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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 38 declined, 10 accepted (48 total, 20.83% accepted)

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Graphics

Submission + - An early peek at AMD's Radeon HD 4870 X2

Dr. Damage writes: AMD has quite a hit in the Radeon HD 4000 series. Coming up next is a product code-named R700, a high-end graphics card based on two 4870s paired together. Here's a preliminary look at how the card — to be called the Radeon HD 4870 X2 — performs. Hint: Nvidia's got one heck of a fight on its hands.
AMD

Submission + - AMD's new Phenom X3 triple-core processors reviewe

Dr. Damage writes: AMD's Phenom X3 processors are essentially quad-core chips with one core disabled, sacrificed for the cause of product segmentation. The X3 extends the Phenom lineup to under 150 bucks. Can AMD gain ground on Intel's very potent dual-core CPUs by offering a third core? Does a non-power-of-two core count make sense? The Tech Report finds out.
Graphics

Submission + - Multi-GPU extravaganza unleashed

Dr. Damage writes: What happens when you put together a $1200 graphics subsystem involving four of the fastest GPUs available today? How does it compare to, well, nearly every other current one, two, three, and four-way GPU config of note? Which one draws the most power (over 600W) and makes the most noise? The Tech Report compared 20 different configs and lays it all out.
Music

Submission + - Vista's changes rob Creative of PC audio crown 4

Dr. Damage writes: Creative has ruled PC sound almost since the beginning, but Vista's new audio layer changes the game by essentially killing off 3D positional audio acceleration. The Tech Report has reviewed a pair of post-Vista sound cards, with surprising results. Motherboard maker Asus saw the opening and created perhaps the best consumer-level sound card yet, the Xonar D2X, with quality components, an EMI shield, color-illuminated ports, the best objective measurements and subjective listening test scores we've ever seen, and (finally!) a PCI Express x1 connector. Could the Sound Blaster era finally be over?
Intel

Submission + - Intel intros 2.93GHz quad-core processor

Dr. Damage writes: Intel has released its most powerful CPU ever, the Core 2 Extreme QX6800, and The Tech Report compares it to 16 other processors, from AMD's Quad FX down to the cheapest dual-core. The CPUs are tested in 32- and 64-bit applications in Windows Vista x64, including Oblivion, Supreme Commander, Folding@Home in Linux, computational fluid dynamics, and power efficiency. Unsurprisingly, the QX6800 creams the competition.
Intel

Submission + - Desktop quad-core CPUs compared

Dr. Damage writes: Intel and AMD have both showcased their high-end desktop quad-core solutions, but those are pricey and sometimes power-hungry. Both CPU makers offer arguably more attractive solutions that cost less and yet are more energy efficient. The Tech Report has tested that concept by pitting five quad-core desktop configs against one another, including the less expensive Core 2 Quad Q6600 and Athlon 64 FX-70. The tests include benchmarks in 64-bit Vista, Folding@Home in Linux, and a novel way of measuring the energy used to render a scene.
Intel

Submission + - Intel Core 2 Extreme quad-core processor reviewed

Bender writes: Just months after releasing its Core 2 Duo processors and taking back the performance crown, Intel has managed to squeeze two of them into a single socket to make the world's first quad-core CPU. The Tech Report has done a full work-up comparing the Core 2 Extreme QX6700 against the fastest dual-core CPUs from AMD and Intel. The tests include power consumption and Folding@Home performance. The quad-core CPU scores highest in each, though in one case that's good and in another bad.
Graphics

Submission + - Quad SLI under the microscope

Dr. Damage writes: The Tech Report has taken an in-depth look at Quad SLI, Nvidia's insane four-GPU solution for extreme gaming graphics. The article explains how load balancing is handled between four GPUs, why OpenGL works better than DirectX for Quad SLI, and how SLI antialiasing achieves 16X and 32X sample sizes. They've also tested Quad SLI against 22 different graphics solutions at a range of settings, exposing Quad SLI's surprising performance and image quality shortfalls in the process.
Graphics

Submission + - GPU power, noise with Vista Aero examined

Bender writes: The idea of Windows Vista's Aero interface using a graphics processor to deliver eye candy on the desktop seems like a fun one at first glance, but what happens when you run it on a high-end graphics card with lots of power draw and a loud blower? Will the Vista Aero GUI make your PC go all Dustbuster on you? TR has tested that possibility with a range of graphics cards, and the initial answer looks better than expected.
Intel

Submission + - Intel guns for parallel processing, graphics

Dr. Damage writes: Last week's Intel Developer Forum didn't produce any major announcements because it wasn't focused on imminent new products. But quietly, in a number of small ways, we saw something further off, but more significant, coalesce: the future of Intel CPU technology is increasingly about highly parallel floating-point processing, whether it be via multicore processors, SSE4, application-specific accelerators, new types of coprocessors, or massively parallel chips with huge 'tiles' of execution resources offering teraflops of power for scientific computing, multimedia, physics, or — Intel appears to be especially sweet on this one — graphics. Could future tera-scale CPUs challenge GPUs for dominance?
Graphics

Submission + - GeForce 7950 GT arrives with passive cooling

Dr. Damage writes: Nvidia's GeForce 7950 GT graphics card debuts today with the same old story: it's cheaper, faster, and better than the card it replaces. All of this would be the usual good news were it not for the fact that XFX's version of the 7950 GT comes with completely fanless passive cooling. The Tech Report has a full review of this intriguing beast, complete with power consumption and noise level tests against a broad array of single and multi-GPU setups.

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