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Posts Tagged ‘asus’

Asus Introduces Laptop with 12 hours of battery life

Gizmodo reported that, Asus have developed a Laptop which they claims to have 12 Hrs of battery Backup.



The big change here is a real-time management system that re-clocks the processor on a moment-to-moment basis depending on what you’re doing, which means light work should result in light power usage. That’s how it can hit 12 hours of battery life despite the Core i7 and its Nvidia GeForce 310 GPU. We haven’t been able to test it yet, since it was just announced at CES, but here’s hoping the claims are anywhere near true. [Ars Technica]. The Laptop is having a Core i7 processor.

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Old look of BIOS changes, Asus gives it Graphical Updates

Yes, BIOS seems to be having the most outdated looks in your system. But not anymore. Asus is coming up with a bios which not only looks cooler, but it also supports mouse inputs. The EFI-capable P5Q motherboards will get the new BIOS, which utilizes an improved layout. See the picture and the video below.

View the video Here.

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Best 4 Graphics Cards available

1.Nvidia GeForce GTX 295

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Nvidia’s GeForce GTX 295 is the single fastest 3D card on the market, and for a relatively aggressive price. Added bonuses like power efficiency and PhysX support sweeten the deal, but even without those extra benefits, this card is good for its processing power and comparative value.

Specifications: Graphics Processor / Vendor: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 295 ; Max Resolution (external): 2560 x 1600 ; Video Memory Installed: 1792 MB.

The good: Best single-card 3D performance available; more power efficient than its competition; PhysX support adds some bells and whistles to a few games; DVI and HDMI output.

The bad: Still a power hog, despite its relative efficiency.

2.Sapphire Radeon HD 4850 X2 (PCI-e 2.0, 2GB, GDDR3)

33421567-2-440-OVR-1Even if it’s a relative power hog, the Sapphire Radeon HD 4850 X2 brings so much speed and utility to the table it’s hard for us to recommend another midrange 3D card. Only the particularly power conscious or those who play games with known multichip scaling issues should look elsewhere.

Specifications: Graphics Processor / Vendor: 2 GPUs – ATI Radeon HD 4850 ; Max Resolution (external): 2560 x 1600 ; Video Memory Installed: 2 GB.

The good: Best-performing card in the $300 price range; four DVI outputs let you connect up to four LCDs.

The bad: Worst power efficiency in its class.

3.eVGA e-GeForce 9800GTX+ Superclocked – graphics adapter – GF 9800 GTX+ – 512 MB

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EVGA’s GeForce GTX 9800+ Superclocked edition has basically the same price-performance benefit as its Radeon HD 4850-based graphics card competition. With identical bang-for-the-buck, you’ll like this card if you demand power efficiency, but you should turn to ATI’s card if your PC has limited upgrade room.

Specifications: Graphics Processor / Vendor: NVIDIA GeForce 9800 GTX+ ; Max Resolution (external): 2560 x 1600 ; Video Memory Installed: 512 MB.

The good: Just barely faster than the competing card from ATI; more power-efficient at idle than its competition.

The bad: Double-wide card takes up more expansion room.

4.Diamond Viper Radeon HD 4850

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AMD’s new ATI Radeon HD 4850 is a solid midrange 3D card that will run pretty much anything, and it boasts some forward-looking features to boot. It might be worth waiting for the price to drop just a bit, at which point this card will become much more attractive.

Specifications: Graphics Processor / Vendor: ATI Radeon HD 4850 ; Max Resolution (external): 2560 x 1600 ; Video Memory Installed: 512 MB.

The good: Respectable price-performance, more so in dual-card mode; flexible, single slot design.

The bad: Competing (and pricier) Nvidia card is faster; runs very hot.