09:37 | GTX 1080 Ti Revival Rumors Are False
Just as a quick update: There was a story circulating this past week about the GTX 1080 Ti allegedly being revived, particularly by EVGA, as a means to quell some of the shortage concerns. We called EVGA and asked if the 1080 Ti was getting remade, and the official answer was “no, it is not being remade. The 1080 Ti is no longer in production.” The unofficial answer when we first posed the question was “HAHA! No.” Sorry to shoot that one down for 1080 Ti fans.
10:52 | Hong Kong Customs Seized Smuggled GPUs
Hong Kong news station TVB News reported on the Hong Kong Customs and Excise Department seizing a cache of 300 “unidentified” graphics cards, which was part of a much larger haul that was intercepted from a Chinese smuggling ring. The smuggling run included other technology products, with TVB primarily showing cell phones, video cards, and trays upon trays of RAM. We’d be open to shipping the Hong Kong customs department
Introduction
After labouring with practically no presence in the x86 server market for a long time, AMD has built momentum through the release of Zen-based Epyc processors starting with first-generation Naples in 2017.
AMD took advantage of Intel roadmap slips by releasing second-generation Rome in 2019, which is particularly notable for doubling the core-and-thread count and quadrupling the L3 cache in one generation and on the same underlying platform.
The capability of AMD s server hardware has since convinced the leading server vendors - Dell, HPE, Lenovo, et al - to take Epyc seriously, and each has product lines for a broad range of use-cases.
Review: AMD Epyc 7763 2P (Milan) - CPU hexus.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hexus.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Samsung has announced that all of its Galaxy devices from 2019 onward will receive four years of security updates. This includes the Galaxy Z, Galaxy S,
This article is sponsored by AMD
The 2020 global pandemic has fundamentally changed the way in which people work. Over the last nine months, millions of previously office-based employees have been working from home. Such a radical shift in practices has the put the onus on technology infrastructure to meet these evolved business needs.
It is no surprise, therefore, that laptops and PCs have been selling like proverbial hotcakes as companies scramble to procure hardware for cumulatively millions of employees who may not be back in an office for a while. On the laptop front, AMD and Intel have revamped their core business-focussed technologies to offer great performance and all-day battery life.