Throughout the last six years, the ATA standard has been the one constant in the PC storage industry. No longer.
Intel is playing down the impact of the company's decision to recall its 915GP and 925GX chipsets following the discovery late last week of a flaw affecting desktop PCs
Intel wants desktop PCs to double up as network hubs and video recorders, a move that could make life tough for the companies that produce those standalone products.
While there have been a lot of loud critics of the new on-line censorship legislation (the Broadcasting Services (On-Line Services) Amendment Act 1999), one aspect of the Act has been largely overlooked.
They're not the glamour products of the semiconductor business, but Intel's new chip sets promise a performance boost for consumers by midyear.
Intel wants desktop PCs to double up as network hubs and video recorders, a move that could make life tough for the companies that produce those standalone products.
Although Intel garners most of its revenue and profits from such well-known processors as the Pentium 4 or the Xeon, it's unsung heroes like the US$40 915G Express chipset, released earlier this year, that have let Intel become the largest and fastest-growing graphics chip designers on the planet.
RMIT Test Lab finally got its hands on some of the most powerful business PCs on the market. So it is with an eagerness bordering on unadulterated glee that Matt Tett puts these racehorses through their paces.
Intel's latest mobile platform, now officially christened Centrino Duo, introduces the Core Duo (Yonah) chip with dual CPU cores. This and other developments should deliver useful -- if not revolutionary -- increases in notebook performance and battery life.
Intel has taken square aim at the value PC arena in announcing a new 800MHz Celeron processor featuring a 100MHz system bus, and a new chip set dubbed the 810E2.
A few new technologies are eliminating some of the bottlenecks in memory and motherboard performance.
Welcome to the start of another confusing round of changes in systems that always seems to accompany major Intel CPU and chipset announcements.
Apple drops iPhone NDA
A little more than six months after Apple initially offered its software development kit for the iPhone, the c… Watch it now
US shows what OPEL could have been
Do you really need 16GB on your phone?
Do you love or hate Microsoft's Seinfeld ads?
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Superguide: Printers -- all you need to know
Looking to buy a printer? Our superguide rates the latest printers and shines a light into the industry.
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Storage and server superguide
Over the last decade the art of maintaining the datacentre of a large organisation has evolved into an art form.
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