Apple allegedly looking into MacBook Air WiFi issue, replacing machines

Apple allegedly looking into MacBook Air WiFi issue, replacing machines

Over the last few days we’ve been hearing from several of our readers about WiFi instability on new Haswell-equipped MacBook Airs, which also happen to be Apple’s first computers with 802.11ac. Despite those rare reports, the company’s new laptops impressed us in our recent review with solid performance and incredible battery life. Today 9to5Mac learned that Apple is supposedly aware of the issue and working on a fix, while some customers have also reported getting their systems replaced. In the meantime, the company’s apparently directed its Genius Bar employees to “capture” machines experiencing the problem — i.e. return them to Cupertino for testing. We’ve contacted Apple for comment and will keep you posted if there’s any official response.

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Source: 9to5Mac

Red Bull Training Grounds tournament ramps up with Falcon Northwest Tiki, GeForce GTX TITAN

This week is a the 2013 edition of the Red Bull Training Grounds tournament with a battle between some of the best StarCraft II gamers from around the world aiming at eachother’s hordes. What we’ve done is to take a peek at what’s under the hood of the gaming rigs that’ll be powering this tournament:

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Lenovo refreshes its IdeaPad laptops with Haswell and touch, designs unchanged

Lenovo refreshes its consumer laptops with HaLenovo refreshes its IdeaPad laptops with Haswell and touch, designs unchangedswell and touch, designs unchanged

No, there’s no new Yoga. You’ll have to keep waiting on that. For now, Lenovo is undertaking a much more modest project: refreshing its existing notebooks with Haswell. First off, the current IdeaPad U310 Touch and U410 Touch are now the U330 and U430 Touch. Other than the difference in screen size (13 inches vs. 14), both will be configurable with up to Core i7 fourth-generation Core processors, along with optional SSDs and a max of 8GB of RAM. While the U330 will be offered with either 1,366 x 768 or 1,920 x 1,080 resolution, the U430 comes with a 1,600 x 900 screen (you can upgrade to 1080p there, too). Oh, and the 14-incher can be had with a 2GB NVIDIA GeForce 730M GPU. Both will be available in the third quarter, with the U330 priced at $799 and up and the U430 going for $899. Moving on, the Y410p is the new, 14-inch companion to the Y510, with up to a Core i7 processor, 16GB of RAM, 1TB of storage and dual 2GB NVIDIA GeForce 750M GPUs arranged in an SLI configuration. Screen resolution is limited to either 1,366 x 768 or 1,600 x 900, however. That’s available now on Lenovo.com starting at $799.

Finishing up with the entry-level S series, we’ve got the 11.6-inch S210 Touch, the 14-inch S400 Touch and the 15.6-inch S500 Touch. One thing to keep in mind is that both of these have Ivy Bridge processors instead of Haswell, as it was an easy way for Lenovo to keep the cost down. Other than that, you’re looking at Core i3 or i5 processors, up to 8GB of RAM, touchscreens with 1,366 x 768 resolution and hopefully some decent battery life (the batteries are so big here they create a hump around the hinge area). Additionally, the S400 and S500 will have optional discrete graphics, with AMD in the S400 and NVIDIA in the S500. Look for those in Q3, with pricing as follows: $429 for the S220, $449 for the S400 and $579 for the S500. Anyhow, since the designs here haven’t changed, we didn’t give these laptops the full hands-on treatment, but we did include some spec summaries in the gallery below, if you’re partial to bulleted lists.

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Source: Lenovo (IdeaPad Y410p product page)

Samsung ATIV Book 9 Plus and ATIV Book 9 Lite hands-on (video)

DNP Samsung ATIV Book 9 Plus and ATIV Book 9 Lite handson

Samsung’s long since decided to rebrand its Series 9 series as ATIV Book 9, but it’s only now that it’s got some new Ultrabooks to show off. While the ATIV Book 7 unfortunately jumped the Haswell gun, the higher-end ATIV Book 9 Plus is happy to benefit from those impressive battery savings we’ve already seen from Intel’s next-generation chips. In fact, Samsung is promising 12 hours of usage — and that’s despite the Plus model arriving with an eye-watering 13.3-inch, 3,200 x 1,800 qHD+ display. In addition, there’s up to 256GB SSD storage and 8GB of RAM, two USB 3.0 ports and mini-VGA and micro-HDMI sockets. The screen is protected by a layer of Gorilla Glass and, alongside adding touch functionality since the previous Series 9 Ultrabook, Samsung has crafted a new hinge for its latest flagship, offering two stop-points. Moving the screen through to a standard 105- to 110-degree pitch, the screen strongly resists. Better still, there’s really not that much give as we tapped our way through Windows 8. However, give it more of a sustained push, and the screen bends down to a flat 180-degree position, making it easier to show the screen around a table.

It’s joined by the humbler Book 9 Lite, with a lower (though unspecified) price. Powered by an unnamed 1.4GHz quad-core processor and housing up to a 256GB SSD drive, it promises a cold-boot time of eight seconds, or two seconds from sleep. It’s the same size screen (13.3 inches) as the Plus model, but resolution drops down to 1,366 x 768 — a noticeable difference when you observe the two side by side. Turn them off, however, and the interiors of the two machines are so similar that even the most hardened Samsung exec might be fooled (excepting for that Intel sticker on the high-end model). On the outside, though, the systems remain noticeably different. The Book 9 Plus gets a moody, matte finish to its aluminum unibody, while the Book 9 Lite has a glossy plastic surface. The cheaper Lite model reminds us of the finish on Samsung’s Galaxy smartphone series, but it’d be great to see Samsung bring this other, cooler finish to more products. Both Ultrabooks are expected to land in the US (and elsewhere) in time for back-to-school season. Check out the gallery below, and follow past the break for more impressions.

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Samsung intros ATIV Book 9 Plus flagship Ultrabook, ATIV Book 9 Lite

Samsung intros ATIV Book 9 Plus flagship Ultrabook, ATIV Book 9 Lite

We haven’t heard much about Samsung’s Series 9 Ultrabooks for a while, barring a resolution bump late last year. Today, though, the company announced the follow-on to that product. Two follow-on products, actually. The company just introduced the ATIV Book 9 Plus, a 13-inch flagship laptop that appears to be the direct replacement to the old Series 9. In addition, the company announced the ATIV Book 9 Lite, another 13-inch ultraportable that doesn’t quite rise to the level of flagship status.

Starting with the Plus, it steps up to Haswell processors (Core i5 and i7), as well as a 3,200 x 1,800 touchscreen. Sammy also made improvements to the old Series 9’s backlit keyboard and trackpad. (Think: the sort of excellent touchpad found on the recent ATIV Book 7). The new display, meanwhile, is coated in Gorilla Glass and has a 72 percent color gamut. The Plus offers two hinge positions — one at about 105 degrees and another all the way down to 180 degrees. Additionally, the company’s opted for OCR bonding this time around, which should offer an improved touch experience, say company reps. With the touchscreen, the weight is up to 1.39kg (3.06 pounds) — definitely not the lightest 13-inch touchscreen Ultrabook we’ve seen, but still plenty portable. As for battery life, you’re looking at 12 hours, according to Samsung. And given the performance of some other Haswell machines we’ve already had a chance to test, we’re inclined to believe it.

Meanwhile, the ATIV Book 9 Lite has up to 256GB of solid-state storage and an unnamed quad-core processor clocked at 1.4GHz (it’s an AMD chip, we hear). As a slightly lower-end device, it has a 1,366 x 768 display, and also comes in a more playful gamut of colors, including white, red and the usual black. Battery life is rated at 8.5 hours, compared with 12 for the Plus. Likewise, you get 4GB of RAM, versus eight gigs on the flagship model. Also, it will be available in both touch and non-touch versions, with the non-touch model weighing in at 1.44kg (3.17 pounds) and the touch one tipping the scales at 1.58kg (3.48 pounds). The Book 9 Plus and Lite will launch globally in Q3, but in the meantime we’ve got a hands-on post on ready for your perusal.

Mat Smith contributed to this report.

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Samsung ATIV Book 9 Plus is the company’s new flagship Ultrabook

STUB Samsung ATIV Book 9 Plus is the company's new flagship Ultrabook

We haven’t heard much about Samsung’s Series 9 Ultrabooks for a while, barring a resolution bump late last year. Today, though, the company announced the follow-on to that product, the ATIV Book 9 Plus.

Developing…

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Intel leak reveals 8-core Haswell-E series desktop CPU for late 2014

Image

Now that Haswell’s available in consumer-grade laptops, it’s time to look at what’s next on Intel’s to-do list. A leaked slide-deck is claiming that Haswell-E, the enthusiast version of the chip, is coming in the second half of 2014. The documents also promise that Intel will axe the 4-core base model in favor of 6-and-8-core editions of the CPU, which can pack up to 20MB of L3 cache. At the same time, the company is likely to release the Wellsburg motherboard chipset, which can support DDR4 RAM with a clock speed of up to 2,133MHz. If it’s all to be believed, then we have one word of advice to the overclocking community — best start stocking up on liquid nitrogen.

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Source: VR-Zone

System76 Galago UltraPro Runs On Haswell Processor And Ubuntu

The System76 Galago Ultrapro is one thin Ubuntu-powered notebook at 0.75″.

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MacBook Air review (13-inch, mid-2013)

DNP MacBook Air review 13inch, mid2013

We can’t lie: we were hoping for a Retina MacBook Air last year when Apple rolled out the thinner, faster MacBook Pros with their pixel-packed displays and optical drive-free chassis. The Air, sadly, got left out of that particular party, but when we reviewed it we found a perfectly fine machine. This year, then, would surely be the year of major updates to Apple’s venerable thin-and-light machine?

As it turns out, no, it wouldn’t be. From the outside, the mid-2013 MacBook Air refresh is again a very minor one indeed, with no new display and (virtually) no exterior modifications. On the inside, though, bigger changes are afoot. New, faster SSDs and a selection of power-sipping Haswell CPUs from Intel have created a device that’s all but identical to its predecessor yet is, in many ways, vastly improved. Is this wedge-like, 13-inch paradox worth your $1,099, and can it really live up to Apple’s promised 12-hour battery life? Let’s find out.

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Digital Storm VIRTUE suggests mid-tower gaming systems need a steel boost

As the PC gaming rig ecosystem continues to expand, groups like Digital Storm stand to gain largely from those ladies and gentlemen aiming to do two things at once: work with a high-powered computer and keep a low, yet stylish profile. That’s getting pretty darn specific when you consider the start of the gaming PC

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