Nvidia To Launch 600 Series March 23

Nvidia 600 Series

Word on the street is that Nvidia could be launching it’s AMD 7000 series competitor on March 23. A few people in the forums have been discussing upgrading their hardware recently so I figured this would be good news for them. The 600 series by Nvidia will follow AMD in the 28nm GPU class. What’s not known is whether or not Nvidia will release a mid-range card or come out guns blazing with a flagship video card. If they do come out with a flagship card, you can bet it will trump or at the very least give the new AMD 7970 a run for it’s money.

Even if you don’t buy the new 600 series card, a ceiling raise for the product lineup will undoubtedly mean decreasing prices on some of the lower end and middle-tier hardware like the 460, 560 Ti, and hopefully 570 & 580. Keep an eye out for these new cards soon!

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Minecraft 1.2 is out!

Minecraft 1.2.2

Jeb has tweeted that Minecraft 2.2 has been released. Among the changes are new redstone lamps (light blocks activated by redstone current), new world generation, Jungle biomes and more.

As usual, Hat Films has made a funny and informative short video highlighting some of the changes.

Read on for a full list of changes!

(more…)

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Playstation 4 to use AMD x86 Architecture

Playstation 4

According to Digital Foundry’s Richard Leadbetter via Gameranx.com, the next generation of Playstation console is “essentially a PC” in terms of its technological make-up. He writes that Sony and AMD are collaborating on the console’s CPU, moving away from the PS3’s Cell architecture to an x86 processor for the new console. This is good news for PC gamers because it could possibly mean more cross platform games, better PC “ports”, and probably faster console price reductions (considering how quickly the prices in the PC industry drop).

If they’re going to be partnering with AMD we’re likely to find something along the lines of the AMD A4 or AMD A6 inside the machines. These are APUs rather than traditional CPUs. An APU integrates a CPU and a GPU on the same die thus improving data transfer rates between these components while reducing power consumption. They’re not as good as some of the high-end CPUs paired with high-end GPUs, but they get the job done and on a closed-system they can be fully taken advantage of without having to worry about things on a normal everyday PC taking up their fair share of the processing power.

Toss in 2gb or 4gb of RAM, a 320gb HDD (possibly a smaller solid state?), and a blue-ray drive and you could be looking at a $300-$400 system. Personally I’ll be happy if this is the case simply because the games will be written for x86 architecture meaning we’ll see a lot more games end up on the PC that we didn’t get before (ahem, Red Dead Redemption…)

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