Acer unveils AMD-infused Aspire Z3100 AIO, Revo 3700 nettop now available for $349

Can you smell it in the air? Autumn is most assuredly here. Sure, you can deduce as much from equinoxes or changing leaves, but if you ask us, it’s almost just as precise to go by a new, pre-holiday product cycle. Acer‘s taken the cue with two new desktop SKUs — one each in the nettop and all-in-one categories. First with the latter: the 21.5-inch AZ3100 all-in-one (pictured). A tier lower than the AZ5700, this one lacks the multitouch and TV tuner, and instead utilizes a 2GHz AMD Athlon II 170u processor, NVIDIA GeForce 9200 graphics, 3GB RAM, and 500GB HDD. Add in a DVD drive, webcam, HDMI, six USB 2.0 ports, Windows 7 Home Premium, and a side chassis for “cable management.” It does best its older brother in the price category, though, at just $599 — about five Benjamins lower.

As for the Aspire Revo 3700, it was actually announced earlier this month, but now we’ve got the skinny on this book-sized nettop’s price and availability. That’d be $349 for the tag, and a street date of approximately… now, according to the press release. Speaking of which, all pertinent paperwork can be found after the break.

Continue reading Acer unveils AMD-infused Aspire Z3100 AIO, Revo 3700 nettop now available for $349

Acer unveils AMD-infused Aspire Z3100 AIO, Revo 3700 nettop now available for $349 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Sep 2010 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Acer Aspire AS5745 and AS7745 pick up NVIDIA Optimus, Aspire AS5742G nabs some 3D Vision

You know who may have been a bit inspired by NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang‘s GPU muscle? Acer! Okay, that’s not exactly what happened, but Acer does have quite a few new laptops that tap the graphics-chip maker’s latest. First up are the 15.6-inch AS5742G and 17.3-inch AS7745, which still have the same design and Intel Core 2010 CPU options as the previous models, but now have the brand spankin’ new GeForce 400M GPUs along with Optimus technology for automatically switching between the integrated and discrete graphics options. Both will be available for less than $800, though there’s no word on exact availability of the mainstream machines. Those a bit too 2D for ya? There’s also the Core i5-powered, GeForce GT 420M-packing Aspire AS5745DG, which is one of the first machines to have NVIDIA’s updated 3D Vision. The IR receiver is integrated into the 120Hz LCD’s bezel and it supports 3DTV Play, which lets you reap the laptop’s 3D benefits on a larger 3DTV. For $1,000 (active shutter glasses included!) that’s not a bad deal, but don’t get too excited about ordering one today — it’ll hit e-tailers in late October. Oh, and there’s one more! The 18.4-inch Aspire AS8943G has been updated with a Core i7 quad-core processor, 8GB of RAM and ATI’s newest Mobility Radeon 5850 graphics for $1,499.99. That’s a lot to digest, but hit the break for the press release if you’re up for even more details on all the new rigs.

Continue reading Acer Aspire AS5745 and AS7745 pick up NVIDIA Optimus, Aspire AS5742G nabs some 3D Vision

Acer Aspire AS5745 and AS7745 pick up NVIDIA Optimus, Aspire AS5742G nabs some 3D Vision originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Sep 2010 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Caption Contest: NVIDIA CEO flaunts tattoo on stage, still serving cans of whoop-ass

Oh sure, NVIDIA might not have had any physical chips to show off at the GPU Technology Conference earlier this week, but CEO Jen-Hsun Huang did have one very, very special exhibit up his sleeve.

Paul: “And below the logo is a picture of all the shipping devices running Tegra 2.”
Don: “Here are the new logo designs we’ve been working on, Mr. Huang.”
Ross:Take a cue from Peter Moore and go with temporary. You never know where you’ll be in even just a few years’ time.”
Chris: “Huang’s Boxee Box tramp stamp, of course, would remain a secret.”
Joanna: “And this is why I hate gun, er GPU shows.”
Darren: “Whatever. At least it’s not a Zune tattoo.”
Richard Lai: “Yo Intel, this is how embedded is done.”
Vlad: “Jen-Hsun’s displays of support for Notion Ink are starting to get out of hand…”

Caption Contest: NVIDIA CEO flaunts tattoo on stage, still serving cans of whoop-ass originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 25 Sep 2010 10:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ElcomSoft turns your laptop into a one-touch WiFi cracking system

It’s been a few years since we checked in with Elcomsoft’s Wireless Security Auditor WiFi cracking software. As you’d expect, things have become easier, much easier. Elcomsoft now has an all-in-one solution that will locate wireless networks, intercept data packets, and crack WAP/WPA2 PSK passwords from any modern laptop with a discrete ATI AMD or NVIDIA graphics card. Here’s the quote IT nerds will surely we love:
Today, ElcomSoft is integrating a wireless sniffer into Elcomsoft Wireless Security Auditor. The integrated sniffer turns Elcomsoft Wireless Security Auditor into a one-button, all-in-one solution ready to be used by corporate security officers without specific experience in information security.

Call us crazy, but if you’re a C-level security officer with no specific information security experience then maybe you shouldn’t be sniffing people’s data packets. Then again, we’re sure ElcomSoft will happily sell their $1,199 pro software or $399 standard edition to any hacker willing to pay, white hat or not.

Continue reading ElcomSoft turns your laptop into a one-touch WiFi cracking system

ElcomSoft turns your laptop into a one-touch WiFi cracking system originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 25 Sep 2010 03:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba Qosmio X500 landing September 26 with GTX 460M graphics and a $1,300 price tag

The best things in life, it turns out, aren’t actually free. Toshiba’s decided to freshen up its X500 gaming station with NVIDIA’s new high-end GTX 460M discrete graphics and slapped a handsome $1,300 MSRP on the resulting beast. And a beast it shall be, with an 18.4-inch screen, Core i5 or i7 CPU choices, SSD storage options, up to 8GB of RAM, a backlit keyboard, and simulated 5.1 audio pumping out of Harman Kardon speakers. We had a chance to check out its X505 brother recently and came away impressed by the deep blacks the screen was able to produce. For a bit more visual detail, visit the gallery of product shots below.

[Thanks, Ralph]

Continue reading Toshiba Qosmio X500 landing September 26 with GTX 460M graphics and a $1,300 price tag

Toshiba Qosmio X500 landing September 26 with GTX 460M graphics and a $1,300 price tag originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Sep 2010 10:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA CEO: Tegra 3 almost done, Tegra 4 on the way, expect a new Tegra annually

Though NVIDIA’s GPU Technology Conference is primarily about the applications of GPU computing, CEO Jen-Hsun Huang hasn’t shied away from revealing new silicon, and he just promised something quite unexpected to attending press: new Tegra chips. Though the Tegra 2 has yet to leave a single dent on the consumer marketplace — the Boxee Box famously tossed it out — Huang told us that not only is a Tegra 3 almost done and a Tegra 4 currently underway, but that we should expect a new Tegra SOC “every single year.” Forgive us for being a mite skeptical of the company’s ability to attract customers, but the only notches we see on Tegra’s belt are the Zune HD… and Microsoft’s failed Kin.

NVIDIA CEO: Tegra 3 almost done, Tegra 4 on the way, expect a new Tegra annually originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Sep 2010 15:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA reveals Fermi’s successor: Kepler at 28nm in 2011, Maxwell in 2013

Not a lot of details to be had, but NVIDIA wants you to know Fermi isn’t the company’s be-all, end-all GPU — “hundreds of engineers” are already hard at work on Codename Kepler, expected to go to production this year and ship in 2011. Kepler’s based on a 28nm process, we’re told, and will thankfully deliver an estimated 3 to 4 times the performance per watt compared to Fermi, and hopefully run cool. If you built your last PC to last, however, you might wait for Maxwell in 2013, supposedly bringing a sixteen-fold increase in parallel graphics-based computing just two years after that, including advanced features like the ability to autonomously process some content independent of a CPU.

Update: Does this roadmap mean we should expect new GPUs from NVIDIA every two years? Jen-Hsun Huang wouldn’t commit to that, but said that there will be “mid-life kicker” product launches in-between each new NVIDIA chip to keep the wheels turning.

NVIDIA reveals Fermi’s successor: Kepler at 28nm in 2011, Maxwell in 2013 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Sep 2010 14:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA teams with PGI for CUDA-x86, gifts its brand of parallelism to the world

NVIDIA’s GPU Technology Conference 2010 just kicked off in San Jose, and CEO Jen-Hsun Huang has shared something interesting with us on stage — thanks to a partnership with The Portland Group, it’s bringing the CUDA parallel computing framework to x86. Previously limited to NVIDIA GPUs — and the lynchpin of NVIDIA’s argument for GPGPU computing — CUDA applications will now run on “any computer, or any server in the world.” Except those based on ARM, we suppose. Still no word on NVIDIA’s x86 CPU.

NVIDIA teams with PGI for CUDA-x86, gifts its brand of parallelism to the world originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Sep 2010 13:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ViewSonic outs 10-inch G Tablet: Android 2.2, NVIDIA Tegra 2 on the inside

Don’t blink — you might just mistake ViewSonic‘s new G Tablet for the ViewPad that we handled back at IFA. This guy, however, packs a very different list of internal specifications in a 10-inch tablet form factor that’s beginning to look all too familiar. Showcased for the first time last night in New York City, this guy dumps Intel’s Atom in favor of NVIDIA’s Tegra 2, and rather than booting a pair of operating systems, it relies solely on Android 2.2 — a mobile OS that Google has specifically said isn’t tailored for use on slates. At any rate, there’s also 1GB of RAM, a 1024 x 600 resolution panel, USB / HDMI, 802.11n WiFi, Bluetooth 2.1, 16GB of storage, a 1.3 megapixel camera and a chassis that measures 9.96- x 6.5- x 0.5-inches. We’re told that it handled 1080p media without any trouble, and while the capacitive touchpanel was deemed “beautiful,” the ultra glossy coating will certainly turn off those who plan to visit the great outdoors. It’s expected to hit shelves in October with a lofty $529 retail price, and with that, we’ll simply wish it the best of luck and point you to the video past the break.

Continue reading ViewSonic outs 10-inch G Tablet: Android 2.2, NVIDIA Tegra 2 on the inside

ViewSonic outs 10-inch G Tablet: Android 2.2, NVIDIA Tegra 2 on the inside originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Sep 2010 14:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Internet Explorer 9 Beta review

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If you’re anything like us, as soon as you get a new PC there’s a laundry list of things you do: uninstall every piece of crapware, change the desktop wallpaper, and fire up Internet Explorer 8 to download a new browser like Firefox or Chrome. Without fail, we’ve repeated that last step on every Windows laptop we’ve reviewed in the last year. Why is it that we almost instantly replace IE with another option? There are lots of reasons, but to name a few… the browser usually comes plastered with toolbars, which makes it painfully slow to load even just a simple news site. And even when those are uninstalled it feels sluggish in comparison to Firefox and Chrome. Also, it’s just not as attractive or intuitive as the others. Oh, and then there are the smaller items, like the fact that it lacks a download manager or uses more RAM than the competition.

That’s no short list of complaints, but you can’t say Microsoft hasn’t been listening. It’s been saying for months that Internet Explorer 9 — which is now available for download as a public beta — will mend all those issues and then some. A lot of the improvements come in speed — Redmond’s been talking about hardware acceleration since November of last year — but there are some other interesting features such as “Pinned Sites” and “One Box” that Microsoft’s been less vocal about. So, does IE9 live up to the hype and will it finally give us a preloaded browser that’s fast enough to run with the others? Should you run along and download it right now? We’ve spent the last week using it as our primary browser on a number of different laptops to find out. We’ll meet again in our full review after the break.

Continue reading Internet Explorer 9 Beta review

Internet Explorer 9 Beta review originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Sep 2010 12:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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