Battlemage might be a winner
Published in Graphics


Early benchmarks in

Intel’s forthcoming Battlemage GPU has hand an early benchmark on Geekbench and it looks like it will rival some top graphics cards.

IBM’s AI is still half-baked
Published in AI


Can’t replace humans

IBM  does not appear to be successful in its cunning plan to replace expensive senior programmers with AI.

Linux nerds in existential crisis
Published in News


Refuse to fix security bug because it can't exist 

Linux nerds are fighting over whether a disastrous bug is actually a security flaw rather than fixing it.  

Sony unveils new Inzone gaming monitors with DisplayPort 2.1
Published in PC Hardware


The Inzone M10S and the Inzone M9 II

Sony has unveiled two new gaming monitors, the Inzone M10S, a 27-inch OLED 480Hz gaming monitor and the Inzone M9 II, a 27-inch 160Hz UHD IPS gaming monitor. Both will be available in October and feature DisplayPort 2.1 and HDMI 2.1 inputs, as well as are NVIDIA G-SYNC compatible.

Bloke gets Linux to run on a 1971 processor
Published in PC Hardware


Takes nearly five days to boot

Dmitry Grinberg has achieved the remarkable feat of running a 33-year-old flavour of Linux on a 1971 processor.

AMD users say Ryzen 9000 series is “meh”
Published in News


AMD might have botched the launch

A recent survey by 3DCenter.org reveals mixed reactions to AMD's Zen 5-based Ryzen 9000 series launch.

Intel finally catches up on cores
Published in News


Xeon 6 ‘Granite Rapids’ 6900P-series models

Intel has launched its high-performance Xen 6 ‘Granite Rapids’ 6900P-series models, featuring five new processors with 72- to 128-cores.

Intel slips out of discrete GPU market
Published in Graphics


Zero per cent market share

Intel remains a dominant player in PC gaming due to its majority share in PC processors, but its discrete graphics presence has vanished into a puff of smoke.

US air traffic control systems out of date
Published in Transportation


Likely to stay that way until the 2030s

Flying within the US will be a little third world until the 2030s because the FAA has not bothered to upgrade its air traffic control equipment, according to government accountants.

Software problems responsible for most car recalls
Published in Transportation


If only people checked this stuff

Software fixes now account for over 20 per cent of car recalls, according to DeMayo Law's analysis of a decade's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data.