2014 Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG: Take one luxobarge and add crazy

Mercedes-Benz’s 2014 S-Class wouldn’t be complete without a ridiculously powerful AMG version, and the tech-saturated new luxobarge has delivered on that with the S 63 AMG. Caressing up to 585 HP out of the AMG 5.5-liter V8 biturbo engine, the new übersedan can get to 62mph in just 4.0s and barrel on to an electronically-limited top speed of 155mph, while transporting passengers in a leather-clad interior that has more LCD displays than your local Best Buy.

Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013

The original S-Class is no slouch, but the three AMG variants headed to the Frankfurt International Motor Show in September crank things up considerably. The two regular cars do 0-62mph in 4.4s and are available in either short- or long-wheelbase versions, with up to 900Nm of torque apiece. Then there’s the S 63 AMD 4MATIC long-wheelbase, which uses all-wheel drive tuned for performance to cut 0.4s from the acceleration by pushing a third of the torque to the front and the rest to the rear wheels.

mercedes_s63_models

The 4MATIC also gets AMG Ride Control sports air suspension, with continuous damping adjustment. The other models get Mercedes’ Magic Body Control, which uses things like road scanning cameras to adjust in real-time to suit driving conditions. All three have comfort and sport modes, which adjust steering feel, suspension, and more.

Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013

Despite the added extras over the previous AMG version of the S-Class, Mercedes claims the 2014 car has actually lost weight. 100kg has been cut, thanks to new forged light-alloy wheels, swapping the traditional starter battery for a li-ion power pack (saving 20kg), and using new composite brakes. The whole outer skin of the car is now aluminum, and the spare wheel sits in a carbon-fiber bucket, saving 4kg along.

On the outside, there are a few cues to show other drivers you’ve spent massive amounts on a slab of German madness. Larger air dams on the front apron, high-gloss black grill inserts and side air-intakes, and a silver chrome front splitter keep the front looking interesting, while there’s two chromed twin tailpipes at the back.

Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG detail:

Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013

Even the noise has been fettled, with those four exhausts having special flaps inside that keep the sound muted when you’re in comfort mode, but let things roar more impressively when you’re in sport or manual modes. The latter shut off the ECO start/stop system and makes for more aggressive gear-changes from the 7-speed transition, while in comfort mode the S 63 AMG defaults to pulling off in second gear and smooths changes in a more leisurely manner.

Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG interior:

Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013

Inside, there’s gobfuls of leather, including a perforated leather AMG wheel with aluminum paddles. The LCD TFT driver display gets AMG logos and new virtual dial shapes, and there are special AMG sports seats with memory and heating for those in the front. An IWC clock is embedded in the dashboard.

Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013

AMG’s logo is splashed just about everywhere possible – the door sills, mats, pedals, and more – and then there’s a 10-speaker audio system with 3D surround sound, LED lighting throughout, and massage chairs. The safety features make the S 63 AMG almost as clever as Google’s self-driving cars, with the new Mercedes tracking other traffic, pedestrians, and other potential hazards, and able to pilot itself down highways and more.

Unsurprisingly, taking a manufacturer’s flagship four-door and throwing insane performance at it doesn’t do anything to make it more affordable. The S 63 AMG short-wheelbase will start at €149,880.50 ($196k) including tax when it hits forecourts in September, while the S 63 AMG 4MATIC long-wheelbase will start from €152,617.50 ($200k).

Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013
Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG (W222) 2013


2014 Mercedes-Benz S 63 AMG: Take one luxobarge and add crazy is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

The 10 Most Controversial Wikipedia Topics Around the World

The 10 Most Controversial Wikipedia Topics Around the World

Give a bunch of scientists a dataset like Wikipedia to play with, and it’ll keep ’em amused for a long old time. Now, a team of researchers from Oxford University have mined the rich seam to work out the ten most internationally controversial topics on the online encyclopaedia.

Read more…

    

Verizon smartphone revenue up in Q2 2013, half of all 7.5 million activations were iPhones (updated)

Image

Verizon’s latest quarterly report reveals a carrier chugging along nicely, thank you very much. Total revenue (including wireless and wireline) is up slightly to $29.8 billion, while wireless service revenue on its own grew by 8.3 percent compared to the same quarter last year. Nearly a million (941,000) new retail postpaid customers joined the VZW brigade, some of whom may have been drawn to the carrier’s expanding LTE service, which is now available to 301 million Americans, as well as to new handsets like the Nokia Lumia 928 and possibly even the BlackBerry Q10 (or maybe not). In any case, those high-margin subscribers helped to increase profit by 14 percent — so long as you’re the kind of person who’s content to be guided by “non-GAAP consolidated adjusted earnings per share.” There’s also no sign of the pension-related issues that affected the company last quarter, which leaves this carrier high and dry, regardless of how smartphone saturation may be affecting others along the food chain.

Update: In its earnings call, Verizon added that 59 percent of traffic on its network is on 4G LTE, and 52 percent of its smartphone activations (around 3.8 million device activations) were iPhones.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Via: CNBC

Source: Verizon (PDF download)

OUYA launches fund-matching Kickstarter project for game developers

Hands-on with the Ouya destined for store shelves

Ouya has just announced that it’ll launch a second Kickstarter campaign in order to speed up the pace of game development for its nascent console. Unlike with the previous campaign, this time the company plans to match any pledges between $50,000 and $250,000 from developers and give $100,000 to whoever kicks in the most. The only caveat is that successful candidates will be required to make their games Ouya exclusives for at least six months. As you’re no doubt aware, Ouya moved over 10,000 developer kits while raising $8.5 million in its hugely successful initial Kickstarter drive. It followed that by selling out its retail launch, so the company is no doubt hoping to prevent any buyer’s remorse by getting new games into the pipeline, stat.

Filed under:

Comments

Source: WSJ

Injectable ‘smart sponge’ controls diabetes, presents new targeted drug delivery method

DNP Targeted drug delivery via sponge

Diabetics might appreciate high-tech glucose sensors when they’re available, but the option for other advanced treatments is certainly intriguing. Take, for example, this new method developed by North Carolina State University researchers that uses injectable sponge to control blood sugar levels. No, it’s not the same sponge you use to clean at home — the material is made out of a substance taken from crab and shrimp shells called chitosan. This spongy material forms a matrix that’s approximately 250 micrometers in diameter, where a rise in blood sugar causes a reaction in the pores that leads to the drug’s release.

Fighting diabetes is but one of the things this miraculous sponge can be used for; developed further, it could even “intelligently” release anticancer drugs whenever the chitosan reacts to tumors or cancer cells in close proximity. Seems like medical technology is getting smarter with each passing day.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: North Carolina State University

This Samsung SSD Runs at a Blistering 3,000MB/s

This Samsung SSD Runs at a Blistering 3,000MB/s

If you think your SSD is speedy, think again: this new Samsung SSD is capable of reading data at a frankly obscene 3000MB/s.

Read more…

    

Nokia Lumia Devices Reportedly Outsold BlackBerry Last Quarter

With iOS and Android taking the top two percentages in terms of market share, we’re sure many are wondering who is sitting in third? Both Microsoft’s Windows Phone and BlackBerry’s OS 10 are probably vying for that spot, at least […]

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Another Motorola Droid Ultra Press Rendering Leaked

Earlier this month thanks to a leaked press rendering by @evleaks, we caught a glimpse of the upcoming Motorola Droid Ultra smartphone that is expected to be announced by Verizon come 23rd of July. Now thanks to a new post […]

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Skyrim Modder Attempts To Land A Job At Bethesda With His Own Mod

Job interviews aren’t always formal situations where you come into the office and a bunch of people ask you questions. Some are more practical where you are asked to demonstrate some practical skills, and in the case of a 19-year […]

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Lenovo Yoga 11 Windows RT seemingly axed as official store stops sales

Lenovo has apparently discontinued its only Windows RT notebook, the IdeaPad Yoga 11 convertible, quietly ceasing sales through its own online store. The Yoga 11, which ran the pared-back Windows RT on NVIDIA’s Tegra 3 chipset, has seemingly been superseded by the newer Yoga 11S, which swaps out the ARM chipset and replaces it with an Intel Core i3 processor and a full copy of Windows 8.

lenovo_ideapad_yoga_11_windows_rt

The end result is a far more flexible machine. In our original Yoga 11 review, we praised the unusual form-factor but were forced to conclude that Windows RT – and its limitations on software – meant that it wasn’t an all-round work and play machine.

In contrast, as we found when we reviewed the Yoga 11S recently, the presence of Windows 8 makes a big difference for usability. Even though the notebook may be part of Lenovo’s more consumer-centric IdeaPad range, rather than a ThinkPad, it’s still capable of standing up to business use.

lenovo_ideapad_yoga_11_windows_rt_discontinued

Lenovo is yet to comment on the Windows RT version, though if it has indeed been discontinued as the online store suggests, the company wouldn’t be alone in its disappointment with the OS. Dell admitted back in June that sales of its Windows RT tablets had been disappointing, and Microsoft itself recently slashed pricing of its Surface RT worldwide to try to drive demand.

Acer, meanwhile, has described the OS as “not influential” and has no plans for a machine that will run it, and there’s chatter of Microsoft cutting its licensing fees for OEMs too. An incoming update of the Surface RT will supposedly use Windows RT 8.1 and include faster chips and the option of embedded LTE.

We’ve contacted Lenovo for more information, and will update if and when the company gets back to us.

VIA Neowin


Lenovo Yoga 11 Windows RT seemingly axed as official store stops sales is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.