Europe now for an eye-watering price of £600 (€700). The company is yet to confirm if it will ever get a US release, but I wouldn't get your hopes up -- the Z1 never got a proper release in the States, and the Z1S was announced at CES earlier this year as a US variant of the older phone. It's listed as "coming soon" on Sony's Asia site (with no pricing given), but there's no sign of it yet for Australia.
The Z2's glass panels do make it rather more susceptible to scratches from keys in your pocket, so if you want to keep it looking pristine -- which I imagine you will, given how much you've paid for it -- you should pop it in a case. Like its siblings, the Z2 is completely waterproof, but the waterproof rating has been slightly increased. It's IP55 and IP58 rated which basically means you can completely submerse it in up to 1.5 metres of water for up to 30 minutes at a time.
The 5.2-inch display packs the same 1,920x1,080-pixel resolution as the previous Z1. As the Z2 is marginally bigger, the screen has a slightly lower pixel density -- 423 pixels per inch against the Z1's 440 -- as the same number of pixels are being stretched over a larger area. In reality though, it's not a difference you're ever likely to notice.
The Z2 arrives running the latest version of Google's mobile operating system, Android 4.4.2 KitKat. You'd be right to expect the latest version of software on new launches, but Sony does have a habit of using older Android iterations -- the Z1 Compact launched only recently with the ageing Jelly Bean -- so it's refreshing to find the latest software on board as standard.
Around the back of the phone is the same 20.7-megapixel camera you'll find on both the Z1 and the Z1 Compact. It's an impressive amount of megapixels, but it doesn't necessarily guarantee better pictures. 

The Z2 has a trick up its sleeve in the form of 4K video capture -- that's considerably more than the resolution previously available. I put it against the S5, which can also shoot 4K, and watched the footage back on a 65-inch Panasonic 4K TV.