Saturday, 27 April 2013

Android 2.2 Update Without Marketplace No Problem...If You Have A Nook Color


It is widely accepted that a mobile device's appeal is largely reliant on the operating system used to power it. And in the same vein, the popularity of the mobile OS being used to run a device is mostly determined by the number of downloadable apps available for said platform.

That being said, attempting to ship a mobile OS such as Google's Android OS on a device while disabling access to the Marketplace, one of Android's key selling points, should be nothing short of suicide right? Apparently, Barnes & Noble think that it is not that great an issue. After all, that is the exact thing the largest US book retailer has in mind for its Nook Color ebook reader which was recently launched with Android 2.1, but without access to the Android Marketplace.

Now, barely two months after the Nook Color was introduced, Barnes & Noble have announced that a firmware update for the ebook reader is in the works and is expected to be ready for download come January next year. But once again, the book retailer has dropped a bombshell by claiming that the update to Froyo will also come without the Marketplace application. The reason for this omission is simple: Barnes & Noble wants to push their own Nook Developer Program, which is like an app repository of sorts similar to what Marketplace has to offer. And it makes little sense for Barnes & Noble to jeopardize their own program by pitting it against the more popular and well-established Android Marketplace.

In addition, it would also be a good time to point out that, in spite of the OS used to power it, the Nook is still an ebook reader: it is no smartphone, and a tablet it definitely isn't. Therefore, people should not expect it to work like one, even if it means living with the limitations and restrictions Barnes & Noble has imposed upon it, even if it means living without one's daily fix of Angry Birds.

More importantly, the fact that the Nook Color runs on Android means that it is possible to root the device and install custom apps, if Marketplace access is really desired.



Wednesday, 24 April 2013

Asetek LCLC Water Cooling Kit For HD 4870 Cards

Asetek's industry-leading, LCLC liquid cooling solution is now available forAMD's latest ATI Radeon HD 4870 family of graphics cards. The unique,single-slot liquid cooling approach provides OEMs with an extremely highoverclocking capability enabling them to design and produce outstanding gamingand entertainment products with virtually no noise.

"PC gamers continue to push the performance envelope," says Gary Baum, Asetek'sSenior VP of Marketing. "Our award-winning, LCLC thermal solution extendsoverclocking performance providing the maximum gaming and entertainmentexperience—with no graphics fan noise."

To meet the demands of advanced gaming or graphics-intensive applications,Asetek's highly integrated solution lowers the GPU temperatures found on the4870 by as much as 26 degrees, enabling it to run significantly cooler inextreme performance modes of operation. And, since the Asetek solution istotally liquid cooled, the graphics card can run completely silent, except forthe system heat exchanger fan that typically runs at a quiet 30 dB(A).

For applications requiring exceptional thermal performance, low noise, smallfootprint, and maximum reliability, Asetek is the only liquid cooling companythat provides these rigorous OEM level reliability and environmental testingassurance. Shock, vibration, and thermal stress testing assures a 50,000-houroperational lifetime with absolutely no end-user maintenance required.

As a single-slot cooling solution, OEM design flexibility is assured. When usedas part of a Crossfire configuration, the LCLC product consumes only two of thefour slots normally used, freeing up two slots for other configuration upgrades.



Friday, 19 April 2013

ASUS 7800GT-Dual Card

Instead of a bare PCB of the 7800 Dual card posted a day back,this is how the actual card with all the components soldered on will look like.The core used is 7800GT not the GTX as reported earlier and the memory is 1.6nsSamsung GDDR3 totaling 512MB.



Wednesday, 17 April 2013

grindhouse classics “the crazies” (1973)

With the new big-budget (well,comparatively speaking) Hollywood remake of George Romero’s seminal 1973 horror film “The Crazies” (a.k.a. “Code Name : Trixie”) upon us, now seems as good a time as any to take a look back at the original — as well as the new version, which your host took in last weekend. But let’s give the progenitor its dues first, shall we? I mean, it’s only fair, and in addition to coming first, it’s also, for reasons I’ll delve into a bit later when we look at the new one, the better of the two by far.

It’s a shame that this film is so often overlooked by horror historians, because truth be told it’s every bit the precursor to “Dawn of the Dead” that “Night of the Living Dead” was. Sure, it didn’t fit the “zombie movie” mold as established at the time since the “crazies” of the title weren’t walking corpses but were, instead, victims of a viral biological outbreak, but by today’s standards as set forth by films like “28 Days Later,” it certainly fits the bill — which is why we’re dealing with the rather bizarre situation we find ourselves in where the remake is considered a proper “zombie flick” while the original, at least at the time, wasn’t.

But it’s not just the fact that it’s (admittedly retroactively) classified as a zombie movie that makes “The Crazies” a thematic lead-in to “Dawn,” it’s the fact that it deals with current (at the time) political and socio-economic issues in a direct manner that makes this film every bit the precursor to DotD that NotLD was. Yes, “Night” tackled issues of race and Cold War paranoia and the like, but it did so mainly indirectly, via metaphor. “The Crazies,” on the other hand, tackles militarism, Viet Nam, germ warfare, state secrecy, and related issues every bit as head-on as “Dawn” tackled the emptiness of consumer culture and the wretchedly excessive gluttony of the “me generation.”

It’s evident from the start that Romero isn’t going to beat around the bush with this film. We start with a guy murdering his own family by burning down their house. He’s acting weird and completely loses it in rather a hurry, and when the local Evans City, Pennsylvania volunteer fire brigade arrives, including among its ranks two of our film’s main protagonists, recently-returned Viet Nam vets and lifelong buddies David (Will MacMillan) and Russell (Harold Wayne Jones),? the family man-turned-firestarter has a tragic moment of lucid clarity before succumbing completely to madness and death.

And the story seldom slacks up from this intense introductory sequence, with Romero opting instead to put the pedal to the metal and never let up. In fairly short order we learn that a military plane containing some sort of vaccine has crashed in the mountains nearby, that the vaccine isn’t a vaccine (of course) but is instead a deadly germ weapon designed to inflict madness, mayhem, and death on an “enemy” population, that the military can’t get its shit together when trying to effect a containment and clean-up, that the local population, infected and otherwise, quickly comes to be considered an enemy by the military, that the heavily-armed townsfolk and rural dwellers aren’t going to take being put under martial law lying down, that the virus, conde named “Trixie” is probably airborne, that gas-masked, hazard-suited military guys who are clearing out households and disposing of dead bodies aren’t opposed to looting homes of their goods and corpses of their cash, and that the US government will wipe the whole area, and everyone in it,? out in order to keep a lid on what’s happened. Oh, and in true Romero fashion, the bodies of the biological plague’s victims need to be burned.

The action shifts around a lot in “The Crazies,” with equal time being paid to the military’s ever-changing “plan” of response, the violent actions of the townspeople (infected or otherwise), and the struggle to escape the situation undertaken by our previously-mentioned protagonists David and Russell along with David’s girlfriend Judy (Lane Carroll), who works as a nurse and is pregnant, and a local evacuee named Artie (Richard Liberty, who would go on to appear in Romero’s “Day of the Dead”)? and his daughter Kathy (cult film legend Lynn Lowry of “Shivers” and “I Drink Your Blood,” among many other credits), who join them along the way.

There is a somewhat lengthy interlude wherein our erstwhile heroes take refuge in the clubhouse of a local Country Club, which actually comes as a welcome relief when it happens, but apart from that it’s pretty much full-throttle mayhem and paranoia and frantic desperation all the way, with barely a pause to take a breath.

And here is as appropriate a time as there probably is for your host where your host to salute the genius social commentary of George Romero, because not only does “The Crazies” deal with the obvious themes mentioned earlier, but the story of Dave and Russ as returned vets at loose ends suddetly confronting a battlefield scenario they don’t entirely grasp the implications of has none-too-subtle, albeit entirely unstated in the script and its dialogue, parallels with both the war in Viet Nam itself, and the situation many veterans found themselves in coming home to a country they no longer fully understood. One gets the definite sense, in fact, that once all hell breaks loose in their tiny town, these two feel more at home than they have at any point since coming back.

The insanity and outright viciousness of the outbreak itself, its victims, and the military’s inept and violent “containment” procedures only escalate until things reach a downright insane, and pretty goddamn bleak in most respects, conclusion. It’s entirely fitting, but it’s the breakneck-paced story along the way, driven in every respect by the human and entirely (if at times depressingly) understandable actions of the plethora of characters on all sides here that makes “The Crazies” so memorable. It’s 100 miles of bad road and we’re packed like sardines into a jeep with no shocks full of people whose actions, reactions,? concerns, and motivations we understand all too well. Some we like, some we don’t, but they are all us, and we are them.

“The Crazies” is available on DVD (and, as of a couple of weeks ago, Blu-Ray) from Blue Underground. The remastered picture looks absolutely superb for a low-budget exploitation flick filmed in rural Pennsylvania in 1973, the sound is mono but clean and good, and the extras package is nice, as well, featuring the trailer, a great little documentary featurette on the cult film career or Lynn Lowry, and an absolutely sensational commentary track from Romero and Blue Underground head honcho (and “Maniac” and “Maniac Cop” director ) Bill Lustig. Romero’s memory of the production is sharp, Lustig asks terrific questions, and the two of them obviously get along terrifically well. It’s an absolute pleasure to listen to.

Hard-core Romero fans are generally the only folks who have given this movie its proper due, but hopefully with the remake in theaters now, horror and exploitation fans, and just people with taste in general, will take a look at this somewhat neglected classic. It packs a punch both for what it does as well as what it says about ourselves and our society. Spellbinding, gut-wrenching stuff all the way around.

And speaking of that remake, we’ll get to that in the next day or two, maybe even tonight if I’m feeling ambitious.

Thursday, 11 April 2013

Asrock 939SLI32-eSATA2 review @ Anandtech

Anandtech has a review on Asrock's 939SLI32-eSATA2 based on the ULi M1697 +M1695 chipset. This board is an alternative to NVIDIA's Nforce 4 SLI X16chipset, offering dual PCIe X16 slots running full X16 speed in SLi mode. Beinga budget product (just under USD$ 100) for such an SLI X16 solution, this boardcan actually match up to the Nforce 4 SLI X16 which goes for 2x the price. Readcomplete story here.



Monday, 8 April 2013

ASUS EAH3870X2 Photos amp; Specs

ASUS, producer of top quality graphic solutions, has today unveiled the latestgeneration of AMD GPUs – the world’s first on-board dual RV670XT, with the ASUSEAH3870X2/G/3DHTI/1G and EAH3870X2/G/HTDI/1G. The EAH3870X2/G/3DHTI/1G comesequipped with the fastest upgraded DRR3 0.8ns memory modules and two exclusiveextra DVI outputs. It also comes specially designed with dual fansinks for bothGPUs – ensuring efficient heat dissipation. On top of all this, the ASUSEAH3870X2 Series will also come bundled with the hottest DX10 game, Company ofHeroes: Opposing Fronts.

Exclusively Designed Hardware Features

The EAH3870X2/G/3DHTI/1G comes equipped with the fastest upgraded DRR3 0.8nsmemory modules, and harnesses the high speed capabilities of these super fastmemory modules for the best performance. It is also exclusively equipped withtwo extra DVI outputs for a maximum of four-display video outputs. Additionally,the EAH3870X2/G/3DHTI/1G utilizes the specially designed dual fansink thateffectively dissipates heat away from both GPUs – enabling much more stableperformances in comparison to reference designed single fansinks.

Hottest DX10 Game Bundle – Company of Heroes: Opposing Fronts

Company of Heroes: Opposing Fronts is the second installment in thehighest-rated strategy franchise that delivers an unprecedented level of realismand reveals a darker, more brutal war. With enhanced lighting effects, missionpersistence, improved vehicle and soldier AI, enhanced physics and a dynamicweather system, this game will set new standards in visual realism for the RTSfranchise. Utilizing the powerful performance of the ASUS EAH3870X2 Series,gamers will be able to enjoy the full graphical spectacle that the game canoffer.

Unprecedented Rock Solid Quality from ASUS

In line with the Rock Solid promise of quality from ASUS, the EAH3870X2 Seriescomes with several solutions to provide top quality graphic performance. Withthe EMI shield, 310dB EMI Interference can be reduced to provide stablesignals. The temperature of the newly adopted DIP Spring Chokes is 510°C lowerin comparison to traditional Toroidal Coil Chokes; while the Japan-made polymercapacitors lowers power loss to provide more stability. Users will thus feel atease while enjoying extreme performance with ASUS’ uncompromising quality onlywith the ASUS EAH3870X2 Series.

Special Features

New Generation Dual GPU SolutionExclusive Hottest DX10 Game bundle: Company of Heroes – Opposing FrontsExclusive “4 DVI-I Output”1GB DDR3 Memory on boardASUS Splendid: Watching movies on PC is as good as on Top-of-the-lineconsumer televisionASUS Gamer OSD: Real-time overclocking, benchmarking and video capturingin any PC game!ASUS Video Security Online: Keep an eye on your home at all times nomatter where you areASUS Smart Doctor: Your intelligent hardware protection and overclockingtool