Xbox 360 Slim May Have Leaked on Chinese Forum

xbox360slim.jpgFor years, heat issues have plagued (or have been said to plague) the Xbox 360, with fans and foes alike claiming that they have been a leading cause of the infamous Red Rings of Death.

Now, a Chinese forum member has reportedly snapped a picture of an upcoming motherboard, with an integrated CPU and graphics chip. Naturally, if the performance can be maintained, the integrated controller should provide a single thermal hotspot to cool. And, of course, integrated GPU/CPU chips like the recent Intel Core i5 lend credence to the possibility that an integrated controller could be on the horizon.

The self-driving car: Vehicle automation tech

With all of the advances in vehicle automation and safety technology, cars that can drive themselves may actually be closer than you might think. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13746_7-20000666-48.html” class=”origPostedBlog”The Car Tech blog/a/p

EVGA Classified SR-2 fits two Xeon CPUs for 24 threads, exemplifies overkill

Remember EVGA’s seven-GPU motherboard monstrosity, the W555? That experimental beast of a board just got declassified — and given immediate launch orders. Under the new “Classified SR-2” callsign, the board’s layout has hardly changed since CES (though the heatsinks certainly got a makeover) but the big news here is that each of its two CPU sockets will support those fancy new six-core Xeon processors. As you’re well aware, two times six is twelve — and since each of the Xeon 5600’s cores can handle 2 threads, you’re looking at the basis for a 24-threaded powerhouse for mondo multitasking performance. Factor in enough slots for 4-way SLI, CrossFireX and 48GB of RAM, and it’s not hard to figure out why the red-and-black HPTX (15- x 13.6-inches!) creation commands a $600 price point. The only questions are how much a full system will deplete your wallet, and how many fuses your house will blow after pressing the power button.

Correction: Just a note that Intel’s Core i7-980X isn’t supported here, but the new Xeon 5600 CPUs are.

EVGA Classified SR-2 fits two Xeon CPUs for 24 threads, exemplifies overkill originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Mar 2010 16:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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A Google TV Set-Top Box is Coming [Google]

A Google TV Set-Top Box is ComingWe knew vaguely that Google was looking toward the living room, but the NYTimes has the details on Google TV, an ambitious platform to deliver web content to Android-based set-top boxes and TVs through partnerships with Sony, Intel, and Logitech.

Google hopes that the new platform will succeed where dozens of lesser efforts have failed—to truly and seamlessly integrate web content onto TVs, bringing services like Twitter and sites like YouTube, in addition to games, webapps, and, of course, Google’s search, to the big screen. The Google TV software reportedly includes a version of Google’s Chrome browser for doing some light surfing, as well.

The Times says Google TV will be delivered on set-top boxes that use Intel Atom chips and run an Android-based platform, though the technology will also reportedly be built directly into Blu-ray players and TVs from Sony. Additionally, Google is working with Logitech to built a keyboard-equipped remote control for the platform.

Though spokespeople from the companies wouldn’t comment on the project, the Times notes that Intel and Logitech have recently put out job listings for programmers with Android experience.

Television is a relatively unexplored frontier for Google. It’s one of the few spaces left in which the company it is yet to extend its services (as well as its advertising.) But Google TV is far from a sure thing. Many companies have struggled to figure out the right user interface to finally make web on TV make sense. Google’s interfaces tend toward the functional, rather than the beautiful, but on a big screen, the sexiness factor cannot be ignored.

Bringing web content to TVs is a role that’s still very much up for grabs. If Google TV, which has reportedly been in works for months, is the right solution for the problem—Gmail was for web mail, Buzz was not for social networking—then it could very well could be the platform that finally brings the power of the internet to the realm of the couch-potato. [NY Times]

Windows Phone 7 Series gaming, all up in the club (video!)

So… look. Sometimes you find yourself in a Vegas club at 3AM, holding a Windows Phone 7 Series testing device loaded up with a working copy of The Harvest, and you shoot what might be world’s shakiest video of the gameplay using a nearby Nexus One. It’s practically a rite of passage in this town, right? Video after the break.

Update: Also, sometimes you find yourself in a Vegas hotel the day after the Vegas club, nursing your brutal headache and desperately seeking a second opportunity to film that hot unreleased game with a better camera. Video of that is after the break, too.

Continue reading Windows Phone 7 Series gaming, all up in the club (video!)

Windows Phone 7 Series gaming, all up in the club (video!) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Mar 2010 16:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Foldable plug wins Design of the Year award

Min-Kyu Choi’s redesign of the charmingly bulky British three-pin plug has won the 2010 Brit Insurance Design of the Year award.

Midrange Sony LED LCD sips power, turns off automatically

Sony’s midrange edge-lit LED-based LCD is nothing special from an image quality standpoint, but Internet video and eco fiends will find a lot to like.

Nvidia releases new 3D drivers to fix fan issue

(Updated) Nvidia responds to reports of most recent graphics card drivers behind fan failures.

ATT to sell eco-friendly phone charger

Wireless operator is going green with a new cell phone charger that will save energy. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://news.cnet.com/8301-30686_3-20000660-266.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Signal Strength/a/p

BlackBerry push framework now available to all developers

It’s been a year or so since RIM announced that push APIs had become available to its Alliance Program members, and now it looks like the rest of us are finally able to get in on the action (at least those of us who are BlackBerry devs). Starting today, access comes in two packages: either BlackBerry Push Essentials (the free version) or BlackBerry Push Plus with a number of tiers that reflect different options and price points. So, what are you waiting for? If it’s good enough to implement in Weather Bug Elite it’s good enough for your application, right? Hit the source link to get started.

BlackBerry push framework now available to all developers originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Mar 2010 15:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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