Time to say goodbye from all of us at bit-tech.net
Welcome challenger. Why not sit down, and play a little game?
Budget in price, mainstream in aspiration.
Just 27mm tall, the PH-TC90LS is claimed to cope with 130W TDP.
Scan's 3XS Graphite laptops offer portability and power.
A game design competition inspired by medieval artist Jheronimus Bosch has launched.
AMD's SeaMicro division has launched the SM15000, a server with Ivy Bridge support.
Ubisoft has entered the digital distribution market.
The Gertboard add-on experimenters' board for the Raspberry Pi is available to order now.
ARM has launched three new Midgard-class Mali GPU designs, boasting a 50% performance boost.
The Khronos Group has officially launched OpenGL 4.3 and OpenGL ES 3.0.
Swiftech has officially unveiled the Maelstrom, a new full-height 5.25-inch reservoir.
Google's Web Lab (Beta) aims to tie together the physical and digital realms.
Crucial has launched a new family in its m4 SSD range, in mSATA flavour.
Fujitsu has announced the launch of a hands-on PC building course, providing training to its customers.
ADATA has launched its first SandForce-based SSDs to take advantage of the new overprovisioning capabilities.
Google's IO conference has never been this hardware-centric, with the company launching the Nexus 7 and Nexus Q devices.
Samsung has launched its Series 9 monitors, starting with a QHD 27in monster with new PLS panel.
AMD has launched the G-T16R embedded APU, a 4.5W part designed to replace the ageing Geode.
AMD has launched a multi-core cashback incentive, offering money back for 4-, 6- and 8-core chips.
AMD has officially launched its first Brazos 2.0 APUs, the E1-1200 and E2-1800.
Nvidia is targeting IGP users with its latest Kepler creation, the GeForce GT 640 2GB.
Gigabyte has launched an overclocking competition, with unreleased Ivy Bridge boards the prize.
October 14 2021 | 15:04